Venue: IET London: Savoy Place
The Institution of Engineering and Technology
(IET) is the
largest multidisciplinary professional engineering institution in the world.
the north bank of the River
The IET was formed in 2006 from two separate institutions: the Institution of
Electrical Engineers (IEE), dating back to 1871, and the Institution of Incorporated Engineers
(IIE) dating back to 1884. Its worldwide membership is currently in excess of 167,000. The
IET's main offices are in Savoy Place in London, England and at Michael Faraday House in Stevenage, England.
The IET has the authority to establish professional registration for the titles of
Chartered Engineer, Incorporated Engineer, Engineering Technician, and ICT Technician,
as a Licensed Member institution of the Engineering Council.
The IET is registered as a charity in England and Wales, and in Scotland.
History of the IEE
The Society of Telegraph Engineers
(STE) was formed on May 17, 1871, and it published the Journal of the Society of Telegraph Engineers from 1872 through 1880. Carl Wilhelm
Siemens was first President of IEE in 1872. On December 22, 1880, the STE was renamed as the Society of Telegraph Engineers and of
Electricians and, as part of this change, it renamed its journal the Journal of the Society of Telegraph Engineers and of
Electricians (1881 – 82) and later the Journal of the Society of Telegraph-Engineers and Electricians (1883 – 88).
Following a meeting of its Council on 10 November 1887, it was decided to adopt the name of the Institution of
Electrical Engineers (IEE). The name of the Institution of Electrical Engineers remains engraved in the
marble façade of its headquarters at Savoy Place. As part of this change, its Journal was renamed
Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers in 1889, and it kept this title through
1963. In 1921, the Institution was Incorporated by royal charter and, following mergers
with the Institution of Electronic and Radio Engineers (IERE) in 1988 and the
Institution of Manufacturing Engineers (IMfgE) in 1990, it had a worldwide
membership of around 120,000. The IEE represented the engineering
profession, operated Professional Networks (worldwide groups of engineers
sharing common technical and professional interests), had an educational role
including the accreditation of degree courses and operated schemes to provide awards
scholarships, grants and prizes. It was well known for publication of the IEE Wiring
Regulations which now continue to be written by the IET and to be published by the British
Standards Institution as BS 7671.
The IET hosts the archive for the Women's Engineering Society (WES) and it has also provided office space for WES since 2005.
History of the IIE
The modern Institution of Incorporated Engineers (IIE) traced its heritage to The Vulcanic Society that
was founded in 1884 and became the Junior Institution of Engineers in 1902, which became the Institution of General Technician Engineers in 1970. It changed its name in 1976 to the Institution of Mechanical and General
Technician Engineers. At this point it merged with the Institution of Technician Engineers in Mechanical Engineering and formed the Institution of Mechanical Incorporated Engineers in 1988. The Institution of Engineers in
Charge, which was founded in 1895, was merged into the Institution of Mechanical Incorporated Engineers (IMechIE) in 1990.
The Institution of Electrical and Electronic Technician Engineers, the Society of Electronic and Radio Technicians, and the Institute of Practitioners in Radio and Electronics merged in 1990 to form the Institution of
Electronics and Electrical Incorporated Engineers (IEEIE).
The IIE was formed in April 1998 by the merger of The Institution of Electronic and Electrical Incorporated Engineers (IEEIE), The Institution of Mechanical Incorporated Engineers (IMechIE), and The Institute of Engineers and
Technicians (IET, not to be confused with the later-formed Institution of Engineering and Technology). In 1999 there was a further merger with The Institution of Incorporated Executive Engineers (IIExE). The IIE had a worldwide
membership of approximately 40,000.
IET London: Savoy Place
Wikipedia: Institution of Engineering and Technology