The Smith Lectures

The Smith Lectures commemorate Agnes Lewis and Margaret Dunlop (both née Smith), twin sisters from Ayrshire, whose contribution to Divinity led to the award of honorary doctorates in 1901 by the University. Brilliant linguists, intrepid explorers, and meticulous scholars, they discovered and catalogued an astonishing number of ancient manuscripts, most famously the Syriac Sinaiticus.

Our next Smith Lecturers will be:

Autumn 2024 - Susan Docherty, Professor of New Testament and Early Judaism, Newman University Birmingham.

Spring 2025 - Charlotte Hempel, Professor of Hebrew Bible and Second Temple Judaism, University of Birmingham.

Autumn 2025 - Joanna Leidenhag, Associate Professor of Theology and Philosophy, University of Leeds.

Each semester, an outstanding female scholar from any subdiscipline of Divinity is invited to St Andrews to deliver the Smith Lecture in their memory, and to meet informally with female students who might be interested in pursuing an academic career in the discipline.

Professor Soskice with Professor Sally MapstoneThe inaugural Smith Lecture was delivered in Martinmas Semester 2018-2019 by Professor Janet Soskice, Emerita Professor of Philosophical Theology at the University of Cambridge, on the eponymous Smith Sisters. They were the subject of one of Professor Soskice's books, entitled Sisters Of Sinai: How Two Lady Adventurers Found the Hidden Gospels (Vintage, 2010) (available in the library).

Pictured: Professor Soskice (right) with Professor Sally Mapstone, Principal of the University of St Andrews, and pictures of the Smith sisters held in the University Special Collections.