Academic literature on the topic 'Tyne and wear (england), history'

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Journal articles on the topic "Tyne and wear (england), history"

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Satre, Lowell J. "Hidden Chains: The Slavery Business and North East England 1600–1865. By John Charlton. (Newcastle upon Tyne, England: Tyne Bridge Publishing, 2008. Pp. 180. $15.00.)." Historian 72, no. 4 (December 1, 2010): 967–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6563.2010.00281_46.x.

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Davies, Jeffrey L. "The Roman Fort at Wallsend (Segedunum). Excavations in 1997–8. By N. Hodgson. Tyne and Wear Museums Archaeological Monograph 2. Tyne and Wear Museums, Newcastle upon Tyne, 2003. Pp. xi + 264, figs 159. Price: £19.50. ISBN 0 9059 7484 0." Britannia 36 (November 2005): 515–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.3815/000000005784016919.

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Bowler, David. "A history of St Nicholas hospital, newcastle-upon-Tyne, England 1869-2001A history of St Nicholas hospital, newcastle-upon-Tyne, England 1869-2001 Ewing Logan Author House £14.99 316pp 9781438937540 1438937547." Mental Health Practice 13, no. 10 (July 2010): 8. http://dx.doi.org/10.7748/mhp.13.10.8.s11.

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Andersen, Søren H. "En glittestok fra Dogger Banke i Nordsøen." Kuml 54, no. 54 (October 20, 2005): 9–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/kuml.v54i54.97309.

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A flaker from the Dogger Bank in the North Sea By the end of the Ice Age, the present North Sea was dry land stretching from Denmark to the British Isles. Here, life conditions for hunter tribes must have been good and similar to those in the adjoining areas – Southern Scandinavia, Eastern England, and the Netherlands. Due to the rise of the world seas, this large land area was gradually flooded after the Ice Age, and recent geological investigations have made it possible to gain a relatively good picture of the development history of the North Sea during the last c.14000 years. These investigations show that the highest land areas – primarily the Brown Bank towards the south and the Dogger Bank towards the north – must have been large land areas far into the early Stone Age. As opposed to our geological knowledge, the archaeological finds fail to provide information about the settlement structure of the early Stone Age in this area. However, they are important because they can provide information about important issues such as when and to which extent the different land areas were flooded by the sea, and the nature of the cultural affiliations of the hunter groups living there.So far, the Stone Age finds have almost all been made in the southern part of the North Sea (Brown Bank), whereas there are just a few finds from the rest of the large sea territory. A few of these artefacts are connected to the Maglemose Culture, whereas the rest can either not be dated or are subject to the discussion whether they are actually artefacts or just products of nature.However, a new find now helps throwing light on some of these questions. It is a pressure flaker fished out of the sea at Dogger Bank, at a depth of 30 to 40 metres. The tool was made from a tine of red deer (Cervus elaphus) antler, the point of which was truncated at an angle and shows clear marks of pressure and wear (Fig. 1). In North Europe, this type of artefact is known only from the late Maglemose Culture settlements on Sea land, and it has been interpreted as a special type of pressure or percussion flaker used in connection with the production of micro-flakes (Fig. 2). Consequently, this is not a fishing tool, but an artefact type used in a settlement. In Denmark, this type of tool is dated using typology to the time between c.6700 and 6400 BC (cal.), which has later been confirmed by an AMS C14 dating giving the result of 7010 BC, or 7040-6700 BC, with one standard deviation.The find of a flaker of the late Maglemose type on Dogger Bank is important, as it shows that this part of the North Sea was still dry land about 9000 years ago. At that time, Dogger Bank was a large peninsula, situated about 100 km from both the east coast of England and the Jutland peninsula (Fig. 3). When the sea finally flooded this last piece of the original North Sea continent is more uncertain. However, geological results indicate that it happened shortly after, i.e. around 6000-5000 BC.The new find of a flaker on the Dogger Bank shows that this part of the North Sea was still dry land about 7000 BC, and that hunters and fishing groups connected to the late Maglemose Culture lived there at the time.Søren H. AndersenNationalmuseetTranslated by Annette Lerche Trolle
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Woodford, Benjamin. "The Language of Periodical News in Seventeenth-Century England. By Nicholas Brownlees. (Newcastle upon Tyne, England: Cambridge Scholars, 2014. Pp. xviii, 227. $67.99.)." Historian 78, no. 2 (June 1, 2016): 373–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hisn.12209.

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McLean, Iain. "The No-men of England: Tyne & Wear County Council and the failure of the Scotland and Wales Acts 1978." Journal of Borderlands Studies 33, no. 1 (April 7, 2017): 19–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08865655.2017.1294024.

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Healey, P. "Urban Policy and Property Development: The Institutional Relations of Real-Estate Development in an Old Industrial Region." Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space 26, no. 2 (February 1994): 177–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1068/a260177.

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The impact of public policy on the opportunities available for property development in an urban region and the effect of such policy on the institutional organisation of the property-development sector are examined. Also explored are the problems of generating autonomous private-sector development capacity in a fragile local economy (Tyne and Wear in North East England) experiencing decline in its traditional industrial base, within which active property markets may only exist with respect to certain types of properties and locations. The tension between a financial orientation and a production orientation towards property development is highlighted. During the 1980s, planning and urban policy in Britain promoted the former orientation, but the needs and opportunities of the local economy emphasised the latter. The importance of understanding the specificities of local property-development organisation and relations for the design and evaluation of public policy directed at the property sector is stressed.
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Lytton, Randolph H. "Alexander the Great. By Krzysztof Nawotka. (Newcastle upon Tyne, England: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2010. Pp. xiii, 440. $74.99.)." Historian 73, no. 4 (December 1, 2011): 876–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6563.2011.00308_60.x.

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Yang, Ruomei, Charles Harvey, Frank Mueller, and Mairi Maclean. "The Role of Mediators in Diffusing the Community Foundation Model of Philanthropy." Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly 50, no. 5 (February 10, 2021): 959–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0899764021991677.

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We examine the role of mediators in locally embedding the community foundation model of philanthropy to enable its global diffusion. We hold that mediators, as trusted agents within elite networks, promote and legitimate institutional innovation by tailoring the model to satisfy local requirements. They thereby limit resistance while creating future potentialities. Our novel addition to the community foundation literature stems from research on the transatlantic diffusion of the community foundation template from the United States to the United Kingdom focused on an in-depth case study of one of Europe’s largest community foundation, that serving Tyne & Wear and Northumberland in North East England. Our findings suggest that success in embedding the community foundation model depends on rendering it fit-for-context and fit-for-purpose. Mediators operating at both the macro and micro level matter because they have the cultural, social, and symbolic capital needed to win acceptance for initially alien philanthropic principles, practices, and structures.
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Ville, Simon. "Book Review: Tall Ships, Two Rivers: Six Centuries of Sail on the Rivers Tyne and Wear." Journal of Transport History 15, no. 2 (September 1994): 217–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002252669401500222.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Tyne and wear (england), history"

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Ridley, David. "Political and industrial crisis : the experience of the Tyne and Wear pitmen, 1831-1832." Thesis, Durham University, 1994. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/5366/.

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/The coalfield of North East England was at the forefront of the industrial revolution in the early nineteenth century, in terms of both technological expertise and managerial experience in business practice. Labour relations were a source of intermittent conflict, and the conjunction of industrial unrest at the collieries, a major cholera epidemic, and the parliamentary reform campaign of 1831-1832, brought an unusual crisis. Prompted by economic deterioration, a new Tyne and Wear pitmen’s union, known after its chairman as 'Hepburn's Union', conducted a successful coal strike in the summer of 1831. But as the pitmen consolidated their victory, the House of Lords' rejection in October 1831 of a second parliamentary Reform Bill caused a major outcry, and locally raised the profile of the 'Northern Political Union', a Newcastle-based pressure group embracing all shades of pro-reform opinion. Many local pitmen gave demonstrable support to the NPU, not least at its May 1832 reform meeting in Newcastle. Meanwhile however, the previously complacent coal owners had consciously set out to destroy the pitmen's union, and after establishing an indemnity fund, provoked the pitmen into strike action in April 1832. The resultant dispute was marked by evictions, the recruitment of outside labour, and by violence and even murder: but with state support from the army, navy, and magistrates, and financial and moral support from local bankers and newspapers, by mid-September 1832 the pitmen's resistance was broken. Along with their leaders' interest in attempts to form general industrial unions, the pitmen's support for parliamentary reform during 1831-1832 suggests the political and industrial aspects of their behaviour were not mutually exclusive, but overlapping and complementary. And though ultimately defeated, Hepburn's Union was most significant in that it became a model for subsequent pitmen's unions.
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Books on the topic "Tyne and wear (england), history"

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Simon, Inglis, ed. Played in Tyne and Wear: Charting the heritage of two cities at play. Swindon: English Heritage, 2010.

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Sunderland. Stroud: History, 2010.

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Gill, Kathleen. Sunderland Volunteer Life Brigade. Stroud, Gloucestershire [England]: History Press, 2010.

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Neil, Mortson, ed. Sunderland transport. Stroud: History Press, 2009.

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Nick, Barnes. Boss cat: Roy Keane's epic first season as a premiership manager. Dublin: Nonsuch, 2008.

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Todd, Nigel. Roses and revolutionists: The story of the Clousden Hill Free Communist and Co-operative Colony, 1894-1902. London: People's Publications, 1986.

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John, Weaver. Cumbria to Northumberland. London: HMSO, 1992.

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Hardy, Clive. Francis Frith's Northumberland and Tyne & Wear. Salisbury, Wiltshire: Frith Book Co., 2001.

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The new Shell guide to North-East England: Northumberland, Co. Durham, Cleveland and Tyne & Wear. London: Joseph, 1988.

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Foster, Joan. Newcastle upon Tyne: A pictorial history. Chichester, England: Phillimore, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Tyne and wear (england), history"

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Dodgson, Guy, Stephanie Common, Peter Moseley, Rebecca Lee, and Ben Alderson-Day. "Voices in Context." In Voices in Psychosis, 17—C2.P59. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192898388.003.0002.

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Abstract The Voices in Psychosis (VIP) study involved forty people who were hearing voices regularly and finding them distressing. All of the participants were service users of Early Intervention in Psychosis (EIP) services in two NHS Foundation Trusts: Cumbria, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear and Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys. Spanning an area which, at the time of the study, ranged from Berwick-upon-Tweed down to York, our participants came from some of the poorest and wealthiest parts of the UK. This chapter offers some background on the history of EIP services, the services participants would have been offered, and the day-to-day challenges that they faced.
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Jackson, Chris. "A Road by Any Other Name: Heaton History Group, a North East Suburb and Shakespeare." In Shakespeare in the North, 244–57. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474435925.003.0011.

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Chris Armstrong’s chapter explores what happens when Shakespeare, northern locations and local history meet, focussing on a recent community research project on the origin of Shakespearean street names in Heaton, Newcastle upon Tyne. Jackson delves into the rich Shakespearean culture and heritage of the North East of England and the intersection of local history and national theatre, reinforcing the sense that Shakespeare’s welcome in the North has been warmer than the North’s reception in Shakespeare criticism.
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Warsh, Molly A. "“Even The Black Women Wear Strands of Pearls”." In American Baroque, 78–127. University of North Carolina Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469638973.003.0004.

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This chapter considers the enduring significance of the Caribbean pearl-fishing settlements in the second half of the sixteenth century. In the wake of a devastating tsunami in 1541, the Pearl Coast never again reached the pearl-producing heights of the 1520s and 1530s, yet its complex political economy demanded constant crown attention and recognition of the centrality of black pearl divers to the region’s identity, as evidenced by the royal coat of arms granted to Margarita Island in 1600. This era coincided with the political merger of Portugal and Spain, a contentious political union with profound repercussions for the rules governing the movement of people and products within and beyond Iberian realms. Pearls and pearl fishing, meanwhile, continued to evoke maritime wealth and power beyond Spain, explored in art by painters charged with conveying the wonders of a world in transformation. As royal chroniclers reflected on the early history of the American pearl fisheries with an eye to assessing the errors and accomplishments of the past, crown officials sought to improve their management of these unruly settlements. Meanwhile, enslaved laborers in Venezuela and diplomats in England and Italy continued to use pearls to navigate the changing parameters of their lives.
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Wiedenmann, Robert N., and J. Ray Fisher. "Lice in War and Peace." In The Silken Thread, 125–40. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197555583.003.0008.

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This chapter considers human lice, which have been parasites of humans throughout all human history and transmit a deadly bacteria that has killed millions. Analyzing lice genetics tells of divergence of humans from other apes and when humans began to wear clothing. Human body lice live in clothing and infest people only to feed. Lice spread easily among people in crowded situations and transmit bacteria causing diseases, such as typhus. The chapter relates how lice-transmitted typhus caused jail fever in early England, resulting in the deaths of more prisoners than the death penalty. Lice and typhus worsened the Irish Great Famine, as the disease killed thousands of Irish emigrating to the United States on “coffin ships.” Epidemics of typhus were prevalent in wartime, killing troops in both World War I and World War II as well as civilians in Nazi concentration camps and the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II and immediately after. Post-war use of DDT averted typhus epidemics in Europe and Japan.
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