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1

Orrell, Reverdy Lewin. Descendants of Conrad Wildensteiner and Anna Margaretha Lohin of Germany. Catonsville, Md. (145 Sanford Ave., Catonsville 21228-5140): R.L. Orrell, 1997.

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2

Warwick, Anne Dudley. Anne, Margaret, and Jane Seymour. Aldershot [Eng.]: Ashgate, 2000.

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3

Frick, Ruth Hudson. The family of Leonard Michael and Anna Margaret Leidich. Bountiful, Utah: Family History Publishers, 1996.

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4

White, Ellen Emerson. The diary of Margaret Anne Brady, 1912. London: Scholastic for the Book People, 2001.

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5

Ferguson, Catherine. Margaret Anna Cusack: (the Nun of Kenmare) : Knock, November 1881-December 1883. Warrenpoint, Co. Down: Gaelbooks, 2008.

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6

Ferguson, Catherine. Margaret Anna Cusack: (the Nun of Kenmare) : Knock, November 1881-December 1883. Warrenpoint, Co. Down: Gaelbooks, 2008.

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7

Margaret Anna Cusack: (the Nun of Kenmare) : Knock, November 1881-December 1883. Warrenpoint, Co. Down: Gaelbooks, 2008.

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8

Jaidka, Manju. From slant to straight: Recent trends in women's poetry : Anne Sexton (America), Margaret Atwood (Canada), Stevie Smith (England), Kamala Das (India), Anna Akhmatova (Russia). New Delhi: Prestige Books, 2000.

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9

Vidulich, Dorothy A. Peace pays a price: A study of Margaret Anna Cusack, the Nun of Kenmare. Washington, D.C: Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace, 1990.

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10

Larpent, Anna Margaretta. A woman's view of drama, 1790-1830: The diaries of Anna Margaretta Larpent in the Huntington Library. Marlborough, Wiltshire, England: Adam Matthew, 1995.

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11

Phelps, Geneva M. An annal begins with Ezekiel and Margaret (Watkins) Phelps, "1793-94". Parsons, W. Va: Superior Printing Co., 1989.

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12

Rousselot, Elodie. Re-writing women into Canadian history: Margaret Atwood and Anne Hébert. Québec: L'Instant même, 2013.

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13

Il mito di Corinne: Viaggio in Italia e genio femminile in Anna Jameson, Margaret Fuller e George Eliot. Roma: Carocci, 2001.

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14

Our Lady of Victorian feminism: The Madonna in the work of Anna Jameson, Margaret Fuller, and George Eliot. Athens: Ohio University Press, 2001.

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15

Smith, Virginia Gress. The ancestors and descendants of Gottfried and Anna Margaret (Schreiber) Kress/Gress: Germany to the United States, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. [Mercersburg, PA] (104 Linden Ave., Mercersburg 17236): [V.G. Smith, 1994.

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16

Loveless, Richard William. The American ancestry of Richard Janssen Chalmers Loveless, child of Richard William Loveless and Margaret Anne Chalmers. Salt Lake City, Utah: Historical Publications, 1991.

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17

Gender roles, literary authority, and three American women writers: Anne Dudley Bradstreet, Mercy Otis Warren, Margaret Fuller Ossoli. New York: P. Lang, 1995.

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18

Hancock, Diana Rensing. John Friederich, Margaret Friederich, John Friederich, Elizabeth Fisher Friederich, John Martin Moll, Elizabeth Anselm Moll, Henry Friederich, Mary Anna Moll Friederich, and some of their descendents. Dhahran, Saudi Arabia: D.R. Hancock, 1993.

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19

Gullette, Margaret Morganroth. Safe at last in the middle years: The invention of the midlife progress novel : Saul Bellow, Margaret Drabble, Anne Tyler , and John Updike. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988.

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20

Safe at last in the middle years the invention of the midlife progress novel: Saul Bellow, Margaret Drabble, Anne Tyler, and John Updike. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988.

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21

Lobsien, Verena Olejniczak. Skeptische Phantasie: Eine andere Geschichte der frühneuzeitlichen Literatur : Nikolaus von Kues, Montaigne, Shakespeare, Cervantes, Burton, Herbert, Milton, Marvell, Margaret Cavendish, Aphra Behn, Anne Conway. München: Fink, 1999.

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22

Wittenberger, Ida Annette Teeple. Genealogy of descendants of Josef Würtenberger and Anna Laüffer, who immigrated with four sons, Franz, August, Josef & Mathias from Gratz, Austria to United States of America, in April 1851 and Margaret, born in U.S.A. Savanna, Ill: [s.n.], 1988.

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23

Laynesmith, J. L. The last medieval queens: English queenship 1445-1503. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.

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24

Georg, Helbrønd, and Slægtsarkivet (Viborg Denmark), eds. Slægten fra Mariegaard i Broager sogn: Omhandlende Anna Margaretha Thaysen, 1808-1836, Christian Jessen, 1796-1832, Christian Petersen, 1807-1855, Cecilia Margaretha Juhler, 1817-1884 og Tyche Henningsen, 1830-1895, deres efterkommere og forfædre. Viborg: Slægtsarkivet, 1987.

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25

Ezell, Margaret J. M. Single-Authored Volumes of Verse. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780191849572.003.0005.

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Although the Interregnum has been described as a dark period in the promotion of the arts, an unusual number of single-authored volumes of verse were printed, often by Humphrey Mosley. Among the published poets whose reputations were established before the war were Sir John Suckling, Robert Herrick and Abraham Cowley while new voices include Henry and Thomas Vaughan, several women poets including Margaret Cavendish, Anne Bradstreet, ‘Eliza’, Anna Trapnel, and Elizabeth Major.
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26

Ciriaco, Dominic G. A Woman for All Seasons: Margaret Anna Cusack. Leonine Publishers, 2015.

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27

Thomas, Emily. Early British Reactions to Absolutism: 1664 to 1687. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198807933.003.0006.

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This chapter considers early British reactions to absolutism between the start of Barrow’s pertinent lectures in 1664, and the publication of Newton’s Principia in 1687. Although the amount of discussion absolutism received in Britain during this period was much less than it would receive later, it was already capturing the attention of some important thinkers. The reactions to absolutism were mixed. Different kinds of absolutism about space or time was adopted by thinkers such as Samuel Parker, Robert Boyle, and John Turner. In contrast, absolutism was rejected by philosophers such as Margaret Cavendish, Ralph Cudworth, Nathaniel Fairfax, and Anne Conway.
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28

O'Neill, Margaret Rose. The life of Mother Clare: "Out from the shadow of the Upas tree", a biography of Margaret Anna Cusack. Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace, 1990.

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29

Royal Princesses of the 20th Century Paper Dolls : 5 Princesses: Alexandra, Anne, Grace, Margaret Rose, Diane. Paper Studio Press, 2020.

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30

Sloniowski, Jeannette, and Marilyn Rose. Popular Fiction. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199679775.003.0028.

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This chapter examines the history of popular fiction in Canada. In Canada, popular culture reflects not only Canadian experience but also cultural anxieties as they have permeated and shaped the national imaginary since the days of settlement. The most significant component of that national imaginary in relation to popular narrative is probably what might be called an evolving Gothic sensibility. Gothicism refers to the portrayal of strange or frightening experiences in mysterious and daunting places and spaces. The chapter considers a number of earlier Canadian novels that stand out in the Canadian popular imagination, including L. M. Montgomery's Anne of Green Gables (1908), Margaret Laurence's The Diviners (1974). It also discusses genre fiction in the modern and contemporary periods, such as Harlequin Enterprises (founded Winnipeg 1949) and women's romances, crime fiction, fantasy, and speculative fiction, notably William Gibson's cyberpunk novel Neuromancer (1984).
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31

Harris, Frances. 1660–1688. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198802440.003.0003.

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The first chapter traces the friendship of Godolphin and Marlborough from their early years at the Restoration court, through the Exclusion crisis until the Revolution of 1688. Both marry for love at a time when many men with no inherited fortune regard wives and families as encumbrances they cannot afford, but Margaret Godolphin dies early in childbirth. They share a diplomatic mission to William of Orange in 1678, and afterwards their friendship enables them to work in different ways towards his intervention to defeat the Catholicizing policies of James II, so that England can participate in a European alliance against the expansionism of Louis XIV. When James flees to France in 1688 both Churchill and Godolphin accept William and Mary as de facto monarchs, though their strongest loyalties are to Mary’s sister Anne, with whom Sarah Churchill has become a favourite.
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32

The family record of David Rittenhouse: Including his sisters Esther, Anne and Eleanor : also, Benjamin Rittenhouse and Margaret Rittenhouse Morgan. Norristown, Pa: Herald Print. and Binding Rooms, 1985.

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33

Gullette, Margaret Morganroth. Safe at Last in the Middle Years: The Invention of the Midlife Progress Novel: Saul Bellow, Margaret Drabble, Anne Tyler, and John Updike. Backinprint.com, 2000.

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34

Backes, Uwe, Alexander Gallus, Eckhard Jesse, and Tom Thieme, eds. Jahrbuch Extremismus & Demokratie (E & D). Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783748911555.

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Das Jahrbuch „Extremismus & Demokratie“ fördert die wissenschaftliche Beschäftigung mit dem Problemkreis des politischen Extremismus in seinen verschiedenen Ausprägungen. Es versteht sich als Diskussionsforum, Nachschlagewerk und Orientierungshilfe zugleich. Der 32. Band dokumentiert, kommentiert und analysiert umfassend die Entwicklung im Berichtsjahr 2019. Aktuelle Schwerpunkte bilden u. a. die Auseinandersetzung mit dem Hufeisenmodell und dem Gebot der Äquidistanz, die linkspopulistische Bewegung #aufstehen, die Autonomiebestrebungen in Schottland, der Islamische Staat, die linksextremistische Interventionistische Linke, eine aktuelle Untersuchung der rechtsextremistischen und rechtsterroristischen Akteure in Deutschland sowie eine Ursachsenanalyse der Radikalisierung von Islamisten. Neben Analysen, Daten und Dokumenten findet sich ein umfassender Literaturteil mit Rezensionen der wichtigsten Publikationen zu Fragen von Extremismus und Demokratie in Geschichte und Gegenwart. Mit Beiträgen von Alexander Akel, Uwe Backes, Dirk Baehr, Manuel Becker, Harald Bergsdorf , Klaus von Beyme, Evelyn Bokler-Völkel, Marcel Boldorf, Wilfried von Bredow, Stefan Breuer, Hubertus Buchstein, Juliane Clegg, Philipp Currle, Frank Decker, Norman Domeier, Jost Dülffer, Kristin Eichhorn, Alexander Gallus, Phillipp Gassert, Michael Gehler, Birgit Glorius, Stefan Goertz, Sebastian Gräfe, Bernd Greiner, Katrin Groh, Florian Grotz, Thomas Grumke, Anna-Maria Haase, Jens Hacke, Stephan Hilsberg, Kai Hirschmann, Lukas Hämisch, Thomas Jäger, Helge F. Jani, Hans-Gerd Jaschke, Eckhard Jesse, Ralph Jessen, Thomas Kern, Ilko-Sascha Kowalczuk, Wolfgang Kraushaar, Jakob Kullik, Jürgen P. Lang, Oliver W. Lembcke, Sebastian Liebold, Josefa Loebell, Tom Mannewitz, Miroslav Mareš, Julian Meinelt, Tilman Mayer, Reinhard Mehring, Lazaros Miliopoulos, Werner Müller, Helmut Müller-Enbergs, Herfried Münkler, Beate Neuss, Paul Nolte, Robert Chr. van Ooyen, Torsten Oppelland, Isabelle-Christine Panreck, Anton Pelinka, Armin Pfahl-Traughber, Gert Pickel, Jürgen Plöhn, Kim C. Priemel, Robert Radu, Claudia Ritzi, Gabriel Rolfes, Philp Rosin, Martin Sabrow, Kurt Schilde, Christine Schirrmacher, Mike Schmeitzner, Brigitte Seebacher, Daniel Siemens, Grit Straßenberger, Martina Steber, Roland Sturm, Tom Thieme, Hendrik Thoß, Margarete Tiessen, Heike Tuchscheerer, Daniela Weber, Manès Weisskircher, Bernd Jürgen Wendt, Nikolaus Werz, Gerhard Wettig, Benedikt Wintgens, Sandra Wirth und Samuel Zeitlin.
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35

Broad, Jacqueline, ed. Women Philosophers of Seventeenth-Century England. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190673321.001.0001.

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This volume is an edited collection of private letters and published epistles to and from English women philosophers of the early modern period (c. 1650–1700). It includes the letters and epistles of Margaret Cavendish, Anne Conway, Damaris Cudworth Masham, and Elizabeth Berkeley Burnet. These women were the correspondents of some of the best-known intellectuals of the period, including Constantijn Huygens, Walter Charleton, Henry More, Joseph Glanvill, John Locke, Jean Le Clerc, and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Their epistolary exchanges range over a wide variety of philosophical subjects, from religion, moral theology, and ethics to epistemology, metaphysics, and natural philosophy. The volume includes a main introduction by the editor, which explains the significance of the letters and epistles with respect to early modern scholarship and the study of women philosophers. It is argued that this selection of texts demonstrates the intensely collaborative and gender-inclusive nature of philosophical discussion in this period. To help situate each woman’s thought in its historical-intellectual context, the volume also includes original introductory essays for each principal figure, showing how her correspondences contributed to the formation of her own views as well as those of her better-known male contemporaries. The text also provides detailed scholarly annotations, explaining obscure philosophical ideas and archaic words and phrases in the letters and epistles. Among its critical apparatus, the volume also includes a note on the texts, a bibliography, and an index.
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36

Prescott, Cynthia, and Maureen Sherrard Thompson, eds. Backstories: The Kitchen Table Talk Cookbook. The Digital Press at the University of North Dakota, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31356/dpb018.

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Sharing recipes is a form of intimate conversation that nourishes body and soul, family and community. Backstories: The Kitchen Table Talk Cookbook integrates formal scholarship with informal reflections, analyses of recipe books with heirloom recipes, and text with images to emphasize the ways that economics, politics, and personal meaning come together to shape our changing relationships with food. By embracing elements of history, rural studies, and women’s studies, this volume offers a unique perspective by relating food history with social dynamics. It is sure to inspire eclectic dining and conversations. Cynthia C. Prescott is Professor of History at the University of North Dakota and an occasional baker. Her research focuses on portrayals of rural women in cultural memory. Maureen Sherrard Thompson is a Ph.D. candidate at Florida International University. Her dissertation focuses on business, environmental, and gender perspectives associated with the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century seed industry. With contributions by: Linda Ambrose, Samantha K. Ammons, Jenny Barker Devine, Nikki Berg Burin, Lynne Byall Benson, Eli Bosler, Carla Burgos, Joseph Cates, Diana Chen, Myrtle Dougall, Egge, Margaret Thomas Evans, Dee Garceau, Tracey Hanshew, Kathryn Harvey, Mazie Hough, Sarah Kesterson, Marie Kenny, Hannah Peters Jarvis, Katherine Jellison, M. Jensen, Cherisse Jones-Branch, Katie Mayer, Amy L. McKinney, Diane McKenzie, Krista Lynn Minnotte, Elizabeth H. Morris, Sara E. Morris, Mary Murphy, Stephanie Noell, Pamela Riney-Kehrberg, Virginia Scharff, Rebecca Sharpless, Rachel Snell, Joan Speyer, Pamela Snow Sweetser, Rebecca Shimoni Stoil, Erna van Duren, Audrey Williams, Catharine Anne Wilson, Jean Wilson.
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37

(Editor), Betty S. Travitsky, and Patrick Cullen (Editor), eds. The Early Modern Englishwoman: A Facsimile Library of Essential Works : Printed Writings, 1500-1640 : Anne, Margaret, and Jane Seymour (Early Modern Englishwoman: ... a Facsimile Library of Essential Works). 2nd ed. Ashgate Publishing, 1996.

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38

Roger, Hudson, ed. The Grand quarrel: From the Civil War memoirs of Mrs Lucy Hutchinson; Mrs Alice Thornton; Ann, Lady Fanshawe; Margaret, Duchess of Newcastle; Anne, Lady Halkett, & the letters of Brilliana, Lady Harley. London: The Folio Society, 1993.

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39

The Last Medieval Queens: English Queenship 1445-1503. Oxford University Press, USA, 2005.

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