Academic literature on the topic 'Hounslow Manor (London, England)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Hounslow Manor (London, England)"

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Glass, Melissa. "“The Rust of Antiquity”?: Print Culture, Custom, and the Manorial Court Guidebooks of Early Modern England." Canadian Journal of History 56, no. 1 (2021): 1–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh-56-1-2020-0032.

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Early modern England’s manor courts were local institutions controlled by landlords, operated by their stewards, and governed by customary law. They fulfilled a wide variety of legislative, punitive, and adjudicative functions regarding the regulation of community resources and the resolution of minor conflicts between tenants. Starting in the mid-sixteenth century, publishers in London began to print short, accessible manuals that explained how to operate these manor courts. The eight manor court guidebooks published in English from 1561 to 1666 that are examined in this article illustrate th
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Holt, Ysanne. "Helen Sutherland in Interwar Northumberland: Patronage and Place." Modernist Cultures 19, no. 1 (2024): 33–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/mod.2024.0417.

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From 1928 to 1939 the art collector Helen Sutherland rented Rock Hall, a large manor house partly dating from the 13th century and located near the coast in rural Northumberland. Throughout this period, interspersed with regular returns to London, Rock served, in her words, as a ‘place of refuge and renewal’ for friends, including the painter and poet David Jones, curator and collector Jim Ede and artists Ben and Winifred Nicholson. This, for Sutherland, was a ‘greatly loved landscape of seashore, hills, saints, legends, birds and all the friends who came there’. Such a perception of the relat
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Beaver, Dan. "The Great Deer Massacre: Animals, Honor, and Communication in Early Modern England." Journal of British Studies 38, no. 2 (1999): 187–216. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/386189.

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I need not complain of the times; every traveler tells them; they are as clear to see as an Angel in the sun. (Henry Osborne, October 1642)In early October 1642, a tract of forest and deer chase in the Severn valley, northwest of Gloucester, known as Corse Lawn, became the site of a grisly spectacle. Richard Dowdeswell, a steward of the property, described the scene in a letter to Lionel Cranfield, earl of Middlesex, the absentee owner resident in Great St. Bartholomew in London. Dowdeswell delivered terrifying news of how “a rising of neighbors about Corse Lawn” destroyed more than 600 of Mid
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Bialuschewski, Arne. "Thomas Bowrey's Madagascar Manuscript of 1708." History in Africa 34 (2007): 31–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hia.2007.0002.

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In 1913 an old chest was discovered in a manor house in Worcestershire in the west of England. Packed with bundles of manuscripts, it contained several hundred letters and business papers written in a crabbed italic hand. These documents belonged to Thomas Bowrey, an English overseas merchant, who was born in 1662 and died in 1713. The collection of papers was later purchased by Colonel Henry Howard, and in 1931 part of it was presented to the Guildhall Library in London. These documents include an incomplete manuscript titled “Discription of the Coast of Affrica from the Cape of Good Hope, to
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Davis, John, and Bernard Lovell. "Robert Hanbury Brown. 31 August 1916 – 16 January 2002 Elected FRS 1960." Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 49 (January 2003): 83–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbm.2003.0005.

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Robert Hanbury Brown was born on 31 August 1916 in Aruvankadu, Nilgiri Hills, South India; he was the son of an Officer in the Indian Army, Col. Basil Hanbury Brown, and of Joyce Blaker. From the age of 3 years Hanbury was educated in England, initially at a School in Bexhill and then from the ages of 8 to 14 years at the Cottesmore Preparatory School in Hove, Sussex. In 1930 he entered Tonbridge School as a Judde scholar in classics. Hanbury's interests turned to science and technology, particularly electrical engineering, and after two years he decided that he would seek more appropriate edu
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Beatty, Derek C., and Christina G. Yap. "Forensic Hypoglycaemia & Neuroglycopenia — A Clinical Legal Social Endocrinology Challenge for 2024, Forensic Law in Hypoglycaemia 4." Current Research in Medical Sciences 3, no. 1 (2024): 58–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.56397/crms.2024.03.09.

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The author, Derek Beatty, was diagnosed with T1D Diabetes 45 years ago when living in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England. Symptoms of thirst, tiredness, difficulty in reading small print, led to GP doctor consultation with fasting blood glucose Biochemistry tests. Possible Genetic Inheritance may have contributed to reduced Immunogenic resistance to infection possibly triggered from business travel to several African Countries including Kenya, Zambia, Nigeria, Sudan, Egypt, South Africa. Add the trauma as witness to a fatal car crash in Bricket Wood, St Albans, when a driver of a Rolls Roy
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Thaning, Kaj. "Hvem var Clara? 1-3." Grundtvig-Studier 37, no. 1 (1985): 11–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/grs.v37i1.15940.

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Who was Clara?By Kaj ThaningIn this essay the author describes his search for Clara Bolton and her acquaintance with among others Benjamin Disraeli and the priest, Alexander d’Arblay, a son of the author, Fanny Burney. He gives a detailed account of Clara Bolton and leaves no doubt about the deep impression she made on Grundtvig, even though he met her and spoke to her only once in his life at a dinner party in London on June 24th 1830. Kaj Thaning has dedicated his essay to Dr. Oscar Wood, Christ Church College, Oxford, and explains why: “Just 30 years ago, while one of my daughters was worki
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Shearwood, Mark. "A summer on Hounslow Heath: Combined army operations in late-seventeenth-century England." War in History, July 8, 2021, 096834452110299. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09683445211029974.

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This article re-examines the purpose of the army summer training camps introduced by James II that became an intrinsic part of London and army life between 1686 and 1688. Current historiography has associated these camps purely with James II’s attempt to subjugate both London and its predominantly Protestant population. This article will argue that although there is no doubt that those opposed to James II viewed the camp as intimidation, that was not James II’s primary focus as there were better locations for any large-scale camp if this was the intended purpose. Using contemporary newspapers,
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Harris, Marc. "O4-5 A gamification-based intervention to encourage active travel." European Journal of Public Health 32, Supplement_2 (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac094.029.

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Abstract Background There are enormous economic, human, and environmental costs of inactivity, climate change, air pollution and congestion and active travel can help reduce and prevent these. In England, however, only 26% of all trips are made by walking and only 2% are made by cycling. Walking and cycling contribute just 4% of total distance travelled. ?Beat the Street' is a community-wide intervention which aims to increase active travel by turning an area into a 6-week game. Residents earn points and prizes by walking and cycling and tapping a smartcard on RFID readers called ?Beat Boxes'
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Harris, M. "A gamification-based intervention to encourage active travel." European Journal of Public Health 32, Supplement_3 (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac129.586.

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Abstract Purpose ‘Beat the Street’ is a community-wide intervention which aims to increase active travel by turning an area into a 6-week game. Residents earn points and prizes by walking and cycling and tapping a smartcard on RFID readers called ‘Beat Boxes’ placed on lampposts at half-mile intervals. To-date, over 1 million people have taken part in the intervention, however, the impact of the program on adult active travel is yet to be explored. Methods In Autumn 2019, Beat the Street was delivered throughout the London Borough of Hounslow. Prior, and immediately following the intervention,
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Books on the topic "Hounslow Manor (London, England)"

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Dr, Taylor Jeremy, and Museum of London. Archaeology Service, eds. Finsbury's moated manor, medieval land use and later development in the Finsbury Square area, Islington. Museum of London Archaeology, 2009.

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Klassen, Julie. Lady of Milkweed Manor. Baker Publishing Group, 2010.

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Klassen, Julie. Lady of Milkweed Manor. Bethany House, 2007.

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McIntosh, Marjorie Keniston. Autonomy and community: The royal manor of Havering, 1200-1500. Cambridge University Press, 1986.

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C, Winthrop Robert. A pedigree of the family of Winthrop: Lords of the manor of Groton, County Suffolk, England ; afterwards of Boston and New London, in New England. J. Wilson and Son, 1986.

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Maurice, Tomlin, and Victoria and Albert Museum, eds. Osterley Park House. Victoria and Albert Museum, 1985.

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Cameron, Andrea. Hounslow Town Past and Present. History Press Limited, The, 2005.

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Webb, W. Arthur. Sandford Manor, Fulham. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2018.

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Norman, Philip 1842-1931, and Walter H. 1881-1961 Godfrey. Eastbury Manor House, Barking: Being the Eleventh Monograph of the London Survey Committee. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2021.

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Eastbury Manor House, Barking. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2023.

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Book chapters on the topic "Hounslow Manor (London, England)"

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"Pneumatists Set the Atomic Stage: Boyle, Hooke, Newton, Black, Cavendish, Priestley, and Davy (Western England and Northumberland, Pennsylvania)." In Traveling with the Atom A Scientific Guide to Europe and Beyond. The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/9781788015288-00030.

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From about 1660 to 1800, pneumatic chemists produced and isolated gases or what were known as “airs”. We discuss the careers of seven pneumatists and early atomists and visit pertinent sites including the Royal Society in London, Newton's Woolsthorpe Manor in Grantham and his statue in the Trinity College Chapel in Cambridge, the Leeds Library and Mill Hill Chapel in Leeds, the Bowood House in Calne, and the Priestley House in the United States. Along the way, we discuss Robert Boyle's role as a chymist and chrysopoet (gold-maker), Isaac Newton's role as a devoted alchemist and atomist, the ro
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Daunton, M. J. "The Rise of the Great Estates and the Decline of the Yeoman." In Progress and Poverty. Oxford University PressOxford, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198222828.003.0003.

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Abstract ‘The distribution oflanded property’, remarked James Caird in 1878, ‘is, by the growing wealth of the country, constantly tending to a reduction in the number of small estates.’1 The increasing concentration of landownership fuelled political controversy in the nineteenth century, and one outcome was the compilation of figures on English landownership in 1873 which defenders of landed society hoped would refute the claim that the countryside was in the grip of a few great magnates. They were disappointed, for the ‘new domesday’ showed a concentrated pattern of ownership (Table 3.1). A
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