995 resultados para Henry, William, 1729-1786.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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First published, 1685.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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On cover: Beacon edition.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Another issue appeared in the same year having different frontispiece, 4 plates, different spacing of the lines of text.
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"This narrative ... appeared first ... in the pages of the 'Dublin university magazine'.".--Pref.
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"To the local reader": inserted before p. [v], gives biographical changes after work had gone to press.
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Preface dated: Springfield, Mass., May 1, 1901.
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Reminiscences of royal and noble personages during the last and present centuries: v.5, p. [341]-396.
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Includes "A Glossary of terms in ancient art" (32 pages at end).
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http://www.archive.org/details/amodernpioneerin00grifuoft
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In the late nineteenth century, a number of writers turned to anthropology to predict a socialist future. They included prominent revolutionary socialists: Friedrich Engels, William Morris and members of the Socialist League. Contextualising the appropriation of the anthropologist Lewis Henry Morgan by such readers, this article also pays particular attention to socialist popularisations of anthropology, particularly those by Morris and his fellow writers in his penny weekly, the Commonweal. Focusing on Morris’s articles on ancient society helps to illuminate his own understanding of history, art and socialism. It also sheds new light on his predictive fiction News from Nowhere, which was originally read alongside Commonweal non-fiction. Both, I will argue, encouraged readers to see the future in the struggles of the ancient past.