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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
281

Continuity and change in the formative period of the Cusichaca Valley, Department of Cuzco, Peru

Hey, Gillian Margaret January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
282

The Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank Headquarter Buildings (1886, 1935, 1986) : a historical analysis of colonialism and architecture

Wong, Shirley Sien Wah January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
283

An artery of empire : the British Post Office and the postal and telegraphic service to India and Australia

Forbes, Andrew Stephen January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
284

Politics and reform in Spain and New Spain : the life and thought of Juan de Palafox 1600-1659

Alvarez de Toledo, Cayetana January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
285

The Pala Kingdom : rethinking lordship in early medieval North Eastern India

Targa, Sergio January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
286

Provincial capitals of late antiquity

Lavan, Luke January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
287

PLACING THE KHASI JAINTIAH HILLS: SOVEREIGNTY, CUSTOM AND NARRATIVES OF CONTINUITY

Ray, REEJU 03 October 2013 (has links)
The north eastern region in India represents a legacy of uneven imperial state formation inherited by the Indian nation state. My doctoral dissertation examines British imperialism in the nineteenth century, as it operated in “non-British” spaces of the north east frontier of colonial India. I focus on the historical production and cooption of the Khasi and Jaintiah hills, into a frontier space of the British Empire. I analyse the interconnections between physical transformations, colonial structures of law, and colonial knowledge that produced inhabitants of the autonomous polities, north east of Bengal into “hill tribals”. Law provided a foundational framework through which colonial commercial and military advancement into non-British territories such as the Khasi hills was achieved. The most profound implication of colonial processes was on ruler-subject relations, which accompanied the reconstitution of space and inhabitants’ conceptions of self. The dissertation traces both spatial and imaginative transformations that stripped the groups occupying the Khasi and Jaintiah hills of a political identity. The Khasi tribal subject’s relationship to the governing structures was navigated, and negotiated using a reconstituted notion of custom. This project is more than a history of tribal minorities in India. It addresses the crisis of colonial sovereignty in colonial frontiers, and the nature of imperialism in non-British territories. The dissertation also addresses how the hills and its peoples have long resisted incorporation and integration into totalizing histories of colonial modernity, capitalism and nationalism. Social identities of the diverse communities in the north east of India are articulated through, what I have called narratives of continuity that are both constitutive of and framed against colonial knowledge systems. Critical of the “naturalisation of the association between history and western modernity” and the consequent binaries of past and present, this dissertation analyses indigenous narratives, and the articulation of distinct pasts often inhered in the present. / Thesis (Ph.D, History) -- Queen's University, 2013-10-02 21:24:20.595
288

Scotland, Great Britain and the United States : contrasting perceptions of the Spanish-American War and American imperialism, c. 1895-1902

Donald, Iain January 1999 (has links)
British relations with the United States during the period 1895 to 1902 shifted from an attitude defined by suspicion and hostility to one of friendship. The relationship endured three main trials; the Venezuelan boundary crisis, the Spanish-American War, and simultaneous colonial struggles; the United States in the Philippines and Great Britain in South Africa. What developed was a greater mutual understanding, laying foundations for the enduring special relationship of the twentieth century. Public opinion was critical to the development of the relationship with the United States, especially in view of existing suspicions and conflicting interest groups in both countries. Great Britain, with her naval power and the vast resources of the British Empire, was undoubtedly the most powerful nation-state for much of the nineteenth century, and had stood in 'Splendid Isolation' secure in the knowledge that each threat to her supremacy could be met in turn. However, in the latter years of the century, over-stretched from her imperial possessions, Britain faced more serious threats to her security and increasing demands for a formal relationship with a power with similar interests, the United States was advanced as that partner. The Spanish-American War was a brief but successful war for the United States of America, eclipsing the bad memories of the civil war. A renewed belief in the republic was instilled, and with it an end to the isolationist characteristic of American foreign policy from the time of Washington's farewell address. The Spanish-American War was also a turning point in the relations between the United States and Great Britain. This has prompted several historians to examine why the two nations, over a relatively short period, managed to settle their differences. Most studies of Anglo-American relations at the turn of the century have centred upon the diplomatic overtures. Others examining public opinion have focused upon the reaction of the London press. While providing valuable insight into opinion prevalent in the capital of the British Empire they neglect to examine British attitudes outside of the centre, in particular in Scotland. Scottish public opinion, within the larger British context, towards the Spanish-American War and American Imperialism, provides an insight into the growth of Anglo-American relations from a new perspective.
289

The Natural Embroidery of Thomas Southerne's Oroonoko

Hancock, Sarah Rose 17 May 2016 (has links)
In this thesis, I plan to investigate the role of the landscape in Thomas Southerne's play Oroonoko. Most scholarship on Oroonoko focuses on the relationship between Southerthne's play and Aphra Behn's novella of the same name. In particular, the scholarly conversation has focused on the way that Southerne white-washed Aphra Behn's character Imoininda. While this distinction is notable, my research, instead, will focus on the way these bodies—both white and black, colonizer and colonized—are framed by 18th century gardening rhetoric. This rhetoric provided naturally conceived tools for nurturing these bodies. I plan to argue that the language of the natural world used in the play demonstrates the role of landscape in the formation of British national identity. / McAnulty College and Graduate School of Liberal Arts; / English / MA; / Thesis;
290

Innovations et traditions en Nubie égyptienne au Nouvel Empire. L'exemple de la céramique / Innovations and traditions in Pharaonic Nubia during the New Kingdom : The case of the pottery

Mielle, Lauriane 12 October 2013 (has links)
L'occupation égyptienne en Nubie au Nouvel Empire a fait l'objet de nombreuses publications. Les sujets qui sont traités sont souvent historiques et archéologiques, mais se focalisent peu sur la culture matérielle en elle-même. Pourtant, la présence égyptienne a modifié les traditions de la civilisation nubienne, en laissant une empreinte importante sur la culture matérielle. L'étude des productions céramiques ne permet pas seulement d'appréhender l'Histoire commune de ces deux civilisations, mais aussi la rencontre et l'influence de deux cultures différentes. Elle permet de constater quels sont les emprunts et les héritages artistiques. / The Egyptian occupation of Nubia during the New Kingdom has been the subject of numerous publications. The topics that are covered are often historical and archaeological, but few focus on the material culture itself. However, the Egyptian presence changed the traditions of the Nubian civilization, leaving a significant imprint on the material culture. The study of pottery production can not only understand the common history of the two civilizations, but also the meeting and the influence of two different cultures. It reveals what loans and artistic heritage.

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