Academic literature on the topic 'England and Wales. Royal Navy'

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Journal articles on the topic "England and Wales. Royal Navy"

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Inskip, Hazel. "The Mortality of Royal Naval Submariners 1960–1989." Journal of The Royal Naval Medical Service 83, no. 1 (March 1997): 19–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jrnms-83-19.

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AbstractThe mortality pattern of 15,318 Royal Naval submariners has been examined to assess the long term effects on health of serving in submarines. The main outcome measures used were standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) which present the submariners’ mortality rates as a percentage of those for men in England and Wales. The SMR for all causes of death combined was low at 86, this being comparable to findings in other studies of Armed Forces personnel. Cancer mortality was particularly low with an SMR of 69 and there was no particular cancer site which showed an excess. Raised mortality from digestive diseases was seen; the excess was attributable to cirrhosis of the liver which gave rise to an SMR of 221 based on 12 deaths, alcohol being a contributory factor in eight. This excess mortality from cirrhosis was concentrated in the period 1970-79 and occurred in men who had left the Royal Navy. Deaths from accidents and violence were also higher than expected with an SMR of 115, but this was due to high levels of accidents occurring after discharge from the Navy.
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Гаврилов, С. Н. "«YOU MAKE NO MEN OF US, BUT BEASTS» SAILORS OF THE ENGLISH ROYAL NAVY AT THE END OF THE XVI CENTURY." Британские исследования, no. VII(VII) (June 1, 2022): 60–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.21267/aquilo.2022.vii.vii.011.

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Эпоха правления династии Тюдор в Англии — время рождения военного флота, его превращения из средневекового «события» в постоянно действующий институт. Не удивительно, что военно-морские силы этого периода традиционно привлекают внимание исследователей. В ходе развития науки менялись научные подходы и направления в исследовании истории королевского флота: от героической истории, объектом которой становились прославленные флотоводцы и победы, до институциональной истории, фокусировавшейся на исследовании повседневных механизмов функционирования военно-морских сил. Вне поля зрения ученых долгое время оставалась история простых моряков, без которых были бы невозможны как победы на море, так и само существование «морских стен Англии». Данная статья посвящена изучению положения английских моряков конца тюдоровской эпохи, ознаменовавшейся не только успешной защитой независимости страны, но и началом ее превращения в будущую Британскую империю. The epoch of the Tudor dynasty in England is the time of the emergence of the navy, its transformation from a medieval “event” into a permanent institution. It is not surprising that the naval forces of this period traditionally attract the attention of researchers. In the course of the development of science, scientific approaches and directions in the study of the history of the Royal Navy changed: from heroic history, the object of which became famous naval commanders and victories, to institutional history, focusing on the study of everyday mechanisms of the functioning of naval forces. For a long time, the history of ordinary sailors remained out of sight of scientists. But without sailors both victories at sea and the very existence of the “sea walls of England” would have been impossible. This article is devoted to the study of the history of sailors at the end of the Tudor epoch, which was marked not only by the successful defense of the independence of England, but also by the beginning of transformation this country into the future British Empire
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Battesti, Michèle. "Les aléas de la stratégie de Napoléon sur mer." Revue Historique des Armées 241, no. 4 (2005): 68–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/rharm.2005.5764.

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The risks of Napoleon's maritime strategy ; Evaluating Napoleon’s relations with his navy and his maritiume strategy is like trying to shine light into a black hole. Only the defeats have gone down into history - Aboukir, Trafalgar - the underside, as it were, of the glories of the Napoleonic era. Yet in exile on St. Helena Napoleon, with some justification, declared himself satisfied with his record at sea. This article seeks to explain this apparent paradox. On assuming power, Napoleon inherited a French navy crippled by six years of war and blockade. He got to grips with making improvements quite effectively, but realised that he would need ten years of peace to fashion a fleet capable of challenging Britain’s Royal Navy with any prospect of suc¬ cess. The ending of the Peace of Amiens (1803) left France virtually disarmed at sea, certainly compared with the protection afforded Britain by its insular position and the ‘wooden walls’ of her fleet. To escape this strategic impasse, Napoleon decided to attempt an invasion of Britain. He based his plan on the assembly of a large fleet of shallow-draught barges to project the Grand Army, 150,000 soldiers, across the Channel. But the plan became delayed. And the more time passed, the greater the complications that emerged, and the clearer became the need for an accompanying sea-going fleet. In 1805 Napoleon attempted a large-scale manoeuvre aimed at concentrating the squadrons of the French fleet in the rear of the British - in the West Indies - before bringing them unexpectedly and suddenly back into Channel waters to cover the passage of the Grand Army to England. The plan failed, but it resulted in the Battle of Trafalgar, which ought never to have taken place. Napoleon, who at first sought to deny the scale of that defeat, did not give up on the French navy. On the contrary, he had it rebuilt once again and raised to the level of the fleet in 1789. He hoped that Britain would lower its guard, to enable him at some point to deliver her a mortal blow. Thus, contrary to what is often argued, Napoleon did understand the mysteries of naval strategy. He realised that a full-scale naval recovery could not be achieved in wartime, whilst Britain retained its mastery of the waves. Yet, and to his credit, he persevered.
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Langton, John. "Royal and non-royal forests and chases in England and Wales." Historical Research 88, no. 241 (May 5, 2015): 381–401. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2281.12098.

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Miller, Benjamin T., and Don K. Nakayama. "In Close Combat: Vice-Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson's Injuries in the Napoleonic Wars." American Surgeon 85, no. 11 (November 2019): 1304–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000313481908501141.

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Born in Norfolk, England, on September 29, 1758, Horatio Nelson was the sixth of eleven children in a working-class family. With the help of his uncle, Maurice Suckling, a captain in the Royal Navy, Nelson began his naval career as a 13-year-old midshipman on the British battleship Raisonnable. His courage and leadership in the battle marked him for promotion, and he rose quickly from midshipman to admiral, serving in the West Indies, East Indies, North America, Europe, and even the Arctic. As his rank ascended, Nelson's consistent strategy was close engagement, an approach that led to success in combat but placed him in direct danger. Thus, Britain's greatest warrior was also her most famous patient: Nelson suffered more injuries and underwent more operations than any other flag officer in Royal Navy history. His career reached a climax off Cape Trafalgar, where he not only led the Royal Navy to victory over the combined French and Spanish fleets but also met his own death.
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Neufeld, Matthew. "The Biopolitics of Manning the Royal Navy in Late Stuart England." Journal of British Studies 56, no. 3 (July 2017): 506–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2017.61.

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AbstractThis article examines the Royal Navy's implementation between 1690 and 1710 of new and publicly controversial policies, grounded in quantitative technologies, to manage the multitude of English seamen. These policies and their promotion can be profitably interpreted using the Foucauldian concept of biopolitics. Naval biopolitics meant mobilizing and promoting political arithmetic in the service of the fiscal-naval state. Thus, naval biopolitics was both a new model of statecraft and a form of state publicity, that is, a genre of works that strove to influence government policy and public opinion by promoting projects that a polemicist argued the state could and should undertake to better govern its subjects. The directives, legislation, and pamphlet literature of naval biopolitics projected a fiscal-naval state capable of counting, tracking, and mobilizing the national stock of seamen onto its ships in a predictable, salubrious, and, most crucially, orderly fashion. However, English naval biopolitics endured much longer as a genre of state propaganda than as a method of mobilizing the population of seamen onto ships.
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Campbell, Ewan, and Alan Lane. "Llangorse: a 10th-century royal crannog in Wales." Antiquity 63, no. 241 (December 1989): 675–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x0007681x.

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Crannogs, artificial island settlements built of stone and timber in lakes, are a feature of Scotland and Ireland from later prehistoric times to the medieval period. They have been absent from England and Wales until the recognition that is reported here of the Llangorse site–known and puzzling for a century–as a first Welsh crannog, and a special one.
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Carroll, Alan. "Obituary." Polar Record 43, no. 3 (July 2007): 287–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247407006390.

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Victor Aloysius Jean-Baptiste Marchesi was born in London on 25 January 1914 and was educated at St. Joseph's in Norwood before joining the Merchant Navy. He later served fifteen months as fourth mate on RRS Discovery in 1936–7. He returned to a country preparing for the possibility of war, and joined the Royal Navy as a Sub-Lieutenant specialising in hydrographic survey. While serving as First Lieutenant on HMS Franklin surveying waters off southeast England in 1943, he received a signal requesting him to report to Lieutenant Commander Jimmy Marr at the Admiralty.
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Doe, Norman. "The Church in Wales and the State: A Juridical Perspective." Journal of Anglican Studies 2, no. 1 (June 2004): 99–124. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/174035530400200110.

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ABSTRACTIn 1536 Wales (Cymru) and England were formally united by an Act of Union of the English Parliament. At the English Reformation, the established Church of England possessed four dioceses in Wales, part of the Canterbury Province. In 1920 Parliament disestablished the Church of England in Wales. The Welsh Church Act 1914 terminated the royal supremacy and appointment of bishops, the coercive jurisdiction of the church courts, and pre-1920 ecclesiastical law, applicable to the Church of England, ceased to exist as part of public law in Wales. The statute freed the Church in Wales (Yr Eglwys yng Nghymru) to establish its own domestic system of government and law, the latter located in its Constitution, pre-1920 ecclesiastical law (which still applies to the church unless altered by it), elements of the 1603 Canons Ecclesiastical and even pre-Reformation Roman canon law. The Church in Wales is also subject to State law, including that of the National Assembly for Wales. Indeed, civil laws on marriage and burial apply to the church, surviving as vestiges of establishment. Under civil law, the domestic law of the church, a voluntary association, binds its members as a matter of contract enforceable, in prescribed circumstances, in State courts.
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Andoh, Benjamin. "The Informal Patient in England and Wales." Medicine, Science and the Law 40, no. 2 (April 2000): 147–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002580240004000211.

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The informal status of a patient is a very important topic because the vast majority of mental patients in hospital are informal. The origins of the status are traced to the Royal Commissions of 1924–6 and 1954–7 which recommended voluntary admissions and informal admissions, respectively. It is pointed out, inter alia, that it is only generally true to say the informal patient has consented to admission and cannot be treated without his or her consent because exceptionally he or she can be given such treatment, e.g. on the grounds of necessity, as held by the House of Lords in R v Bournewood Community and Mental Health Trust (1998) and that today there are two types of informal patients: those who can, and do, consent to admission, and those who cannot consent to admission, but do not show willingness to leave hospital. It is argued that there is only a power under the Mental Health Act 1983 to admit patients informally. Finally, the informal patient's consent to admission, consent to treatment, other rights, leaving hospital, and how his or her position can be improved are looked at.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "England and Wales. Royal Navy"

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Sinnott, Catherine Agnes. "A bioarchaeological and historical analysis of scurvy in eighteenth and nineteenth century England." Thesis, Cranfield University, 2015. http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/9150.

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The identification of metabolic diseases is a crucial aspect of osteoarchaeological analysis and of paleopathological studies. This study is specifically concerned with the study of scurvy and its bony manifestation. This investigation considers the recognition of the bony lesions of scurvy in adult skeletons that originate from English archaeological contexts dating to the Post Medieval period. In order to identify scorbutic bony lesions, assemblages were analysed that derived from the Georgian period Navy that were known to suffer from endemic scurvy, namely Haslar hospital near Portsmouth and Stonehouse hospital in Plymouth. These assemblages were complemented by two Non-Naval skeletal collections of a broadly contemporaneous time period, one of which was a prison assemblage from Oxford Castle in Oxford and the other was from Darwen, Lancashire and consisted of a Primitive Methodist cemetery. For the purpose of this study, an extensive literature review was carried out and a specially modified scurvy recording form was created. In total three hundred and fifty-eight skeletons were analysed using the scurvy recording form on which a total of twenty-one potential scorbutic indicators were scored. The data was then subject to statistical analysis and a set of primary and secondary scorbutic indicators was established. The primary scorbutic lesions were femur, sphenoid, posterior maxilla, scapula, endocranial and mandible. Nine secondary lesions were also established and these were lesions of the foot, humerus, ulna, radius, hand, clavicle, innominate, fibula and the ectocranial surface of the skull. In total, 66.7% of the Haslar assemblage was found to have suffered from scurvy, followed by Plymouth with 20.6%, Darwen with 16.4% and Oxford Castle with 7.9%. It was found that scurvy could be identified in adult skeletal material through the recognition of a number of lesions that could not be attributed to any other disease process. The results indicated that scurvy was present in all of the skeletal collections studied but was more common in the Naval assemblages. This is an important development in the detection of scurvy in the archaeological record and is crucial in the reconstruction of past diets and metabolic disease patterns.
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Sinnott, C. A. "A bioarchaeological and historical analysis of scurvy in eighteenth and nineteenth century England." Thesis, 2015. http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/9150.

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The identification of metabolic diseases is a crucial aspect of osteoarchaeological analysis and of paleopathological studies. This study is specifically concerned with the study of scurvy and its bony manifestation. This investigation considers the recognition of the bony lesions of scurvy in adult skeletons that originate from English archaeological contexts dating to the Post Medieval period. In order to identify scorbutic bony lesions, assemblages were analysed that derived from the Georgian period Navy that were known to suffer from endemic scurvy, namely Haslar hospital near Portsmouth and Stonehouse hospital in Plymouth. These assemblages were complemented by two Non-Naval skeletal collections of a broadly contemporaneous time period, one of which was a prison assemblage from Oxford Castle in Oxford and the other was from Darwen, Lancashire and consisted of a Primitive Methodist cemetery. For the purpose of this study, an extensive literature review was carried out and a specially modified scurvy recording form was created. In total three hundred and fifty-eight skeletons were analysed using the scurvy recording form on which a total of twenty-one potential scorbutic indicators were scored. The data was then subject to statistical analysis and a set of primary and secondary scorbutic indicators was established. The primary scorbutic lesions were femur, sphenoid, posterior maxilla, scapula, endocranial and mandible. Nine secondary lesions were also established and these were lesions of the foot, humerus, ulna, radius, hand, clavicle, innominate, fibula and the ectocranial surface of the skull. In total, 66.7% of the Haslar assemblage was found to have suffered from scurvy, followed by Plymouth with 20.6%, Darwen with 16.4% and Oxford Castle with 7.9%. It was found that scurvy could be identified in adult skeletal material through the recognition of a number of lesions that could not be attributed to any other disease process. The results indicated that scurvy was present in all of the skeletal collections studied but was more common in the Naval assemblages. This is an important development in the detection of scurvy in the archaeological record and is crucial in the reconstruction of past diets and metabolic disease patterns.
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Gabriel, Sauvé. "La pensée navale et le débat sur la torpille en Angleterre au cours de la décennie 1880." Thèse, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/6968.

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L’évolution du débat sur la pensée navale en Angleterre de la décennie 1880, suivant la fin d’une période d’intenses changements technologiques dans les marines de guerre est marquée par le déclin d’un mode de réflexion matériel et l’ascension, à partir des années 1885 et 1886, de l’école historique de John Knox Laughton. Selon la méthode matérielle, populaire au cours de la période de transformation technique, la guerre sur mer est entièrement tributaire du Progrès, tandis que, pour les tenants de la méthode historique, des principes et des leçons immuables la régissent. À travers l’évolution de ce débat, on constate l’introduction, par la Jeune École française, d’une perspective matérialiste et de la stratégie navale comme objet de réflexion, et son exploitation par l’école historique anglaise. L’émergence de la stratégie comme sujet de débat coïncide donc avec le triomphe de l’école historique. Croyant que la torpille allait démocratiser la puissance navale en empêchant le belligérant le plus puissant d’user de sa maîtrise des mers, la Jeune École connut un succès fulgurant qui déborda des côtes françaises et atteint l’Angleterre. Néanmoins, les matérialistes anglais, demeurant beaucoup plus modérés que les français, furent finalement marginalisés par une école historique utilisant les exagérations de la Jeune École, dont les insuffisances sont apparues lors des manœuvres de l’été 1886, pour disqualifier entièrement la méthode matérielle. Étudiant les débats du Royal United Service Institution Journal, ce mémoire démontre l’existence, en Angleterre, au cours de la décennie 1880, d’un débat polarisé au contraire d’une historiographie ne montrant que l’ascension des précurseurs de Mahan et de l’école historique.
Great Britain saw in the 1880s, at the end of a period of intense technical change and before the publication of Mahan’s classic on Sea Power, the decline of the material way of thinking about naval affairs and the rise, from the years 1885 and 1886, of the historical school of John Knox Laughton. Proponents of a material method established the idea that technological change altered naval warfare in a fundamentally way. They were, however, opposed by the partisans of a historical method who supported the idea that naval warfare is set on some timeless principles which can be discovered by the use of the methods of the new historical profession. Throughout the decade, the material method, successful in an era of rapid technological change, quickly subsumed to Mahan’s precursors. In a debate originally dominated by tactics, we observe the introduction of strategy by the French materialist Jeune École. Consequently, strategy became the core of the historical school and seems closely linked to the rise of strategy as a subject of reflection. The Jeune École believed that the torpedo would democratize Sea Power in making the powerful navies to use its mastery over the oceans. The Jeune École’s original success was so great, in France and abroad, that it influenced the English’s debate. Although materialists in Great Britain where more moderate than in France, they finally got marginalize by the historical school using the Jeune École’s wildest claims to disqualify the materialist point of view. Studying the debates through the Royal United Service Institution Journal, this thesis shows the existence, in Great Britain, of a debate centered on two method of thinking naval warfare and contributes to reassess current historiography which still focuses solely on the rise of Mahan’s precursors.
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Books on the topic "England and Wales. Royal Navy"

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Office, Great Britain Census, Great Britain Royal Navy, and Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints., eds. 1881 census of England and Wales: Royal Navy. [S.l.]: Corporation of the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, 1990.

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Seymour, Philip. Where the hell is Africa?: Memoirs of a junior naval officer in the mid-twentieth century. Edinburgh: Pentland Press, 1995.

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Wales, England and. An act for authorizing Col. Blake, Col. Popham, and Col. Dean, or any two of them, to be admiral & general of the fleet now at sea. London: Printed for Edward Husband ..., 1986.

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England and Wales. Sovereign (1689-1694 : William and Mary). By the King and Queen, a proclamation for encouraging mariners and seamen to enter themselves on Their Majesties ships of war. London: Printed by Charles Bill and the executrix of Thomas Newcomb deceas'd ..., 1985.

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England and Wales. Sovereign (1689-1694 : William and Mary). By the King and Queen, a proclamation requiring all seamen and mariners to render themselves to Their Majesties service. London: Printed by Charles Bill and Thomas Newcomb ..., 1985.

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Hornstein, Sari R. The restoration Navy and English foreign trade, 1674-1688: A study in the peacetime use of sea power. Aldershot, Hants, England: Scolar Press, 1991.

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Under the White Ensign: Brightlingsea and the sea war of 1939-1945. (S.l.): (J. P. Foynes), 1993.

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Burrows, Donald. Handel and the English Chapel Royal. London: Church Music Society, 1985.

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Christopher, Phillpotts, Museum of London. Archaeology Service, and English Heritage, eds. The Royal Navy victualling yard, East Smithfield, London. London: Museum of London Archaeology, 2010.

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Hodgson, Frederic. Choirs and cloisters: Seventy years of music in church, college, cathedral and Chapels Royal. 2nd ed. London: Thames, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "England and Wales. Royal Navy"

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Newburn, Tim. "The Royal Commission." In The Official History of Criminal Justice in England and Wales, 46–68. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003529965-4.

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Newburn, Tim. "Malpractice and another Royal Commission." In The Official History of Criminal Justice in England and Wales, 147–68. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003529965-9.

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"The Royal Commission." In The Tithe War in England and Wales, 1881-1936, 259–86. Boydell & Brewer Ltd, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/jj.11589153.17.

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Seligmann, Matthew S. "Handelskrieg gegen England." In The Royal Navy and the German Threat, 1901-1914, 7–24. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199574032.003.0002.

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Henley, Georgia. "Royal Aspirations." In Reimagining the Past in the Borderlands of Medieval England and Wales, 75–115. Oxford University PressOxford, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192856463.003.0003.

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Abstract This chapter focuses on the reimagining of British historical memory by the Mortimers of Wigmore in the late fourteenth century. At this time, Roger Mortimer, 4th earl of March, became the presumptive heir to Richard II, prompting chroniclers at Wigmore Abbey to draw together a compilation of historical texts and genealogies, several of which are edited by the author for the first time. These genealogies emphasized his right to rule in an elaborate presentation of hybrid English and Welsh ancestry. Using Welsh textual sources, genealogists traced his Welsh and English ancestry back to the legendary founders of Britain, doubling his claim to the throne. This creative refashioning of the past on the part of family chroniclers illustrates the leverage of Welsh familial connections by marcher baronial families. Their efforts positioned Roger Mortimer as uniquely qualified to unite the kingdoms of Britain and offered an important model for Edward IV’s and Henry Tudor’s later uses of Welsh ancestry to support their own royal claims.
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"9 The Royal Commission." In The Tithe War in England and Wales, 1881-1936, 259–86. Boydell and Brewer, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781805433361-014.

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Ugolini, Wendy. "First World War Identities." In Wales in England, 1914-1945, 117–39. Oxford University PressOxford, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198863274.003.0005.

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Abstract ‘First World War Identities’ focuses on the military phenomenon of the mobilization and enlistment of English men with Welsh antecedents into active service units during the First World War. In particular, it addresses the identity politics behind the establishment of the 15th (1st London Welsh), Royal Welch Fusiliers. It underlines how, for a cohort of male English volunteers, Wales and Welshness held some form of meaning at the point of their military enlistment. It analyses Lloyd George’s wartime relationship with the London Welsh soldier, William Pugh Hinds, the son of John Hinds MP, to illuminate the ways in which politicized displays of Welsh patriotism in the metropolis were implicated in the military voluntarism of a cohort of English soldiers. It provides a case study of the dual identity construction of David Jones who immortalized his military service in the Royal Welch Fusiliers in the epic poem, In Parenthesis (1937).
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Muir, Rory. "The Navy." In Gentlemen of Uncertain Fortune, 194–211. Yale University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300244311.003.0009.

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This chapter takes a look at the navy. For many boys growing up in England in the eighteenth century, the Royal Navy was immensely glamorous, the object of intense fascination. There was almost universal agreement that the navy was Britain's own particular strength, and that unlike the army, the navy defended the country and promoted trade without threatening traditional English liberties. Even in peacetime there were naval exploits to capture the imagination. A career at sea, especially in the navy, appeared exciting, romantic, and desirable; and there were numerous cases of young boys either running away to sea or demanding that their parents allow them to join the navy. Many parents favoured the navy as a career for their younger sons on more pragmatic grounds. It was traditional, patriotic, and thoroughly respectable.
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"Back to England, July–December 1772." In A Boston Schooner in the Royal Navy, 1768-1772, 116–36. Boydell & Brewer Ltd, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2z5513w.13.

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"5 Back to England, July–December 1772." In A Boston Schooner in the Royal Navy, 1768-1772, 116–36. Boydell and Brewer, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781800107847-011.

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Conference papers on the topic "England and Wales. Royal Navy"

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Oligbu, G., A. Djennad, S. Collins, CL Sheppard, NK Fry, R. Borrow, NJ Andrew, and S. Ladhani. "G54 Impact of pneumococcal conjugate vaccines on pneumococcal meningitis in england and wales, 2000 – 2016." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the Annual Conference, 13–15 March 2018, SEC, Glasgow, Children First – Ethics, Morality and Advocacy in Childhood, The Journal of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2018-rcpch.52.

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Oligbu, G., S. Collins, CL Shepherd, NK Fry, M. Slack, R. Borrow, and S. Ladhani. "G359(P) Childhood deaths attributable to invasive pneumococcal disease in england and wales, 2006–2014." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the Annual Conference, 24–26 May 2017, ICC, Birmingham. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2017-313087.352.

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Ahmed, L., GI Oligbu, L. Ferraras, and SN Ladhani. "G610(P) Retrospective analysis of neonatal deaths secondary to infections in England and Wales, 2013–2015." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the RCPCH Conference–Online, 25 September 2020–13 November 2020. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2020-rcpch.524.

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Vassallo, J., M. Webster, E. Barnard, M. Fragoso-Iñiguez, MD Lyttle, and JE Smith. "G296(P) Epidemiology and aetiology of paediatric traumatic cardiac arrest in england and wales, a peruki study." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the Annual Conference, 24–26 May 2017, ICC, Birmingham. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2017-313087.289.

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Sanner, JRF, and MN Hurley. "G32 Improving survival of those with cerebral palsy in England and Wales over the last 18 years." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the RCPCH Conference–Online, 25 September 2020–13 November 2020. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2020-rcpch.21.

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Stuttaford, L., M. Chakraborty, A. Carson-Stevens, and C. Powell. "G190 Patient safety incidents in neonatology: a 10-year descriptive analysis of reports from nhs england and wales." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the Annual Conference, 13–15 March 2018, SEC, Glasgow, Children First – Ethics, Morality and Advocacy in Childhood, The Journal of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2018-rcpch.185.

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Veeraraghavan, Nirubhan, Magali Dubus, Stacey Brown, and Vimal Vasu. "1699 A descriptive analysis of Coronial prevention of future death reports relating to neonatal patients in England & Wales (2015–2020)." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the RCPCH Conference–Online, 15 June 2021–17 June 2021. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2021-rcpch.802.

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Denaxa, D., A. Ghattamaneni, S. Dixon, L. Niland, P. Arkwright, and C. Lumsden. "G599(P) Design and implementation of a database for real-time reporting and analytics of paediatric allergy outpatient clinic attendances and outcomes in the north west of England and North Wales." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the RCPCH Conference–Online, 25 September 2020–13 November 2020. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2020-rcpch.514.

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Eaton, P. A., and D. Webster. "HMS Queen Elizabeth Aircraft Carrier: The Challenges and Successes of Commissioning, Trialling and Delivering an Integrated Full Electric Power and Propulsion System." In 14th International Naval Engineering Conference and Exhibition. IMarEST, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.24868/issn.2515-818x.2018.069.

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Abstract:
HMS Queen Elizabeth (QNLZ), procured by the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) for the Royal Navy (RN) from the Aircraft Carrier Alliance (ACA), is the first aircraft carrier in the world to utilise an Integrated Full Electrical Power and Propulsion System (IFEP). While building on the design and lessons learned from the UK RN’s Type 45 Destroyer, the first front line warship to utilise IFEP, it also presented a step change in size and complexity, not only of the high voltage (HV) electrical power and propulsion (PandP) system and its automation control system, but also the ship’s wider distribution, control and auxiliary/ancillary systems, which both rely on and support the HV IFEP. Unlike its forerunner Type 45, QNLZ did not benefit from a full-scale shore-based test demonstrator with the cost/benefit decision being taken to carry the system integration and operational risk into the commissioning and trials phase of the project. The challenge presented to the ACA PandP Sub-Alliance (comprising Thales, GE Power Conversion, Rolls-Royce and L3) was therefore to develop a commissioning and trials strategy, programme and documentation set that would allow all elements of the IFEP to be set-to-work in as safe and efficient a manner as possible, with the goal of gaining acceptance from the MoD by delivering the required capability to the RN. This paper will present the methods adopted during this 10-year programme highlighting; 1. The processes followed to develop and then deliver a holistic integrated system commissioning strategy and plan. 2. The pull through and implementation of lessons learned and derisking from previous programmes. 3. The development of the detailed test and trials documentation to allow the PandP equipment and system to be commissioned, trialled and accepted allowing successful delivery into service. 4. The expected and unexpected challenges faced prior to and during the whole-system commissioning and trials phase and what was done to overcome these. 5. The planning and coordination of system integration and sea trials. 6. The lessons learned, successes and best practice that are being taken forward into the programme for HMS Prince of Wales (PWLS).
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