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The Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer : ウィキペディア英語版
Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer

The Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer is a private ritual, authored by Rudyard Kipling, in which students about to graduate from an engineering program at a university in Canada are permitted to participate. Participation may also be permitted for Canadian professional engineers and registered engineers-in-training who received training elsewhere. The ritual is administered by a body called The Corporation of the Seven Wardens.〔"(The Ritual of the Calling of an Engineer )", ''The Corporation of the Seven Wardens'', Retrieved 4 April 2010〕 As part of the ritual each participant is conferred the Iron Ring.
==History==
The ritual traces its origins to professor H. E. T. Haultain of the University of Toronto, who believed and persuaded other members of the Engineering Institute of Canada that there needed to be a ceremony and standard of ethics developed for graduating engineers. The need was patently obvious in the light of the Quebec Bridge disasters. The ritual was created in 1922 by Rudyard Kipling at the request of Haultain, representing seven past-presidents of the Engineering Institute of Canada.〔〔"(Engineer-in-Residence/ Iron Ring )", ''Professional Engineers Ontario'', Retrieved 4 April 2010〕 The seven past-presidents were the original seven Wardens of the Corporation.
An inaugural ceremony was held in the evening of 25 April 1925, at the University Club of Montreal, when the obligation was taken by six engineers,〔R.A. Ross, Consulting Engineer, acting as the Senior Supervising Engineer of the ceremony; J.M.R. Fairbairn, Chief Engineer, Canadian Pacific Railway; Harold Rolph, President, John S. Metcalf and Co., Consulting Engineers; N.M. Lash, Chief Engineer, Bell Telephone Co.; J.M. Robertson, Consulting Engineer; and John Chalmers, Engineer for John Quinlan & Co., Contractors.〕 some of whom were involved with Kipling in its development. On 1 May 1925, three of these newly obligated engineers〔Dr. Ross, Dr. Fairbairn and Mr. Rolph.〕 met at the University of Toronto with a number of the officers of the Engineering Alumni Association and obligated 14 of them in the Senate Chamber of the University becoming the first local chapter (referred to as a Camp) to do so. The Ritual and the conferring of the Iron Ring continues to be administered by The Corporation of the Seven Wardens Inc./''Société des Sept Gardiens inc.'' through Camps〔(Camp locations and affiliations. )〕 associated with the universities granting degrees in engineering in Canada.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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