Ancient Monuments Society

The Ancient Monuments Society (AMS) is a learned society and registered charity in England and Wales,[1] founded in 1924 "for the study and conservation of ancient monuments, historic buildings and fine old craftsmanship".

Vestry Hall, Logo of the Ancient Monuments Society

National Amenity Societies

The Ancient Monuments Society is recognised as one of the National Amenity Societies, and as such is informed of any application for listed building consent in England and Wales involving any element of demolition.[2] As such it plays an important part in shaping the historic environment in England and Wales.

Partnership with Friends of Friendless Churches

The Ancient Monuments Society works in partnership with the Friends of Friendless Churches, sharing an office and staff and operating a joint membership scheme. The co-operation came about because Friends of Friendless Churches was set up by Ivor Bulmer-Thomas, who was also Secretary and later Chairman of the Ancient Monuments Society.

Publications

The AMS publishes three newsletters and a volume of Transactions (scholarly articles on a range of architectural historic topics) annually for its 2,100 members.

gollark: Maybe they weren't to know yet.
gollark: You failed at Macron, but Toki Pona is simple so SURELY you can manage that.
gollark: <@319753218592866315> make toki pona.
gollark: <@319753218592866315> macron.
gollark: What is this *for* anyway? Cryptography is very ÆÆÆÆÆÆÆææÆÆÆææÆÆæÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆæææ to get right, so I would mostly recommend just using existing stuff like TLS.

See also

References

  1. Charity Commission. Ancient Monuments Society, registered charity no. 209605.
  2. Department for Communities and Local Government (24 March 2015), Arrangements for handling heritage applications Direction 2015, www.gov.uk, retrieved 5 August 2015

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