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7824 results for: ‘婚纱摄影服务 预约平台✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.zOjKZtxtoGGBdV’

  • Inclusion at the University of Leicester

    Information about Inclusion at the University of Leicester

  • Death’s Doings

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on September 24, 2015 In spite of all the Hypochondriac’s attempts to keep sickness at bay, Death comes whizzing down the chimney in the form of a skeletal spider. The Hypochondriac’s cat remains unmoved.

  • Convicts, Collecting and Knowledge Production in the Nineteenth Century

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on July 27, 2015 In previous blogs, I have explored some of the circulations and connections that linked nations, colonies and empires, and wove together practices of punishment and penal labour across polities and imperial spaces.

  • Identifying clues to the position and orientation of the buildings

    The team found important clues to which part of the friary had been found because the benches they found would be the chapter house, which normally projected from the eastern side of a cloister, making the corridor or building joining it in Trench 2 part of the eastern...

  • Skills employers value

    In the post-COVID world, many sectors of commerce and industry are adapting and changing methods of working. This means the range of skills that employers look for is also changing.

  • Mayor of Oadby and Wigston views world-class research at University of Leicester

    The Mayor of Oadby and Wigston, Councillor David Carter, accompanied by his consort, Mrs Janet Carter, viewed first-hand the world-class research into neurodegenerative diseases at the University of Leicester.

  • How medieval people named their animals is explored in new book 

    The relationship between medieval people and their pets is the topic of the latest book by the University of Leicester’s Dr Ben Parsons. Introducing Medieval Animal Names explores what names medieval people gave to the animals with which they lived and worked.

  • Professor Paul Monks to join BEIS as new Chief Scientific Advisor

    The University of Leicester’s Professor in Atmospheric Chemistry and Earth Observation Science Paul Monks is to join the Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) as its new Chief Scientific Advisor.

  • Ut vitam habeant – so that they may have life

    On 11 November 1918, the First World War came to an end and the following day Dr Astley Clarke wrote to the local newspaper to announce the creation of the 'Leicester University Fund', in celebration of peace and for the founding of a university college as a memorial.

  • Country Houses and the British Empire: How Imperialism Transformed Britain’s Colonial Countryside

    Explore the fascinating histories of Britain’s colonial houses and their links to the British Empire.

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