Culture, Space and Society Borthwick Institute of Historical Research Mark Hallett, Jane Rendall. 11 For details , see RCHME vol . 3 , pp . ... W. Ellerby and J. P. Pritchett , A History of the Nonconformist Churches of York , ed .
The Eighteenth-century Woman
An alluring look at the relationship of clothing and interior design in 18th-century France
2 D.J.F. Crouch , Piety , Fraternity and Power : Religious Gilds in Late Medieval Yorkshire 1389-1547 ( York , 2000 ) , p.141 . 3 E. White , The St. Christopher and St. George Guild of York ( Borthwick Paper 72 , York , 1987 ) , p.11 .
48 The Oxford Movement and Parish Life : St Saviour's Leeds , 1839-1929 by W. N. Yates . 1975 . 49 York Civic Ordinances , 1301 by Michael Prestwich . 1976 . 51 Jonathan Gray and Church Music in York , 1770-1830 by N. Temperley . 1977 .
(14.6 × 15.8 cm) The Art Institute of Chicago; John H. Wrenn Memorial Endowment (2005.5) Selected references: ... (23.5 × 17.1 cm) Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Bequest of William Perkins Babcock (B3320.4) Inscriptions: below image, ...
... run by John Hughes and William Phillips — where, for 4s. per week, several small central London parishes boarded their poor. By this time Hoxton had become a veritable village of pauper farms, almshouses and private madhouses, ...
Norman S. Fiering, 'Irresistible Compassion: An Aspect of Eighteenth-Century Sympathy and Humanitarianism',Journal ... Jeremy Gregory and John Stevenson, The Routledge Companion to Britain in the Eighteenth Century 1688–1820 (London and ...
This new book by award winning Masonic author Dr David Harrison tells the story of the staunchly independent Grand Lodge of All England at York and its rise and fall during the eighteenth century; looking at its leaders, its ritual and its ...
This innovative collection explores how a distinctively British model of sociability developed in the period from the Restoration of Charles II to the early nineteenth century through a complex process of appropriation, emulationand ...
Necessity drove the city's poor into inevitable conflict with the changing property laws such that all the working-class men and women of London had good reason to fear the example of Tyburn's triple tree.In this new edition Peter Linebaugh ...