Search

10345 results for: ‘易校网校园综合跑腿小程序源码修复运营版✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.weXzgqtSka’

  • Attitudes to Convict Ancestry: Documentary Review

    Posted by Katy Roscoe in Carceral Archipelago on December 2, 2016 In this blog post I review the documentary ‘A Secret History of my Family: Gadbury Sisters’ , which aired in 2016, and discuss how it reflects changing attitudes to convict ancestry amongst British and...

  • Getting Away with Murder in Eighteenth Century England. The Surgeon’s Bain and the Power of the Crim

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on March 14, 2016   The Murder Act of 1752 could have created a major new supply line for the hard-pressed anatomy teachers of England, Wales and Scotland.

  • People

    Browse our list of academic staff, university fellows and honorary visiting staff and find out how to get in touch via telephone and email.

  • Reconsidering Southern African Studies from the Indian Ocean

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on September 15, 2014 “Reconsidering Southern African Studies from the Indian Ocean.” This challenge underpinned two wonderful days of discussion at the University of the Western Cape last week.

  • Arthur Edward Davis (1882-1916)

    Arthur Edward Davis was educated at Mill Hill School, London. He became a cricketer of distinction and played for Leicestershire. In the great War he joined as a Private the 11th Royal Fusiliers and served in France, where he was killed in 1916.

  • Clare Anderson: Page 2

    I am a professor of history, with interests in colonialism and colonial societies across the British Empire. I am especially interested in the history of confinement.

  • Emma Battell Lowman

    Emma Battell Lowman is Lecturer in the History of the Americas at the University of Hertfordshire and is an Honorary Visiting Fellow in the School of Archaeology and Ancient History where she continues her postdoctoral research as a member of the Harnessing the Criminal...

  • Conceptualising Islands in History: Considering Bermuda and Gibraltar’s Prison Hulks

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on March 8, 2016 By Anna McKay, AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Partnership Student, National Maritime Museum & University of Leicester.

  • Dismemberment in Victorian London: The Thames Torso Murders. By Shane McCorristine

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on May 31, 2016   Battersea, London. Source: The A to Z of Victorian London. Harry Margary, Lympne Castle, Kent, 1987.

  • A story to … awaken thrilling horror

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on October 31, 2016 University of Leicester Special Collections. Frontispiece to the first illustrated edition of Frankenstein, drawn by Theodor von Holst and engraved by W. Chevalier.

Back to top
MENU