Academic literature on the topic 'Glasgow (Scotland). Incorporation of Tailors'

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Journal articles on the topic "Glasgow (Scotland). Incorporation of Tailors"

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Devine, T. M. "The Long Road: Catholic Schools and Catholic social integration since 1918 (Cardinal Winning Lecture, 2017)." Scottish Affairs 28, no. 1 (2019): 63–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/scot.2019.0265.

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Critics, past and present, of state-funded denominational education in Scotland after 1918 have often asserted that the system has promoted social division, separateness and even fostered sectarianism. This lecture – the Cardinal Winning Lecture, 2017, delivered to the St Andrew's Foundation for Catholic Teacher Education, University of Glasgow – disagrees with these views. Instead, the presentation argues that Catholic schooling, in addition to its recognised importance in Christian spiritual formation, has been a crucial influence promoting the integration of a formerly disadvantaged and mar
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Landsman, Ned. "Taxation with and without Representation: Malt Tax Riots in Scotland, Stamp Riots in North America, and the Prospects and Problems of Incorporating Union." Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 113, no. 3 (2024): 23–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tap.2024.a938827.

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Abstract: In 1774, as Parliament debated "Intolerable Acts" designed to punish the town of Boston for the Boston Tea Party, an American sympathizer remarked that government had never before imposed collective punishment on a whole community rather than on individual actors, as it was now doing in Britain's colonial dependencies. In fact that was incorrect, government replied, pointing to the aggressive use of force against Glasgow following the Malt Tax Riot in 1725 and Edinburgh after the Porteous Riots the following decade. All of those violent actions were responses by provincial sectors of
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Charles, Sally, and Hilary Nicoll. "Aberdeen, City of Culture?" M/C Journal 25, no. 3 (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.2903.

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Introduction This article explores the phenomenon of the Creative City in the context of Aberdeen, Scotland’s third-largest city. The common perception of Aberdeen is likely to revolve around its status, for the last 50 years, as Europe’s Oil & Gas Capital. However, for more than a decade Aberdeen’s city planners have sought to incorporate creativity and culture in their placemaking. The most visible expression of this was the unsuccessful 2013 bid to become the UK City of Culture 2017 (CoC), which was referred to as a “reality check” by Marie Boulton (BBC), the councillor charged with the
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MacGregor, Gavin, Julie Roberts, Adrian Cox, Michael Donnelly, Caitlin Evans, and John Arthur. "Excavation of an Iron Age burial mound, Loch Borralie, Durness, Sutherland." Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports 9 (January 1, 2004). http://dx.doi.org/10.9750/issn.1473-3803.2003.09.

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As part of the Historic Scotland Human Remains Call Off Contract, Glasgow University Archaeological Research Division (GUARD) undertook an archaeological evaluation of the find spot of a human skull from a cairn at Loch Borralie, Sutherland (NGR NC 3790 6761). Excavation recovered the remains of two burials beneath the cairn and established that the cairn was multi-phased. One individual was an adult male (Skeleton 1), while the other was immature and of undeterminable sex (Skeleton 2). Both individuals showed signs of ill health, and dogs and/or rats appear to have gnawed their bones. A ring-
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MacGregor, Gavin. "Excavation of an Iron Age burial mound, Loch Borralie, Durness, Sutherland." Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports, no. 9 (2003). http://dx.doi.org/10.9750/issn.2056-7421.2003.9.1-17.

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As part of the Historic Scotland Human Remains Call Off Contract, Glasgow University Archaeological Research Division (GUARD) undertook an archaeological evaluation of the find spot of a human skull from a cairn at Loch Borralie, Sutherland (NGR: NC 3790 6761). Excavation recovered the remains of two burials beneath the cairn and established that the cairn was multi-phased. One individual was an adult male (Skeleton 1), while the other was immature and of undeterminable sex (Skeleton 2). Both individuals showed signs of ill health, and dogs and/or rats appear to have gnawed their bones. A ring
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Books on the topic "Glasgow (Scotland). Incorporation of Tailors"

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Mair, Craig. History of the incorporation of coopers of Glasgow. Published for the Incorporation of Coopers of Glasgow by The Angels' Share, an imprint of Neil Wilson Publishing Ltd., 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Glasgow (Scotland). Incorporation of Tailors"

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Blair, Kirstie. "The Measure of Industry." In Working Verse in Victorian Scotland. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198843795.003.0004.

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Chapter 4 turns to the ways in which poets engaged with industrial cultures. It argues against a persistent narrative that Victorian Scottish writers ignored industrial change and developments, and shows that in relation to working-class writers, this is not the case. The first subsection studies poetic representations of industry in Lanarkshire, especially the heavily industrialized towns of Coatbridge and Airdrie. The second remains in the Glasgow/Lanarkshire area, but concentrates on miner-poets and the ways in which they discussed their work, with particular attention to poet David Wingate
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