User:TSventon/sandbox
Backlog-mode enabled Please note that DYK is currently in a "backlog-mode". This means that editors who have made at least 20 DYK nominations must review an additional DYK nomination (known as a QPQ) per nomination. For a link to the discussion, please click here. To look up how many DYK nominations you have, please click here. |
Michael Metcalf | |
---|---|
Born | 8 May 1933 |
Died | 25 October 2018 | (aged 85)
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Oxford |
Wikipedia:AfC sorting/Culture/Biography/Women
Background
[edit]Hofdamen
- Irma Sztáray ( – )
- Countess Marie Larisch von Moennich ( – )
- Charlotte von Majláth ( – )
- Ida Ferenczy ( – )
- Karoline Gräfin Hunyady ( – )
- Marie Festetics ( – )
- Sophie Esterházy ( – )
- Pauline von Königsegg ( – )
- [[ ]] ( – )
- https://books.google.com/books?id=l3kAAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA136 Geschichte der Grafen von Helfenstein, Volume 1 by Heinrich Friedrich Kerler
- https://www.deutsche-biographie.de/sfz59364.html "10 (?) außerehel. K u. a. →Margarethe Gfn. v. Helfenstein († 1525)"
- Benedikte Naubert
- https://origin-rh.web.fordham.edu/mvst/magazinestacks/residenz.html contents
- Pierrette Perrin ?
- Pipara ?
- Grey Cloud Woman
- Mary Strangman ?
- Marguerite de Helfenstein
- Linda Deziah Jennings
- Kathy Andrade
- Géraldine Faladé
- Frances Lawrence Parker
- Felicia Nossig
- Eleonora Verbeke
- Despo Botsi
- https://issuu.com/rachelmakari/docs/ssh_news_2022_2023/s/17536522 SSH News
The section on the early history of the college as the Society of Oxford Home-Students (1879–1942) has three paragraphs about members of the M family. I don't think that this information belongs in the article: notable students can be mentioned in the Notable people section, rather than the History section, but Gertrude M does not appear to be notable and the other three people mentioned did not study at the college. Also the paragraphs have an excessive number of references and lengthy quotes in the references.
- a paragraph about Wychwood School, where Gertrude M lived from 1900–1902, while a student at the college. In 1900 the college was for female students who lived at home or in hostels or approved lodgings, so the article does not need to mention that Wychwood School was an example of approved lodgings.
- a paragraph about Gertrude M and Margaret M, who did not study at the college. Group photo including Gertrude M and Olive M, who did not study at the college.
- a paragraph about University Settlements, which synthesises information from the college archivist (ref 21) and information about college office holders. Dorothy M, a student at another college, later worked at the Women's University Settlement in London (ref 22).
Opinions from other editors are welcome.
- Mary Talbot, Countess of Shrewsbury
- Frances Vaughan, Baroness Burgh m. Thomas Burgh, 3rd Baron Burgh Q75272364
- Marie Stewart, Countess of Mar
- Elizabeth Harvey (courtier) m. Daniel Harvey (diplomat) Q76001604
- Anne Lennard, Countess of Sussex
- Jane Bentinck, Countess of Portland m. William Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland Q75248664
- Juliana Boyle, Countess of Burlington m. Charles Boyle, 2nd Earl of Burlington Q75251993
- Elizabeth Montagu, Countess of Sandwich m. Edward Montagu, 3rd Earl of Sandwich Q75269604
- Margaret Macdonald of Sleat m. Sir Alexander Macdonald, 7th Baronet Q75264209 need dob
- Mary Gregory m. David Gregory (historian) Q75271068
- Ann Fairfax Q75965437 Anne Fairfax
- Margaret Heathcote m. Sir Gilbert Heathcote, 3rd Baronet Q75269877
- Louisa Jenkinson, Countess of Liverpool
- Jane Gaugain check
- Letitia Higgin
- https://archive.org/details/b24750141/page/570/mode/2up?ref=ol&view=theater halls
- https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Report_of_the_Commissioner_of_Education/495CAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0
- https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=wtZLAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA549 Mayor's Message and Reports of the City Officers
- https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/_/wMz_iSm_hJEC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA41 A Complete View of Baltimore Joseph Chiappi
- https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/History_of_Baltimore_City_and_County_fro/6tF4AAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Peale+Baltimore+Museum+1833&pg=PA693&printsec=frontcover 1881 source
- Revolver: Sam Colt and the Six-Shooter That Changed America Jim Rasenberger 2021 · Joseph E. Walker
- Handbill Edgar Allan Poe's Baltimore By David F. Gaylin · 2015 p53
- Alexandria Phenix Gazette, February 16, 1833, Pg. 2
- https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-baltimore-sun-baltimore-museum-fire/124410170/ Baltimore Museum fire 1873
=== Independence Hall
In 1802 the museum moved again to Independence Hall, the former Pennsylvania statehouse. Peale retired in 1810 and left the running of the museum to his son Rubens. The museum was incorporated as the Philadelphia Museum Company in 1821.[1] In 1822 Peale painted The Artist in His Museum, a self portrait with his museum in the Long Room of the Independence Hall in the background.[2]
=== Other museums
In 1814 Peale's son Rembrandt opened a second Peale Museum in Baltimore, which was the first purpose built museum building in the United States.[3][4] Rubens opened a third museum in New York in 1825.[5] In the 1840s the Peale museums suffered from declining revenue and competition from the showman P. T. Barnum, who opened his American Museum in New York in 1842. The New York Peale museum was closed in 1842 and the Baltimore museum in 1845, their contents being sold to Barnum.[4]
=== Later years
Peale died in 1827 and the museum moved again to Chestnut Street Arcade. Later Peale's son Titian took over and then his grandson Edmund.[4] In 1838 the museum moved to a newly constructed building at Ninth and Sansom streets, which was also known as the Chinese Museum as it initially housed the Chinese collection of Nathan Dunn, one of its directors, in its lower story. That building burned down in 1854[1] The majority of the Philadelphia collection was sold to P. T. Barnum and Moses Kimball in 1849 and was subsequently lost or destroyed. The portrait collection was auctioned in 1854 and some of it was bought by the City of Philadelphia for display in Independence Hall.[6]
References
- ^ a b Scharf, John Thomas; Westcott, Thompson (1884). History of Philadelphia, 1609-1884. L. H. Everts & Company. pp. 948–950.
- ^ Ward, David C. (Winter 1993). "Celebration of Self: The Portraiture of Charles Willson Peale and Rembrandt Peale, 1822-27". American Art. 7 (1): 8–27. doi:10.1086/424174.
- ^ Mendinghall, Joseph S. (February 28, 1975). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination: Peale's Baltimore Museum". National Park Service. Retrieved 2024-05-30.
- ^ a b c Dugatkin, Lee Alan (Fall 2020). "The Rise and Fall of Charles Willson Peale's Philadelphia Museum". Skeptic. 25 (4) – via Gale Academic OneFile.
- ^ "Rubens Peale". National Portrait Gallery, Washington. Retrieved 4 May 2024.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Philadelphia Encyclopedia
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
FAG
[edit]Helen Vickroy Austin 2017 Ernesta Drinker Ballard 2011 x Helen Ballard 2020 Iris Bannochie 2006 x Émile Napoléon Baumann 2018 Jelena de Belder-Kovačič 2018 Rae Selling Berry 2015 x Sue Biggs 2018 Sylvia Blankenship 2023 Andrea Brunsendorf 2018 Maggie Campbell-Culver 2013 x Angelika Campbell, Countess Cawdor 2024 Pamela Cunningham Copeland 2017 Emma G. Cummings 2018 Anna de Diesbach 2009 x Margaret Bell Douglas 2019 Jane Edmanson 2018 Margery Fish 2016 Catherine FitzGerald 2019 Olive Fitzhardinge 2012 x Elizabeth Gilmer 2009 x Jane Norton Grew 2023 Annie Gulvin 2018 Jane B. Haines 2020 Beatrix Havergal 2009 x Isabelle Bowen Henderson 2024 Amelia Egerton, Lady Hume 2018 Alice Hutchins (gardener) 2021 Charlotte Knight 2015 x Snježana Kordić 2012 x Joy Larkcom 2021 Abra Lee 2021 Norah Lindsay 2009 x Cecily Littleton 2022 Tatjana Ljujić-Mijatović 2018 Mary McMurtrie 2014 x Corinne Melchers 2020 Hilda Murrell 2004 x Lady Dorothy Nevill 2008 x Anna B. Nickels 2021 Ethel Anson Peckham 2015 y Frances Perry (gardener) 2007 x Elza Polak 2018 Nora Pöyhönen 2016 Hortensia del Prado 2021 Isabella Preston 2016 Chrystabel Procter 2018 Elsie Reford 2010 x Patricia Easterbrook Roberts 2018 Eleanour Sinclair Rohde 2006 x Lester Gertrude Ellen Rowntree 2014 x Kate Sessions 2006 x Theodosia Burr Shepherd 2018 Holly Shimizu 2021 Midori Shintani (horticulturalist) 2021 Lady Beatrix Stanley 2020 Frances Tophill 2015 x Elisa Bailly de Vilmorin 2014 x Edna Walling 2005 x Susana, Lady Walton 2010 x Karen Washington 2017 Cynthia Westcott 2017 Frances Garnet Wolseley, 2nd Viscountess Wolseley 2016
Stony Brook
[edit]- https://web.archive.org/web/20200811043716/https://www.parkscollege.ox.ac.uk/about-our-building-project
- https://web.archive.org/web/20210309184345/https://estates.admin.ox.ac.uk/files/radcliffesciencelibrary1compressedpdf
Bavaria
[edit]Hi, I have reverted your edits to a couple of articles
- Duchy of Prussia . You added content to the article sourced to books about Italy, which are not high quality sources for the Duchy of Prussia.
- Byzantine civilisation in the 12th century . You added content to the article sourced to books about the Angevin Empire, which are not high quality sources for the Byzantine Empire. Also the section was about economic expansion, and the information was not relevant to the topic.
Would an 18-hour rotation be useful?
[edit]Hi, I see that you started the article Adelheid von Nassau-Dillenburg in November 2021. The articles ne:Adelheid van Vianden and en:Adelaide of Vianden are about the same person, but sources differ about her parents and date of death.
- daughter of PHILIPP II von Vianden in nl https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/LUXEMBOURG.htm#_Toc119513440
- daughter of Gottfried II von Vianden, Abbess of Kloster Keppel 1375 in de
https://www.lagis-hessen.de/de/subjects/idrec/sn/bio/id/2273
We have just switched to 16 hooks a day on 23 August and back to 8 a day on 29 August, while we still have around 130 approved hooks. This was previously discussed at Wikipedia talk:Did you know/Archive 192#Would an 18-hour rotation be useful?.
- Gordon Fallows
- Geoffrey Allen (bishop)
- Desmond Carnelley
- Dennis Ede
- Michael Doe (bishop)
- John Oliver (Archdeacon of Leeds)
- John Delight
- John Packer
- Hedley Sparks
- Anthony Dyson (priest)
- Arthur Willis (athlete)
- John W. Rogerson
- Eric Halladay
- Robert Grimley
- Martin Wharton
- Mark Dalby
- Tim Stevens
- Stephen Sykes
- Charles Jenkinson (priest)
- Derrick Walters
- Peter Wheatley
- Stephen Stetler
- Gordon Taylor (Royal Navy chaplain)
- John Langdon (priest)
- Philip Turner (writer)
- Ian Ramsey
- John Bowker (theologian)
Translation
[edit]https://archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk/search/archives/9db5deea-6b43-3ed4-8a61-b9b06066ab50
- Maria Schmitz
- Agnieszka Machówna
- Zborowski (Jastrzębiec)
- https://atom.lib.strath.ac.uk/jordanhill-college-of-education-glasgow
- The Glasgow Sugar Aristocracy: Scotland and Caribbean Slavery, 1775–1838
Stephen Mullen
- A History of Catholic Education and Schooling in Scotland New Perspectives by Stephen J. McKinney, Raymond McCluskey · 2019
- Going It Alone: Catholic Schools in Scotland By WILLIAM JOSEPH MCKECHIN · 2018
- The Schooling of Working-Class Girls in Victorian Scotland Gender, Education and Identity By Jane McDermid · 2013
- Historical Writing in England - Volume 2 - Antonia Gransden · 1974 · https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=zKUNAQAAMAAJ
page 5 says To the historian today Gildas's work has shortcomings . Besides mis- interpreting some of his evidence , he is vague , giving no precise dates and few names . His knowledge is confined mainly to west Britain and he knows little of the Anglo-Saxon settlements in the east .
page 23 says Bede's sources for the pre - conversion period were scanty and it was beyond living memory . He adds little to his written authorities ( such as Pliny , Orosius , Gildas , Constantius's Life of St. Germanus , the Life of St Alban83 and the Liber Pontificalis84 ) .
- Towards tomorrow : the Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus by Makower, Frances A
- Mother Mabel Digby a biography of the superior general of the Society of the Sacred Heart, 1835-1911 by Anne Pollen A
- Sudden Splendor: The Story of Mabel Digby Mary Kathleen Richardson · 1957 G
- I would prefer to keep the colleges separate as they originally had separate histories, though I agree the sources for Digby Stuart are a bit thin. Would removing the calligraphy section resolve the additional citations tag? I agree that a list of non-notable people is not needed.
- Grand Mosque Allahabad, official per https://islahulmuslimeen.org/grand-mosque-allahabad
- Allahabad Darbar per https://www.encyclopediasindhiana.org/article.php?Dflt=%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%87%D9%87%20%D8%A2%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%AF%20%D8%AF%D8%B1%D9%BB%D8%A7%D8%B1
- Dargah Allahabad Sharif per https://sd.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D8%AF%D8%B1%DA%AF%D8%A7%D9%87%D9%87_%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%84%D9%87_%D8%A2%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%AF_%D8%B4%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%81
- Dargah Allahabad per https://ur.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D8%AF%D8%B1%DA%AF%D8%A7%DB%81_%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%84%DB%81_%D8%A2%D8%A8%D8%A7%D8%AF
- Modèle:Infobox Encyclopédie
- Modèle:Infobox Site web
Hi, I notice that you started da:University College Lillebælt. I think it would be useful to wikilink the former institutions with da Wikipedia articles, e.g. da:Jelling Seminarium, da:Odense Seminarium, da:Skårup Seminarium, da:Den Sociale Højskole (Odense).
- CVU Lillebælt= CVSU – Fyn, CVU Fyn, CVU Jelling, Odense Socialpædagogiske Seminarium, Skårup Seminarium, Sygeplejeskolen i Vejle and Amtscentrene for Undervisning på Fyn og i Vejle.[1]
- CVU Lillebælt and Den Sociale Højskole i Odense[2]
References
- ^ "Om CVU Lillebælt" [About CVU Lillebælt]. University College Lillebælt (in Danish). Archived from the original on 16 December 2007. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
- ^ "Om os" [About us]. University College Lillebælt (in Danish). Archived from the original on 25 March 2008. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
DYK
[edit]- three new churches
- correct Hague
- Timothy Gilbert
- Moody tent
- Emily Otis
- The village's official name was changed from in 2023.[1][2]
- Anjum to Eanjum, Augsbuurt to Augsbuert-Lytsewâld, Bornwird to Boarnwert, Ee, Friesland to Ie, Noardeast-Fryslân, Engwierum to Ingwierrum, Hantumeruitburen to Hantumerútbuorren, Hantumhuizen to Hantumhuzen, Holwerd to Holwert, Kollumerzwaag to Kollumersweach, Lioessens to Ljussens, Metslawier to Mitselwier, Morra, Netherlands to Moarre, Niawier to Nijewier, Oosternijkerk to Easternijtsjerk, Oostmahorn to De Skâns-Oostmahorn, Oostrum to Eastrum, Oudwoude to Aldwâld, Paesens to Peazens, Triemen to De Trieme, Veenklooster to Feankleaster, Westergeest to Westergeast, Zwagerbosch to Sweagerbosk.
References
- ^ "22 dorpen in Noardeast-Fryslân krijgen op 1 januari 2023 een nieuwe Friese naam" [22 villages in Noardeast-Fryslân will receive a new Frisian name on 1 January 2023]. RTV NOF (in Dutch). 10 December 2022. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- ^ "Friese namen" [Frisian names]. Taalunie (in Dutch). Retrieved 7 April 2023.
- Eanjum, Augsbuert-Lytsewâld, Boarnwert, Ie, Noardeast-Fryslân, Ingwierrum, Hantumerútbuorren, Hantumhuzen, Holwert, Kollumersweach, Ljussens, Mitselwier, Moarre, Nijewier, Easternijtsjerk, De Skâns-Oostmahorn, Eastrum, Aldwâld, Peazens, De Trieme, Feankleaster, Westergeast, Sweagerbosk.
- Peazens-Moddergat, Protestant church of Hantumhuzen.
- https://www.rtvnof.nl/22-dorpen-in-noardeast-fryslan-krijgen-op-1-januari-2023-een-nieuwe-friese-naam/595397/
- here
East Gothland Theatre → Östgötateatern
- "The choice between anglicized and local spellings should follow English-language usage, e.g. the non-anglicized titles Besançon, Søren Kierkegaard, and Göttingen are used because they predominate in English-language reliable sources, whereas for the same reason the anglicized title forms Nuremberg, delicatessen, and Florence are used (as opposed to Nürnberg, Delikatessen, and Firenze, respectively)."
- Karl May School аттестаты certificates or attestat degrees
- I found a paper Mothers, Monsters, Maturation: Female Evil in Beowulf by Gwendolyn A. Morg (Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts, 1991) JSTOR link
- [1]: 306
- Template:Did you know nominations/Roy Field
- Template:Did you know nominations/Lille langebro
- Template:Did you know nominations/Red Book of Worcester
- Template:Did you know nominations/Trial of Neumann and Sass
- Template:Did you know nominations/Jørgen Læssøe
- Template:Did you know nominations/Kathleen Freeman (classicist)
- Template:Did you know nominations/Judith Schiff
- Canterbury 1770–1814, Calcutta 1814–1836, Sydney 1836–1847, Adelaide 1847–1856, Perth 1856–1904 and Bunbury 1904–
Blackfriars Hall, Oxford
[edit]- ug ئوكسفورد ئۇنىۋېرسىتېتى
- th มหาวิทยาลัยออกซฟอร์ด
- bn অক্সফোর্ড বিশ্ববিদ্যালয়
- pa ਆਕਸਫ਼ੋਰਡ ਯੂਨੀਵਰਸਿਟੀ
- ko 옥스퍼드 대학교
- he אוניברסיטת אוקספורד
- as অক্সফ'ৰ্ড বিশ্ববিদ্যালয়
- uk Оксфордський університет
- ja オックスフォード大学
- zh 牛津大学
- tg Донишгоҳи Оксфорд 11
- sr Универзитет у Оксфорду
- ru Оксфордский университет
- mk Оксфордски универзитет
- kk Оксфорд университеті
- bg Оксфордски университет
- be Оксфардскі ўніверсітэт
- be-tarask Оксфардзкі ўнівэрсытэт
- vi Đại học Oxford
- uz Oxford universiteti
- tw University of Oxford 21
- tr Oxford Üniversitesi
- tl Unibersidad ng Oxford
- sw Chuo Kikuu cha Oxford
- sv Oxfords universitet
- sk University of Oxford
- sh Univerzitet u Oxfordu
- ro Universitatea Oxford
- pms Università d'Oxford
- pt Universidade de Oxford
- pl Uniwersytet Oksfordzki 31
- nrm Unnivèrsité d'Oxford
- no University of Oxford
- nl Universiteit van Oxford
- nds University of Oxford
- lv Oksfordas Universitāte
- lfn Universia de Oxford
- lb Universitéit vun Oxford
- kbp Oxford sukuli kɩtɛzʊʊ
- it Università di Oxford
- is Oxford-háskóli 41
- id Universitas Oxford
- hu Oxfordi Egyetem
- fy Universiteit fan Oxford
- fr Université d'Oxford
- fi Oxfordin yliopisto
- la Universitas Oxoniensis
- ia Universitate de Oxford
- eu Oxfordeko Unibertsitatea
- es Universidad de Oxford
- eo Universitato de Oksfordo 51
- de University of Oxford
- cs Oxfordská univerzita
- ca Universitat d'Oxford
- bs Univerzitet u Oxfordu
- ban Univérsitas Oxford
- az Oksford Universiteti
- ast Universidá d'Oxford
- an Universidat d'Oxford
- af Universiteit van Oxford
- simple University of Oxford 61
- en University of Oxford
{{subst:Cfr2|Irvingism|Catholic Apostolic Church|text=Your reason(s) for the proposed rename. TSventon (talk) 12:07, 23 January 2023 (UTC)} } {{subst:Cfr2|Catholic Apostolic Church denominations|Apostolic Church denominations|text=Your reason(s) for the proposed rename. TSventon (talk) 12:07, 23 January 2023 (UTC)} } Move Talk:Blackfriars Hall, Oxford/Comments
- The subject of the first sentence of the lead should generally be the name of the article, see WP:FIRST. The common name is Blackfriars,not Blackfriars Priory.
- I don't see any evidence that Wychwood School is an important part of the history of the home students. The Victoria County History mentions the religious hostels, which accomodated a third of home students in 1939.
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/oxon/vol3/pp351-353
- @Gerda Arendt:,| thank you for your answer, unfortunately I didn't see it until the nomination page was closed. I have asked at the resource exchange what Weltgebäude meant in the 17th century.
- diff
- NO BOTS should have been added
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Oxford University Gazette
[edit]- History of Oxford University Press: Volume II 1780 to 1896 2013 p. 59
- Wikipedia:FAQ/Copyright#Derivative_works
- naturally enough, evaluations of this period differ markedly in German and Lithuanian scholarship
p. 774 of Germany and the Memel Germans in the 1930s Alvydas Nikžentaitis https://www.jstor.org/stable/2639972 The Historical Journal Vol. 39, No. 3 (Sep., 1996), pp. 771-783 (13 pages) Published by: Cambridge University Press
Neumann-Sass-Prozess als Ausdruck fundamentalen Wandels in den Beziehungen zwischen Litauen und Deutschland
- Antanas Smetona and His Lithuania - Page 301
Alfonsas Eidintas · 2015 the trial of Neumann and Sass
- Nested Security
Lessons in Conflict Management from the League of Nations and the European Union - Page 95 Erin K. Jenne · 2015
- Nebo-Sarsekim Tablet
- German nationalists began to take advantage of the situation, and with their activity only worsened it → which worsened over time
- German politicians aimed to maintain the German character of Klaipeda, while Lithuanian politicians sought to make it more Lithuanian.
- https://www.oxfordpreservation.org.uk/sites/www.oxfordpreservation.org.uk/files/Book%201%20-%20footnoted%20text%20MG_1.pdf Blackfriars, built between 1921 and 1929, Doran Webb.
Elizabeth Paulet
[edit]- Category:Wikipedians interested in Reno Express
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- A PERIOD OF REFORM AT THE UNIVERSITIES OF OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE JSTOR
- Environmental defender merger discussion
- Architect for Bermondsey HQ
- 95% coffee beans
- Disambiguate The Clarion
- Move final sentence, reword originates to influenced
- Environmental defender new pages feed 13:45, 8 December 2021
- Wimperis, Simpson and Guthrie 558 26-9 96-7
Josua Lindahl 1912 or 1914
- Her parents were the M.P. Walter Blount and his wife Margaret or Mary.[2]
Her first marriage was to Anthony Beresford.
- Nether Hall https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/staffs/vol9/pp46-48
- pp 188-211 https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/ecco/004896874.0001.000/1:11?rgn=div1;view=fulltext
- two brothers; William Blount an executor, with Nicholas Bacon, of sir Tho|mas Pope's will: and Walter Blount, nominated a scholar of Trinty college, Oxford, by the founder, and admitted January the ninth, 1557. Her sisters were Mary, Anne and Ellen
- She died in 1593 and was buried, with Thomas Pope and his second wife Margaret, in a tomb she had had built in the chapel at Trinity College.[3]
- She then married Sir Thomas Pope, a wealthy landowner who founded Trinity College, Oxford. Pope's death left Elizabeth a rich widow and she afterwards married Sir Hugh Paulet.[4]
References
- ^ Richards, Julian D. (2000). "Identifying Anglo-Scandinavian Settlements". In Hadley, Dawn M.; Richards, Julian D. (eds.). Cultures in Contact: Scandinavian Settlement in England in the Ninth and Tenth Centuries. ISBN 978-2-503-50978-5.
- ^ "BLOUNT, Walter I (by 1501-43 or later), of Blount's Hall, nr. Uttoxeter, Staffs. - History of Parliament Online". www.historyofparliamentonline.org.
- ^ Hopkins ·, Clare (2005). Trinity 450 Years of an Oxford College Community. Oxford University Press. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-19-951896-8.
- ^ Underhill, Charles Hayward (1941). History of Burton Upon Trent. Tresises. pp. 113–115.
AEW
[edit]- Death Penalty India Report in Capital punishment in India
- Category:Serbian educators split wd
- Manouchehr Yazdi
- Category:Estonian educators
- Estonian teachers
- Anna Raudkats
- People from Northern Ireland was used because Northern Irish People and Northern Ireland People were controversial, so . Obviously many more English speakers have a strong opinion on Ireland than on Saint Martin.
- The 1847 'Blue Book' reports diff
- Usage diff
- Purpose diff
- References by politicians to the Welsh Not diff
- please can you withdraw this list. Editors may remove pro Welsh content for valid reasons rather than because they are anti Welsh. Also you missed at least one pro Welsh edit from me.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=1045601867&oldid=1045596665&title=Welsh_Not
- https://www-jstor-org.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/stable/3099079 The Place of School in the Maintenance of the Welsh Language
- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=849680273&oldid=849664012&title=Welsh_Not
- Robert Lowe revised code 1862
- Churches: Maperton, Milborne Wick Mission Church, Montacute, Church of St John the Evangelist, Milborne Port, St Helena's Church, West Leake, Andrew Taylor (architect), Church of St Catherine, Montacute, Lilleshall Hall
- Hospitals: Derbyshire Royal Infirmary y, Victoria Hospital for Children, Evelina London Children's Hospital, Royal Dental Hospital y, Royal Northern Hospital y, Miller General Hospital y[1]
References
- ^ Gray, Alexander Stuart (1986). Edwardian Architecture: A Biographical Dictionary. University of Iowa Press. p. 394. ISBN 9780877451365. Retrieved 31 August 2021.
Academic halls
[edit]- I think [[Whimbling iron may be a hoax. Do the terms "whimbling iron" and "whefting iron" exist outside wikipedia?
References
- https://books.google.co.uk/books?redir_esc=y&id=9y0BAAAAQAAJ&q=elis#v=onepage&q=elis&f=true Smith
- https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=7Ig1_BV6JEQC The Polis as an Urban Centre
- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ancient_Elis&diff=prev&oldid=875333416 edit on perioiki
- https://rune.une.edu.au/web/handle/1959.11/2361 thesis
- Association for Promoting the Higher Education of Women in Oxford (AEW) The History of the University of Oxford: Volume VIII: The Twentieth Century edited by Trevor Henry Aston, Brian Harrison p346
- Association for Promoting the Higher Education of Women in Oxford The University of Oxford: A History By L. W. B. Brockliss
- Association for the Higher Education of Women (AEW) St Hugh’s: One Hundred Years of Women’s Education in Oxford Penny Griffin 1986 p21
- Hi, do you have all the dates you need for colleges that have changed name.
- St Hilda's 1893 St Hilda's, 1896 St Hilda's Hall, 1926 St Hilda's College see st-hildas-college-concise-history page 6.
- St Hilda's organisation page 6
- 1893 Founded as St Hilda's, students registered as home-students
- 1896 recognised by Association for the Education of Women as St Hilda's Hall
- 1901 merged with St Hilda's College, Cheltenham, a teacher training college, as St Hilda's Incorporated College
- 1910 recognised society for women students
- 1920 women become members of the university
- 1926 royal charter as St Hilda's College, Oxford
- 1955 new charter gives independence from Cheltenham Ladies' College
- 1959 applies to be full college
- 1961 new charter as full college
- https://www.st-hildas.ox.ac.uk/content/st-hildas-college-concise-history
References
Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain
[edit]CelticBrain (and page watchers), I think your change to the time line needs discussion and the edit summary "Added a slightly updated version of the timeline" should have mentioned what you had changed, e.g. "influence of Celtic languages".
- Original: "A few loan words are borrowed from the native Romano-Britons but any further influence from the Celtic languages or British Latin is disputed"
- Revised: "A few loan words are borrowed from the native Romano-Britons but aside from this, influence from the Celtic languages is essentially nonexistent"
- Revised: "A few loan words are borrowed from the native Romano-Britons but aside from this, Old English shows little obvious influence from Celtic or spoken Latin Celtic language decline in England
I have removed the final paragraph Some recent scholarship has argued, however, that current approaches to the sociology of ethnicity render it extremely difficult, if not impossible, to demonstrate ethnic identity via purely archaeological means, and has thereby rejected the basis for using furnished inhumation or such clothing practices as the use of peplos dress, or particular artistic styles found on artefacts such as those found at Alwalton, for evidence of pagan beliefs, or cultural memories of tribal or ethnic affiliation.[1][2]
- The paragraph criticises "demonstrat{ing] ethnic identity via purely archaeological means", which the first two paragraphs don't support. The example of Alwalton is not mentioned in either citation.
- It may give undue weight to a single paper as it seems to be based on the second citation, to a paper by James M. Harland, which says it was based on PhD research (supervised by Guy Halsall).[1]
- The first citation, to a paper by Guy Halsall is not relevant as it is a criticism of two papers on continental archaeology and says "In British archaeology, the approach taken would usually be to address the nature of ethnicity and whether, theoretically, such forms of identity would or could be identifiable in the archaeological record."[2]
- X, Y I have had a look at byrne et al's study and it says it is extending a People of the British Isles study (i.e. Leslie et al). It is a modern DNA study and I am not sure it is independent of Leslie et al.
References
- ^ a b Halsall, Guy (2011). "Ethnicity and Early Medieval Cemeteries" (PDF). Arquelogía y Territorio Medieval. 18: 15–27. doi:10.17561/aytm.v18i0.1462. Retrieved 27 October 2020.
- ^ a b Harland, James M. (2019). "Memories of Migration? The 'Anglo-Saxon' Burial Costume of the 5th Century AD". Antiquity. 93 (370): 954–969. doi:10.15184/aqy.2019.60. S2CID 199266022. Retrieved 27 October 2020.
- I am wondering whether the following sentence implies that there are contemporary scholars with an uncritical reading of Gildas and Bede and if so, whether it can be improved. It says In recent decades, a number of specialists have maintained support for this interpretation, and variations on this theme continue to feature in standard histories of the language. The original 2017 version was similar In recent decades, a few specialists have continued to support this interpretation.
Alumner
[edit]Alumner_från_Gymnastik-_och_idrottshögskolan done
- Viktor Balck
- Per-Olof Åstrand
- George H. Taylor (physician)
- Martina Bergman-Österberg
- Wiktor Unander
- Princess Birgitta of Sweden?
- Anders Gärderud
- Erik Hamrén
- Lotta Hedström
Alumner_från_Kungliga_Konsthögskolan
- Dorrit Hallström
- Fredrik Wretman
- Cajsa von Zeipel
- Camilla Akraka
- Peter Linde
- Anders Widoff
Alumner_från_Operahögskolan
- Johan Schinkler
- Stefan Ljungqvist
- Hillevi Martinpelto
- Loa Falkman
Diffs
[edit]- Wood, Ian (2016), "Beowulf and the Schleswig-Holstein Question", in Beck, H. (ed.), The Modern Origins of the Early Middle Ages, Oxford Umiversity Press, ISBN 9780198767497
- Wood, Ian (2016), "Beowulf and the Schleswig-Holstein Question", The Modern Origins of the Early Middle Ages, Oxford Umiversity Press, ISBN 9780198767497
{{Re|MrClog} see InklingScholarWycliffeHall's post above.
Hi InklingScholarWycliffeHall, thanks for revising the articles. Don't worry (too much) about making mistakes at first. Have you read the "Possible conflict of interest" section above?
On format for a talk page, a "ping" looks like the beginning of this post and only works if followed by a signature. To sign you type four tildes or click on the button (with four tildes) following "Sign your posts on talk pages:". All the other stuff allows the code to show as text.
- 24 January 2017 to 14 April 2020
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=950821945&oldid=761806707 Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=952234859&oldid=952174290
briticisms
[edit]- Non-specific criticism
- Richard Coates, “Invisible Britons: the View From Linguistics,” 2007
- Diglossia model
- Robert McColl Millar, “At the Forefront of Linguistic Change: The Morphology of Late Northumbrian Texts and the History of the English Language, with Particular Reference to the Lindisfarne Gospels.”
- Periphrastic “do”
- https://www.academia.edu/5772279/_At_the_Forefront_of_Linguistic_Change_The_Morphology_of_Late_Northumbrian_Texts_and_the_History_of_the_English_Language_with_Particular_Reference_to_the_Lindisfarne_Gospels_
- Herbert Schendl, “Middle English: Language Contact,” 2012
https://www.academia.edu/12524687/Middle_English_Language_contact
- Peter W. Culicover, “The Rise and Fall of Constructions and the History of Do-Support,” 2008
- Anthony S. Kroch, “Function and Grammar in the History of English: Periphrastic Do,” 1989
- Progessive form
- George Lamont, “The Progress of English Verb Tenses and the English Progressive,” 2005
- Tauno Mustanoja, A Middle English Syntax, originally published 1960, current edition published 2016, pp. 572-585
- Johann Elsness, “On the progression of the progressive in Early Modern English,” 1994
- Artemis Alexiadou, “Nominal vs. Verbal -ing Constructions and the Development of the English Progressive,” 2013
- Herbert Schendl, “Middle English: Language Contact,” 2012
- Kirstin Killie, “Old English-Late British language contact and the English progressive,” in Language Contact and Development Around the North Sea, 2012
- Coates p154-155[1]
- Kortmann and van der Auwera Norwegian analytic[2]
- Zarraz (degree thesis) does not mention Welsh or Celtic[3]
- https://www.researchgate.net/publication/249903234_A_history_of_the_English_language_and_A_history_of_the_English_language_and_The_Oxford_history_of_English_review book review
- https://www.academia.edu/3592269/Review_of_D._Gary_Miller_2012._External_Influences_on_English_From_its_Beginnings_to_the_Renaissance._Oxford_Oxford_University_Press book review
- https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=nHzUDwAAQBAJ from p56 welsh slaves
References
- ^ Coates, Richard. "Celtic whispers: Revisiting the problems of the relation between Brittonic and Old English".
- ^ Kortmann, Bernd; van der Auwera, Johan (eds.). The Languages and Linguistics of Europe: A Comprehensive Guide.
- ^ Zarraz, Jaione Inda. "The Progress of the English Progressive" (PDF).
Category:Professional education in the United Kingdom
[edit]* [[:Category:Palacký University]] to [[:Category:Palacký University Olomouc]] – C2D: since March 2019 main article has been [[:Palacký University Olomouc]], which is the official English name [https://www.upol.cz/en/university/basic-information/]. ~~~~ ** [[:Category:Palacký University alumni]] to [[:Category:Palacký University Olomouc alumni]] – as above ** [[:Category:Palacký University faculty]] to [[:Category:Palacký University Olomouc faculty]] – as above ** [[:Category:Palacký University Rector elections]] to [[:Category:Palacký University Olomouc Rector elections]] – as above {{subst:Cfr-speedy|Palacký University Olomouc}} {{subst:Cfr-speedy|Palacký University Olomouc alumni}} {{subst:Cfr-speedy|Palacký University Olomouc faculty}} {{subst:Cfr-speedy|Palacký University Olomouc Rector elections}} {{reply to|Wilfridselsey {{reply to|Richard75 I think the explanation for writing "appear to be" is that Timothy Briden is a barrister writing a legal textbook. The
- I agree that the list is suspect, as are many Wikipedia articles, but hopefully we will improve it. I would call the section other peculiars and add a section for former peculiars such as Masham.
- This structure seems to exist only for the UK. (Compare Category:Professional studies)
- Education in the United Kingdom by subject
- Universities and colleges in the United Kingdom by type
- ==Category:Alumni of Birmingham Institute of Art and Design===
- Paul Bradshaw (journalist) academic faculty
- Ravi Deepres academic faculty
- Xavier Mendik academic faculty
- Beverley Nielsen academic faculty
- Stephen Biesty BIAD
- Richard Billingham Bournville College of Art
- Peter Bishop (artist) BIAD
- William Bloye Academic BSA
- Bernard Cuzner Academic BSA
- Trevor Denning Academic BSA
- Bernard Fleetwood-Walker Academic BSA
- Arthur Gaskin Academic BSA
- Charles March Gere Academic BSA
- Roger Hiorns Bournville College of Art
- Alex Hughes (cartoonist) BIAD
- Sidney Meteyard Academic BSA
- Saiman Miah BIAD
- John Mulligan?
- Henry Payne (artist) Academic BSA
- Rob Pepper BIAD
- Peter Phillips (artist) Academic BSA
- Mike Perkins Bournville College of Art
- Donald Rodney Bournville College of Art
- Jo Metson Scott BIAD
- John Shelley (illustrator) Bournville College of Art
- Marty St. James Bournville College of Art
- Andrew Tift BIAD
- Phil Winslade BIAD
- Marjorie Yates Bournville College of Art
Heads of colleges in the United Kingdom
[edit]- Check alumni by art school to alumni by college
- Ridley Hall, Cambridge, Janet Henderson, Russell Darbyshire, Edward Woods (bishop), Jeremy Begbie, Jo Bailey Wells
- Cranmer Hall, Durham, Calvin T. Samuel, Michael Volland, Alison White (bishop), John Pritchard (bishop), Pete Wilcox
- Royal Central School of Speech and Drama
- Elsie Fogerty 1906 to 1942
- Gavin Henderson 2007
- Category:Bible colleges, seminaries and theological colleges in England
- Category:Staff of Ridley Hall, Cambridge
- Category:Staff of Wesley House
- Category:Staff of Westcott House, Cambridge
- Category:Staff of Ripon College Cuddesdon
- Category:Staff of Cranmer Hall, Durham
- Royal Northern College of Music list added
- Category:People associated with the Royal College of Music
- Sir David Willcocks (1974)
- Michael Gough Matthews (1985)
- Dame Janet Ritterman (1993)
- Colin Lawson (since 2005)
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2010/2614/made
- President of Centennial College Canada
- ?Category Colleges in the United Kingdom
- Music schools in Canada, Conservatoire Quebec
References
To do
[edit]- Oriel Coll Latin [1]
- Category:Directors of the Royal Danish Academy of Music
- Category:Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences alumni done
- Category:Lillehammer University College alumni done
- Category:Hedmark University College alumni done
- Category:Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences faculty
- Category:Lillehammer University College faculty done
- Category:Nord-Trøndelag University College alumni done
- Category:Nesna University College alumni done
- Category:Oslo Metropolitan University alumni
- Category:Rectors of BI Norwegian Business School done
- Category:Rectors of the Norwegian School of Veterinary Science only 3?
- Category:Stockholm University of the Arts alumni done
- Category:Dramatiska Institutet alumni done
- Category:University of South-Eastern Norway alumni
- Category:Telemark University College alumni
- Category:Vestfold University College alumni
- Category:University of South-Eastern Norway faculty
- Category:Western Norway University of Applied Sciences alumni done
- Category:Nord University alumni done
Oxford
[edit]- Exeter College Andrew Roe end of September 2024
- Lincoln College Nigel Clifford September 2024
- Nuffield College Julia Black 30th September 2024 https://www.nuffield.ox.ac.uk/news-events/news/professor-julia-black-cbe-pba-elected-as-the-tenth-warden-of-nuffield-college/
- St Catherine’s College 23 July 2024 https://www.stcatz.ox.ac.uk/master-retirement-kersti-borjars/
- University of Lille v University of Lille Nord de France
- Rowcroft, 1929 , and Emily Morris soon after (Fielding Dodd) The Clarendon Guide to Oxford - Page 121
- Besse (1952, Kenneth Stevens) Matthews Building (1971 , architect Kenneth Stevens) Latner Building (1972, architect Kenneth Stevens) The Encyclopaedia of Oxford - Page 423
- New Building? 1988 Chamberlin Powell Bon & Woods west of chavasse quad jebb p 212
- Refs:
{{cite web}}
: Empty citation (help)
Ps. Spl. M. 103, 19 =Arundel MS. No. 60 in the British Museum, Psalm 104 v18
References