Search

7189 results for: ‘wordpress外贸商城包包类女士包多语言响应式跨境电商wp主题整站源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.bQcTXuTClIgzI’

  • A chance to talk about gibbeting and hanging in France? Yes, please! By Emma Battell Lowman

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on February 22, 2016   One of the joys of academic work is participating in study days or workshops that bring together a diverse group of scholars to approach a theme or issue from multiple vantage.

  • Water in Jupiter, University of Leicester

    Juno's search for the distribution of water on Jupiter.

  • “New views of Jupiter” showcases swirling clouds on giant planet

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on May 11, 2018 Members of NASA’s Juno mission team, some of the world’s leading observers of Jupiter, and citizen scientists from across the globe are attending a workshop ‘New Views of Jupiter:...

  • Film footage offers unique insight into Richard III burial site dig

    The University has released a unique insight into the archaeological dig that has captured the imagination of the world, with new film footage of a second excavation at the site where the remains of King Richard III were discovered in 2012.

  • The Aesthetics of Authenticity in the Modern Chain Pub – University of Leicester

    Discussion of a book chapter about the "Pub Authenticity-Value Aesthetic" in relation to the JD Wetherspoon pub chain, recently published in an edited volume Biographies of Drink (CSP, 2015)

  • Cider in Unexpected Places? Rural Chile and the Cider Pressing – University of Leicester

    Deborah Toner discusses the social and cultural importance of cider making in rural Southern Chile in South America, summarising the work of Anton Daughters that appears in recent book Alcohol in Latin America: A Social and Cultural History, edited by Gretchen Pierce and...

  • Study in Nature provides potential for cancer treatment targets

    Researchers for our Department of Chemistry have been involved in new research, published in Nature, that provides potential for new targets for developing cancer treatments.

  • Angus Cameron

    Senior Lecturer and Deputy Head of School. He blogs at xenotopia.wordpress.com and tweets as @Tausendkunstler.

  • Nineteenth Century British Art Reassessed

    Module code: HA3025  British art between 1800-1900 has often been the victim of critical and art-historical scorn, often seen as producing ‘old-fashioned’ or ‘prosaic’ art.

  • Fatal wounds on the back and base of skull (injuries 4-6)

    Discover more about the fatal wounds to the back and base of Richard III's skull and the types of weapons that might have inflicted the wounds.

Back to top
MENU