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11119 results for: ‘URL跳转单页带进度条简洁大气HTML单页无后台源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.dsAwILkOHDS’

  • mstein

    The secret peacemaker: A quiet leader of our time Posted by mstein in School of Business Blog on May 24, 2017 Professor Mark Stein of the School of Business mourns the key intermediary between the British government and the IRA with Leicester connections, who has died aged 80.

  • Bloomberg: Credit Default Swaps

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on April 26, 2013 Since the European Union ban on naked sovereign CDS in November, the volume of sovereign CDS trades has plummeted while the volume on financials CDS has increased, according to DTCC data.

  • Literary Archives

    Posted by Sarah Wood in Library Special Collections on April 25, 2019   The Secret Mystery of Adrian Mole Aged 13 ¾   Working in the archives, I often roll my eyes at newspaper headlines which report on archive material being ‘newly discovered’, suddenly...

  • Economics

    Find your research degree supervisor in Economics at Leicester.

  • Martyrdom, Memory and the Marquis of Montrose. By Rachel Bennett

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on March 22, 2016   During the past three years a key part of my research as part of the Criminal Corpse project has been to trace the people who suffered the last punishment of the law from their capital...

  • British Sign Language (BSL)

    Browse the range of BSL courses at the University of Leicester

  • Cricket Country

    An account of the history of Cricket, India, and the British Empire

  • Brian Burch OBE

    We have learned, with regret, of the death of Brian Burch OBE, who served as University Librarian  from 1982 to 1995 and also wrote the definitive history of the University.

  • 2020

    Here the list of publications of 2020 can be found.

  • Post-Mortem Punishment: A Fate Worse than Death? By Rachel Bennett

    Posted by Rachel Bennett in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on September 14, 2015 A key question I have repeatedly asked myself in the researching and writing up of my PhD thesis, and one that permeates the Criminal Corpse project, asks why punish the dead? The 1752 Murder...

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