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1

Sendino, Consuelo, and Andrew Tucker. "The Fossil Lithistida Collection at the Natural History Museum, London (UK)." Biodiversity Data Journal 10 (August 24, 2022): e87106. https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.10.e87106.

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This paper presents a quantitative and detailed description of the Fossil Lithistida Collection in the Natural History Museum, London. This collection started to be built with the first fossil sponges from the Cretaceous of Wiltshire, collected by William Smith in 1816 and 1818 for the first geological map of England. The latest specimen to enter the collection was collected from the Permo-Carboniferous of Norway by Angela Milner, a researcher at the Museum, in 2000. Although they are mostly from the Cretaceous of England, lithistids are represented from the Cambrian to Cenozoic of England. Th
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2

Miller, C. Giles, and Ronald L. Austin. "Conodont collections formerly housed at the University of Southampton, U.K." Journal of Paleontology 70, no. 3 (1996): 535. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002233600003849x.

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In 1994 an extensive collection of mainly Carboniferous conodonts was transferred from the Department of Geology, University of Southampton, England, to The Natural History Museum, London, on the retirement of R. L. Austin. The collection consists of approximately 2,000 slides of type/figured specimens and picked residue slides, which complement material previously deposited at The Natural History Museum, London. The following is a very brief resumé of figured material in the collection.
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3

Cosgrove, John W., Tom O. Morgan, and Richard Ghail. "The deformation history of southern England, and its implications for ground engineering in the London Basin." Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology 55, no. 2 (2021): qjegh2020–144. http://dx.doi.org/10.1144/qjegh2020-144.

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Structures in the basement beneath the London Basin affect the geology of relevance to geotechnical engineering within London. Unfortunately, the basement beneath London is covered by Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments. It is cut by major faults linked to the compressive phases of the Hercynian and Alpine orogenies and to the regional extension that occurred during the Mesozoic between these compressive events. Evidence is presented that movement on basement fractures beneath London played a major role in the distribution and deformation of sediments within the Basin, causing local folding and
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4

Jeans, Hannah. "Women and Manuscript News Culture in Early Modern England." Huntington Library Quarterly 86, no. 4 (2023): 653–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hlq.2023.a944187.

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ABSTRACT: Women’s news reading has often been overlooked by scholars of seventeenth-century news cultures. This article examines the manuscript newsletter collection of Lady Anne Pole, who received hundreds of newsletters in the 1690s and 1710s, to explore how she used her news reading as part of a process of ‘self-fashioning’ and as a form of political participation. It will also compare Pole’s collection to the manuscript newsletters of several other women, demonstrating that women can and should be seen as dedicated news consumers, and that they were able to maintain an active involvement i
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David, A. Rosalie. "William Flinders Petrie and the Egyptology Collection at the Manchester Museum, England." Buried History: The Journal of the Australian Institute of Archaeology 39 (January 1, 2004): 3–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.62614/37rr6c84.

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Sir William Flinders Petrie (the grandson of Captain Matthew Flinders who explored the coast of Australia between 1797 and 1803) had a brilliant career as an archaeologist that spanned five decades, and his contribution to the subject in developing scientific methodologies for excavation is unparallelled. Initially, it was Amelia B. Edwards, a founder of The Egypt Exploration Fund in London, who recognised Petrie’s genius, and ensured that he was recruited as one of the Fund’s first archaeologists. However, disagreements with the Committee led to a parting of the ways, and in 1886, he had no e
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6

Madureira, José Rafael. "Dick McCaw e os escritos inéditos de Rudolf Laban." Conceição/Conception 14 (June 30, 2025): e025002. https://doi.org/10.20396/coce.v14i00.8678552.

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Review of the book The Art of Movement: Rudolf Laban’s Unpublished Writings (Routledge, 2024), edited by Dick McCaw, emeritus reader in Performance Practices at Royal Rolloway, University of London. The work is a collection of unpublished texts by Rudolf Laban interspersed with other textual and visual materials, equally unpublished, produced by Laban's disciples, collaborators and family members and meticulously selected from the collection of the Brotherton Library, University of Leeds (England).
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Rudolf, Winfried. "The Homiliary of Angers in tenth-century England." Anglo-Saxon England 39 (December 2010): 163–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263675110000098.

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AbstractLatin manuscripts used for preaching the Anglo-Saxon laity in the tenth century survive in relatively rare numbers. This paper contributes a new text to the known preaching resources from that century in identifying the Homiliary of Angers as the text preserved on the flyleaves of London, British Library, MS Sloane 280. While these fragments, made in Kent and edited here for the first time, cast new light on the importance of this plain and unadorned Latin collection for the composition of Old English temporale homilies before Ælfric, they also represent the oldest surviving manuscript
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8

FIELD, JACOB F. "Charitable giving and its distribution to Londoners after the Great Fire, 1666–1676." Urban History 38, no. 1 (2011): 3–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926811000010.

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ABSTRACT:Major fires are essential case-studies of how urban society responds to crisis. How a city organizes its relief reflects its place in larger networks and reveals its charitable priorities. This article will use the example of the Great Fire of London (1666) to show how the city recovered from this catastrophe. It will examine the recovery using the records of a nationwide charitable collection taken for Londoners ‘distressed’ by the Fire, which shows both how and where money was collected in England and spent in London. It will show that London was extremely resilient to the Fire, and
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9

Martin, Cheryl. "The Music Collection of Thomas Baker of Farnham, Surrey." Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle 44 (2013): 19–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14723808.2012.730316.

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Thomas Baker's music collection is part of the special collections of the Music Library at Western University, Ontario. Thomas Baker (1719/20–94) lived mainly in Farnham, southwest of London, England, in the County of Surrey. His music collection remained largely intact, which is unusual for the library of an eighteenth-century man who lived in a small town in rural England. The collection at Western consists of 90 separate pieces of music, collections of music, and books of music theory, plus six manuscripts; an inventory of the collection illustrates the variety of musical forms that he coll
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10

Kneepkens, C. H. "The Collection of Grammatical Sophismata in ms London, bl, Burney 330. An Exploratory Study." Vivarium 53, no. 2-4 (2015): 294–321. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685349-12341301.

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Manuscript London, British Library, Burney 330 contains an anonymous collection of grammatical sophisms, dating in all probability from early 13th-century France or England, and all based on problematic biblical, liturgical or religious propositions. After a presentation of the manuscript and collection, this article examines two analysis tools that are applied in the majority of the sophisms, viz. a distinction between three layers of grammatico-semantic perfection or completeness, and the grammatical and semantic supposition doctrines. It appears that these sophisms pay prominent attention t
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11

Tretter, Justin T., and Jeffrey P. Jacobs. "Global Leadership in Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Care: “Coding our way to improved care: an interview with Rodney C. G. Franklin, MBBS, MD, FRCP, FRCPCH”." Cardiology in the Young 31, no. 1 (2021): 11–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s104795112000476x.

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AbstractDr Rodney Franklin is the focus of our third in a planned series of interviews in Cardiology in the Young entitled, “Global Leadership in Paediatric and Congenital Cardiac Care.” Dr Franklin was born in London, England, spending the early part of his childhood in the United States of America before coming back to England. He then attended University College London Medical School and University College Hospital in London, England, graduating in 1979. Dr Franklin would then go on to complete his general and neonatal paediatrics training in 1983 at Northwick Park Hospital and University C
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12

Gibbons, Patti. "Freda Matassa. Museum Collections Management: A Handbook. London: Facet Publishing, 2011. 258p. ISBN 978-1-85604-701-2. $110." RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage 13, no. 1 (2012): 66–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/rbm.13.1.371.

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Writing from the United Kingdom, Freda Matassa prepared her textbook Museum Collections Management: A Handbook as a text for museum professionals and students in British classrooms, yet the clearly laid out information is equally relevant to a range of different types of cultural heritage institutions outside England. In the first part of her book, Matassa covers big-picture issues and defines the scope of collection management, before introducing day-to-day collection management activities in the second part of the text. Her treatment covers the full scope of collection management including r
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Greaves, Richard L. "Revolutionary Ideology in Stuart England: The Essays of Christopher Hill." Church History 56, no. 1 (1987): 93–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3165306.

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With the possible exception of Sir Geoffrey Elton and Lawrence Stone, no present historian of Tudor and Stuart England has been more prolific or controversial than Christopher Hill, the former master of Balliol College, Oxford. The twenty-nine articles, lectures, and book reviews included in the first two volumes of his Collected Essays deal with many of the themes developed in his more recent books, beginning with The World Turned Upside Down: Radical Ideas During the English Revolution (London, 1972). Although two of the pieces appeared as early as the 1950s, Hill has revised the essays for
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14

WILLIAMS, D. J. "E.E. Green’s collection of scale insects (Hemiptera: Sternorrhyncha: Coccomorpha) in The Natural History Museum, London, U.K." Zootaxa 4318, no. 2 (2017): 201. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4318.2.1.

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In 1940, E.E. Green’s collection of scale insects, consisting of 6505 microscope slides and 2172 boxes of dry material, was donated to the The Natural History Museum, London, U.K. (then the British Museum (Natural History)). Green was a tea and coffee planter in Sri Lanka, and later became Government Agricultural Entomologist there before retiring to England in 1913. He continued to work on scale insects and became one of the foremost scale insect specialists at the time. His collection includes most of the species he described as new, but is also important because it contains authentic materi
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15

Vozar, Thomas Matthew. "London’s First Public Library: Books and Readers at Sion College, ca. 1630–60." Milton Studies 66, no. 1 (2024): 77–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/miltonstudies.66.1.0077.

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ABSTRACT In 1632, John Milton went to live with his parents outside of London and undertook a rigorous program of reading. Scholars have long wondered which, if any, institutional collections he might have consulted. This question offers the opportunity to bring attention to London’s first public library, where Milton may well have studied, in its earliest decades. Formed for the benefit of the London clergy, Sion College is shown to have welcomed readers of various backgrounds from as far away as Germany and New England. Already by this date its collection was global in scope, including writi
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16

Field, Clive. "The Allan Library: A Victorian Methodist Odyssey." Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 89, no. 2 (2013): 69–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/bjrl.89.2.5.

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The history of the Allan Library is here told systematically for the first time. This antiquarian collection of substantially foreign-language books and some manuscripts was formed by barrister Thomas Robinson Allan (1799-1886) during the 1850s, 1860s and 1870s. His stated intention was to create a Methodist rival to Sion College Library (Church of England) and Dr Williamss Library (Old Dissent). Allan donated it to the Wesleyan Methodist Conference in 1884, which funded the erection of purpose-built Allan Library premises opening in London in 1891. However, the Wesleyans struggled to make a s
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17

Holman, Peter. "The Sale Catalogue of Gottfried Finger's Music Library: New Light on London Concert Life in the 1690s." Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle 43 (2010): 23–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14723808.2010.10541030.

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In the winter of 1704–5 Henry Playford advertised ‘a Choice Collection of Vocal and Instrumental Musick in Italian, French, and English’ owned by Gottfried Finger and partly collected by him ‘in his Travels to Italy’. Finger had evidently sold the collection to Johann Gottfried Keller and John Banister junior prior to his abrupt departure from England in 1701 after coming last in the competition to set Congreve's masque The Judgement of Paris. The discovery of a copy of the printed catalogue throws light on Finger's collecting activities in Italy and on the reception of Italian music in Englan
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18

Watson, Joan, and Helen L. Fisher. "A revision of the conifer Sphenolepis kurriana (Dunker) Schenk from the Wealden of Germany and England." Fossil Imprint 80, no. 1 (2024): 19–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.37520/fi.2024.005.

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The scale-leaved fossil conifer Sphenolepis kurriana (Dunker) Schenk is redescribed from the Wealden floras of Germany and England. The revised study of this fossil species encompasses specimens remaining in the nineteenth century Dunker Collection in the Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin, from which a neotype is selected; figured specimens in the Museum of Geology, Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen and the Rufford Collection in the Natural History Museum, London. Dispersed samples more recently collected from debris-beds in the English Wealden show cuticular details of particularly well-preserv
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19

Panov, Alexei A., and Ivan V. Rosanoff. "An attempt to attribute the authorship of the treatises from the collection “The Modern Musick-Master” (London, 1730)." Contemporary Musicology, no. 1 (2021): 41–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.56620/2587-9731-2021-1-041-056.

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In 1730, a collection of treatises on singing and playing various musical instruments was published in London. It included “A Brief History of Music” and a small musical dictionary. Neither on the title page nor elsewhere in the text do we find information about its author/authors. Today, both reference and encyclopedic literature as well as special scholarly works refer to Peter Prelleur as the author (very rarely the compiler) of the collection. However, when comparing the basic explanations of musical theory and the basic performing principles in each individual treatise, these explanations
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20

Flint, Kate. "COUNTER-HISTORICISM, CONTACT ZONES, AND CULTURAL HISTORY." Victorian Literature and Culture 27, no. 2 (1999): 507–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150399272142.

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LATE IN 1839, George Catlin arrived in London from New York with a collection of Native American artifacts, costumes, and some six hundred portraits and other paintings. Executed during the previous eight years in the Prairies and the Rockies, they showed the appearance, habitat and customs of various tribes. Catlin rented the Egyptian Hall, in Piccadilly, set up a wigwam made of twenty or more ornamented buffalo skins in the center, and proceeded to mount his exhibition. Initially attracting a good deal of favorable attention, it ran for two years before touring England, Scotland, Ireland, an
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21

Selivanova, L. L. "«THE UNBEKNOWN ANIMAL» ON THE COINS OF CYRENE." Ancient World and Archaeology 21, no. 21 (2023): 52–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.18500/0320-961x-2023-21-52-69.

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the article revisits the first catalogue of ancient Greek and Roman coins in British collections, published by N.F. Haym in London in 1720. In the collection of the Duke of Devonshire, Haym found a golden coin from Cyrene with the image of strange small animal next to the silphium, the vegetative symbol of Cyrene, which evinced a multidisciplinary interest during the Enlightenment period in England. Such coins from Cyrene constitute the subject of the current investigation, which aims to analyze their iconography and, specifically, to identify the animal and tentatively suggest the reason that
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22

Rose, E. P. F., and J. A. Cooper. "G.B. Alexander's studies on the Jurassic of Gibraltar and the Carboniferous of England: the end of a mystery?" Geological Curator 6, no. 7 (1997): 247–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.55468/gc527.

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George Baker Alexander (1907-1980), a graduate of St. John's College, Cambridge, began research on the Carboniferous Limestone biostratigraphy of Staffordshire, Derbyshire, and West Yorkshire whilst based at the University of Leeds in 1930-1932 and Imperial College London in 1933-1934. He disappeared before the work was completed, for reasons unknown, but a collection of over 1,100 specimens, mostly corals, brachiopods, and goniatites, was donated to the Booth Museum of Natural History following his death in Brighton in September 1980. Other material of his is preserved at the Sedgwick Museum,
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23

Audini, Bernard, Michael Crowe, Joan Feldman, et al. "Monitoring inner London mental illness services." Psychiatric Bulletin 19, no. 5 (1995): 276–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.19.5.276.

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Our objective was to establish a mechanism for monitoring indicators of the state of health of inner London's mental illness services. Data were collected for a census week around 15 June 1994. Local data collection was coordinated by consultant pyschiatrists working in inner London services. Twelve services participated with a combined catchment population of 2.6 m. They included ten London services which were among the 17 most socially deprived areas of England. Main indicators were admission bed occupancy levels (including an estimate of the total requirement), proportion of patients detain
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TALLACK, DOUGLAS. "Reflections on The American Scene: Prints from Hopper to Pollock, British Museum, London; Djanogly Art Gallery, Nottingham; Brighton Museum and Art Gallery; Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, April 2008–December 2009." Journal of American Studies 44, no. 3 (2010): 613–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875810001556.

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It is tempting to regard the remarkable success of this exhibition of works from the British Museum's American prints collection, as it toured England, as a response to the demise of the Bush Administration and the election of Barack Obama. However, George W. Bush was in the White House throughout the period when these prints were on display at the British Museum from April to September 2008.
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25

Kavaliūnaitė, Gina. "Historical Sources Bearing on Samuel Bogusław ChyLinski’s Pursuits in England and the Netherlands and their Echoes in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania." Lithuanian Historical Studies 16, no. 1 (2011): 7–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.30965/25386565-01601002.

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This article presents all known manuscript and printed sources relating to Chylinski’s Bible translation, viz. letters written by him to his patrons, the correspondence of his patrons on Chylinski’s endeavours, records of the Privy Council, royal briefs for the collection of monies to support Chylinski and the Lithuanian Calvinists in general, and so forth. The author also presents pamphlets by Chylinski advertising his project, published in Oxford and London. Many of these sources, discovered by the author, have not been used in previous studies.
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26

Monter, William. "English Private Money, 1648–1672." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 54, no. 4 (2024): 477–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh_a_02007.

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Abstract Between 1644 and 1672, England halted the production of its lowest denomination coins, prompting ordinary individuals and communities to create coins to address the shortage of small change. A large twentieth-century collection that includes over 13,000 such surviving tokens has largely been overlooked by historians and economists, despite the tokens’ significance. In this source and others are a total of over 9,000 types of tokens, originating mainly from the City of London, thirty-seven English counties, and the Irish Pale. Catalogued in an eight-volume Sylloge, published over thirt
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27

Dr., G. Aghalya. "EAST INDIA COMPANY IN INDIA OFFICE RECORDS IN LONDON." International Journal of Computational Research and Development 2, no. 1 (2017): 73–76. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.569734.

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The historical research, which involves interpreting past events to predict future ones. Historical research design involves synthesizing data from many different sources. The purpose of the research is to further encourage the limited but fruitful cross-disciplinary conversations of recent years. The historical scope of the records begins in 1600, when the East India Company was granted exclusive rights to trade in much of Asia, including the entire Indian subcontinent. The records of the East India Company’s Governments in India are probably the best historical materials in the world. The re
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28

Koudal, Jens Henrik, and Michael Talbot. "Pastor Iver Brink's Sacred and Secular Music: A Private Collection of Music from Copenhagen at the Beginning of the Eighteenth Century." Journal of the Royal Musical Association 135, no. 1 (2010): 1–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02690401003597748.

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Iver Brink (1665–1728) is familiar to students of Danish religious literature, but a published auction catalogue of his books (1729) shows him also to have been a discerning collector of music. Born in Norway, Brink settled in Copenhagen in 1686. After ordination, he became, in 1691, the first official pastor to the Danish community in London. Returning in 1701, he worked as pastor at two Copenhagen churches. In 1708–9 he accompanied King Frederik IV to Italy as chaplain. Brink's musical collection reflects his religious vocation, his travels to England, Italy and Germany, and especially his f
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Oliveira, Susana. "“The intolerable business": Religion and diplomacy under Elizabeth’s rule." Sederi, no. 26 (2016): 159–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.34136/sederi.2016.7.

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Within the scope of foreign affairs between Portugal and England during Elizabeth’s rule, numerous events indicate the challenges faced by the Portuguese ambassadors on their missions. Regrettably, little is known about these envoys and one rarely finds any reference to their names or their diplomatic accomplishments in Early Modern studies. This paper focuses on a diplomatic incident which involved Francisco Giraldes, a Portuguese resident ambassador in England, aiming to shed some light on “the intolerable business” that led to a confrontation with the Bishop of London, Edwin Sandys. Attendi
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Kent, Joan. "The Rural ‘Middling Sort’ in Early Modern England, circa 1640–1740: Some Economic, Political and Socio-Cultural Characteristics." Rural History 10, no. 1 (1999): 19–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956793300001679.

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A middle class ‘did not begin to discover itself (except perhaps in London) until the last three decades of the [eighteenth] century’. So wrote E. P. Thompson in the 1970s in a now-famous analysis which divided English society into patricians and plebeians, and which, along with J. H. Hexter's ‘The Myth of the Middle Class in Tudor England’, largely eliminated ‘middle class’ from the vocabulary of early modern English historians. During the past decade, however, there has been renewed focus on the middle ranks in early modern England, now commonly labelled ‘the middling sort’, and such studies
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31

Watson, James, and Stephanie Daley. "The use of section 135(1) of the Mental Health Act in a London borough." Mental Health Review Journal 20, no. 3 (2015): 133–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/mhrj-02-2015-0007.

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Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to determine the incidence of the use of section 135(1) of the Mental Health Act 1983 in a London borough and describe the main features of the population subject to that section. Design/methodology/approach – Uses of section 135(1), hospital stay, and demographic data were gathered from service and patient records over one year. Means, medians, modes and standard deviation were calculated for interval data. Nominal data were cross-tabulated and the chi square test applied where appropriate. Study data were compared to census and national hospital data; t
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32

Bond-Simmons, James. "The attitudes of general practices towards clinical research." British Journal of General Practice 74, suppl 1 (2024): bjgp24X737817. http://dx.doi.org/10.3399/bjgp24x737817.

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BackgroundDuring the financial year 2021/2022, the PANORAMIC study utilised the primary care setting to provide vital research into oral antivirals for COVID-19, recruiting more than 26 000 participants. Alongside the relentless work conducted by practices in supporting vaccine research, the number of GPs recruiting to National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) portfolio studies in England remains consistently around 45% year on year despite the support offered by the NIHR. This figure varies across regions, falling to 23% in Greater Manchester, and rising to 95% in Northwest Londo
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PALMA, RICARDO L. "Confirmation of the identity of the type host of the louse Halipeurus fallacis (Phthiraptera: Philopteridae)." Zootaxa 4407, no. 1 (2018): 135. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4407.1.10.

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Alexander (1954: 489) recorded a petrel (Aves: Procellariiformes) captured alive on board a ship in the Indian Ocean by Mr W.W.A. Phillips who, after removing some lice, liberated it the following morning. Alexander (1954) identified that petrel as the species “Pterodroma aterrima Bonaparte”, now placed in the genus Pseudobulweria. The lice were kept in the collection of the then British Museum (Natural History), now the Natural History Museum, London, England. Jouanin (1955) published a new species of petrel from the Indian Ocean as Bulweria fallax. Jouanin (1957: 19) discussed the identity o
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34

Cassia, Cristina. "Bembo, Palestrina, and an English "contrafactum": a cross-cultural translation of "Gioia m'abond'al cor" and its issues." Musica Iagellonica 13, no. 2022 (2023): 43–67. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7956556.

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The publication of the madrigal collection Musica transalpina (London, 1588) provided a&nbsp;significant impulse to the spread of Italian music in England. In fact, this anthology contains contrafacta of fifty-seven pieces whose texts were translated into English and adapted for&nbsp;the new audience. Focusing on the third piece, <em>Joy so delights my heart</em>, whose music was originally composed by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina on Pietro Bembo&rsquo;s canzone <em>Gioia m&rsquo;abond&rsquo;al cor</em>, this paper aims at both investigating the textual and musical changes required by the
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35

Zolotova, E. Yu. "Two Illuminated Letters of Queen Anne Stuart from the Russian State Archive of Ancient Documents Сollection in Moscow". Art & Culture Studies, № 4 (грудень 2024): 354–77. https://doi.org/10.51678/2226-0072-2024-4-354-377.

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The article for the first time publishes two illuminated parchment letters of Queen Anne Stuart of 1707 and 1708 addressed to Tsar Peter the Great from the collection of the Russian State Archive of Ancient Documents (RGADA) in Moscow. The analysis of their artistic decoration allows establishing that the letters were decorated in the royal workshop in London by its head, Thomas Brand, using the samples of ornamental engraving by the French master of the second half of the 17th century, Alexis Loir. Based on the material of the illuminated letters of the epoch from Charles II of England to Ann
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Weller, Toni. "The Information State in England: The Central Collection of Information on Citizens Since 150020053Edward Higgs. The Information State in England: The Central Collection of Information on Citizens Since 1500. London: Palgrave Macmillan 2004. , ISBN: 0333920708 (hbk); 033920708 (pbk)." Journal of Documentation 61, no. 2 (2005): 314–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/00220410510585278.

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BROWN, CHRISTOPHER. "The Renaissance of Museums in Britain." European Review 13, no. 4 (2005): 617–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1062798705000840.

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In this paper – given as a lecture at Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the summer of 2003 – I survey the remarkable renaissance of museums – national and regional, public and private – in Britain in recent years, largely made possible with the financial support of the Heritage Lottery Fund. I look in detail at four non-national museum projects of particular interest: the Horniman Museum in South London, a remarkable and idiosyncratic collection of anthropological, natural history and musical material which has recently been re-housed and redisplayed; secondly, the nearby Dulwich Pic
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McAllister, Charlie. "Cust & Hughes, Conflict in Early Stuart England - Studies in Religion And Politics 1600-1642. Lockyer, The Early Stuarts - A Political History of England 1603-1642." Teaching History: A Journal of Methods 16, no. 1 (1991): 44–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.33043/th.16.1.44-46.

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On January 30, 1649, the diminutive Charles I of England became a head shorter than all his contemporaries. Historians agree on that fact, but they disagree on nearly all others, especially on the causes of that decollation. "Whit," historians on the English Civil War proved that the early Stuart kings illegally resisted the natural development of liberty in England. Marxists on the English Revolution proved that it was a matter of class warfare during the transition from feudalism to capitalism. Both "schools" found conflict to be the axis on which the drama of the 1640s turned. Both perspect
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HAYAT, MOHAMMAD, F. R. KHAN, and S. M. A. BADRUDDIN. "Type depositories of Chalcidoidea (Hymenoptera) species described from the Department of Zoology, Aligarh Muslim University, India." Zootaxa 2786, no. 1 (2011): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2786.1.1.

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The type specimens of 717 chalcidoid species described by taxonomists from the Department of Zoology, Aligarh Muslim University, India, and their depositories are tabulated. Table 1 lists the holotypes and other type specimens of the species deposited in the Natural History Museum, London, England (BMNH), National Zoological Collections, Zoological Survey of India, Kolkata, India (NZSI), Forest Entomology Division, Forest Research Institute, Dehra Dun, India (FRI), National Pusa Collections, Division of Entomology, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi, India (NPC), and the Insect
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Lee, Robert. "Sewage as Waste: Implications for the UK Water Industry of the ECJ’s Ruling on the Application of the Waste Framework Directive to Sewage." European Energy and Environmental Law Review 16, Issue 10 (2007): 269–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/eelr2007030.

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Summary: The ECJ has handed down judgment in the case of R (Thames Water Utilities) v South East London Division, Bromley Magistrates’ Court (Case C-252/05) (10 May 2007). The ECJ has decided that sewage that leaks from a waste water collection system is in principle “waste” for the purposes of the European Waste Framework Directive (WFD). The case has been referred back to the High Court in England on one point which will now be critical in deciding whether or not leaking pipes expose sewerage undertakers to the threat of criminal sanctions. This article examines the basis for the decision, t
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Welch, Anna. "The Book as Mirror: Embroidered Bindings at the Court of Charles I." Parergon 41, no. 2 (2024): 67–101. https://doi.org/10.1353/pgn.2024.a946926.

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Abstract: Embroidered bindings were an important aspect of the culture of luxury goods associated with the Stuart court, and several surviving examples are associated with Charles I's queen Henrietta Maria, including one in the John Emmerson Collection, State Library Victoria, Melbourne, Australia. Most unusually, this binding can be linked to a group of eight bindings identified to date as the work of one individual or workshop, held in the collections of SLV, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Bodleian Libraries, Oxford, and the British Library, London. This article will explore the relatio
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42

Spronk, Susan. "The Age of Commodity: Water Privatization in Southern Africa." Canadian Journal of Political Science 39, no. 1 (2006): 205–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008423906339996.

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The Age of Commodity: Water Privatization in Southern Africa, David A. McDonald and Greg Ruiters, eds., London and Sterling, VA: Earthscan Press, 2005, pp. xv, 303.This collection of essays is a cutting-edge study of neoliberal public service reform in Southern Africa. While most studies of water privatization, such as Karen Bakker's An Uncooperative Commodity: Privatizing Water in England and Wales (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004) and Vandana Shiva's Water Wars (Cambridge: South End Press, 2002), have concentrated on the transfer of ownership and control from the state to private corpo
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Bergeron-Maguire, Myriam, Laura-Maï Dourdy, and Juliette Thiriet. "Ordinary letters, extraordinary findings." Lingvisticae Investigationes 47, no. 1 (2024): 121–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/li.00104.ber.

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Abstract This project proposes an innovative approach to the history of French by replacing the ‘tunnel vision’ (Watts/Trudgill 2002) which characterizes the vast majority of studies of ‘Classical French’ by a wider approach, based on an extraordinarily valuable source, i.e. the ‘Prize Papers’. The Prize Papers are a collection which includes 50,000 undelivered private French letters, confiscated between 1652 and 1815 during the frequent military conflicts between France and England. The documents are held by the National Archives of the United Kingdom in London, and are remnants of the privat
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Kemal, A. R. "Clem Tisdell and Priyatosh Maitra (eels.). Technological Change, Development and the Environment: Socia-economic Perspective. London: Routledge, 1988. 351 pp.£ 30.00 (Hardbound)." Pakistan Development Review 28, no. 2 (1989): 157–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.30541/v28i2pp.157-163.

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This book is a collection of 15 papers presented to the Fourth Congress of Social Economics held at Toronto in 1986, which was organized by the International Institute of Social Economics, Hull, England. The papers relate to the appropriateness, the development and the dissemination of technology, and the effect of technological change on social environment. The book highlights various issues which include, among others, the extent to which socially appropriate technology is being developed and applied in both the developing and the developed countries; the control of developing countries over
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Cornwell, Steve. "Ken Wilson: Author, Teacher, and Teacher Trainer." Language Teacher 35, no. 4 (2011): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.37546/jalttlt35.4-5.

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Ken Wilson is an author and trainer. He has written more than thirty ELT titles, including a dozen series of course books, including Smart Choice for Oxford University Press (OUP). He also writes lots of supplementary material, and in 2008, OUP published Drama and Improvisation, a collection of more than 60 of his ELT drama and motivational activities. His first publication was a collection of songs called Mister Monday, which was released when he was 23, making him at the time the youngest-ever published ELT author. Since then, he has written and recorded more than 150 ELT songs, published as
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Bench, Suzanne, Edward Baker, Nicola Dover, et al. "The education and training needs of advanced clinical practitioners: An exploratory, qualitative study." Journal of Nursing Education and Practice 8, no. 8 (2018): 66. http://dx.doi.org/10.5430/jnep.v8n8p66.

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Advanced clinical practitioners increasingly provide patient care in a variety of settings across the world. This paper reports a qualitative study exploring the training and education needs of these healthcare professionals in England. Four focus group discussions and one individual interview were conducted with a total sample of 17 people. Participants were adults enrolled on an Advanced Practice Masters programme at one Higher Education Institution or advanced clinical practitioners from across two large London National Health Service hospitals. Data collection took place March-April 2017.
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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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Hollander, Rachel. "Girls of the Future: Queer Community in Olive Schreiner and Amy Levy." Victorian Literature and Culture 53, no. 1 (2025): 23–48. https://doi.org/10.1017/s1060150324000056.

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Despite their overlapping fin de siècle New Woman communities in London and their correspondence, few scholars have compared the literary works of South African writer Olive Schreiner and Jewish author Amy Levy directly. Reading allegories from Schreiner's first collection, Dreams (1890), in relation to two of Levy's early verse works, “Xantippe” (1881) and Medea (1884), I argue that they both imagine new futures for queer community as an alternative to the oppressive status quo of imperialist England. This paper suggests that Schreiner and Levy, feminist writers with fraught relationships to
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Newman, Keith A. "Holiness in Beauty? Roman Catholics, Arminians, and the Aesthetics of Religion in Early Caroline England." Studies in Church History 28 (1992): 303–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424208400012511.

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This paper is more concerned with posing questions than attempting to provide answers. I am principally interested in trying to establish whether there was a connection between the English Arminians’ emphasis on ritual and the beautification of churches in the 1620S and 1630S and the perception at the time that Roman Catholicism was gaining ground, especially in London and at the court. It has long been known that Charles I’s court was considered by contemporaries to have been rife with Catholic activity. Likewise, the embassy chapels in London provided a focus for Protestant discontent as a r
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50

BRUCE MCMILLAN, R. "ALBERT KOCH’S HYDRARCHOS: A HOAX OR A BONA FIDE COLLECTION OF BONES." Earth Sciences History 42, no. 1 (2023): 84–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/1944-6187-42.1.84.

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ABSTRACT This is the second essay of a two-part series on the life and collecting activities of Albert Koch. After Koch traveled to England where he sold his Missourium to the British Museum, the American mastodon that now stands in the Natural History Museum of London, he then went to his homeland in Germany. Koch left his family in Dresden, when he again departed for the United States to pursue some additional paleontological adventures. Following several weeks of travel, he arrived in Alabama where he excavated the remains of a large, archaeocete whale, that he named the Hydrarchos. Koch di
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