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  • Professor Vincent Newey (1943–2020)

    Professor Philip Shaw writes: It is with deep sadness that I share the news that Vincent Newey, our colleague, friend and former Head of Department, has passed away.

  • New Director to lead Attenborough Arts Centre

    The University of Leicester is pleased to confirm the appointment of a new Director of the Attenborough Arts Centre, which delivers the institution’s public arts programme.

  • Postgraduate Researcher Careers: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 5

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Confirm your project

    This form is for our clients to accept quotes issued by ULAS. By submitting this form you are agreeing to all costs outlined on the quote, and our standard terms and conditions (PDF, 130kb).

  • Methods of making: palaeographical problems, codicological challenges

    The first of three Insular Manuscripts workshops, taking place in London 2017, it covered the manufacture of parchment and manuscripts at St Gallen.

  • 2021 news

    26 October 2021 Host Stress Signals Stimulate Pneumococcal Transition from Colonization to Dissemination into the Lungs Fayez Alghofaili, Hastyar Najmuldeen, Banaz O. Kareem, Bushra Shlla, Vitor E. Fernandes, Morten Danielsen, Julian M.

  • Leicester Oral History Archive collection

    The Leicester Oral History Archive is an extensive collection of over 500 interviews with a wide range of interview topics such as health, childhood, education, housing and many others. Learn more about the project.

  • Akoya PhenoImager slide scanner

    The PerkinElmer Vectra Polaris slide scanner can be found in the Advanced Imaging Facility. Learn more about it.

  • Everywhere and Nowhere: exploring histories of disability across the National Trust

    National Trust and University of Leicester launch new film to explore fascinating, previously untold stories of disability from the Trust’s sites and collections

  • Better peatland management could cut half a billion tonnes of carbon

    However, because large populations rely on these peatlands for their livelihoods, it may not be realistic to expect all agricultural peatlands to be fully returned to their natural condition in the near future.

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