Spelling suggestions: "subject:"distory - 19th century"" "subject:"ahistory - 19th century""
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Torture, taxes and the colonial state in Madras, c.1800-1858Elliott, Derek Llewellyn January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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Friedrich Ludwig Jahn and German nationalism 1800-1819Weibye, Hanna Margaret January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
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From slavery to unfreedom, Antigua, 1834-1844Septuf Ntepua Sesepkekiu, Nsaka January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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The administration of Port Arthur penal settlement 1830-1844Denholm, Decie. January 1968 (has links) (PDF)
Includes bibliography.
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Translating "The book of changes" in nineteenth century BritainWong, Chi-Keung, 黃志強 January 2010 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Negotiating a slave regime: free people of color in Cuba, 1844-1868Reid, Michele Bernita 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Hierarchy and authority among the Hausa with special reference to the period of the Sokoto Caliphate in the nineteenth centuryBrady, Richard Peter January 1978 (has links)
This thesis concerns hierarchy and authority among the Hausa of Northern Nigeria and Niger with special reference to the period in which the various Hausa city-states were brought under a single rule in the nineteenth century, known as the Sokoto Caliphate. However, contrastive discussion also centres on the pre-jihad (1804- A.D.) Hausa polities and those kingdoms which escaped conquest in the jihad. The examination of hierarchy and authority in this study focusses on the ways in which the Hausa consistently conceive, in political terms, other non-political institutions in their society. This hierarchical organisation extends to such diverse social institutions as craft associations and associations of youth. In addition, many of the <u>iskoki</u>, 'spirits', are known by their political titles and, as a group, are hierarchically organised. It is through the duplication of titles at many levels of the society and through kinship that hierarchy is expressed.
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Leopold Eidlitz and the architecture of nineteenth century AmericaHolliday, Kathryn Elizabeth 07 July 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Raciological thought in Victorian culture : a study in imperial disseminationO'Leary, Daniel Ralph J. 05 1900 (has links)
My thesis revives the term raciology to describe collectively the literature which emanated
out of philological ethnology, that is, out of the studies of man inspired by the rapid advances in
linguistic science in the early nineteeenth century. Raciological Thought in Victorian Culture is
divided into two parts: it examines the development and dissemination of nineteenth-century
raciological knowledge in the works of celebrated philologists and anthropologists; and then
investigates typical features of raciological discourse in Victorian and Victorian Canadian culture.
It views this regional British literature as a field for the political and educational deployment of
British raciological conceptions, and comments on some of the implications of the circulation of
raciological doctrine.
My argument begins with discussion of the often overlooked celebrity and authority of
philologists in Victorian culture, tracing the derivation from philology of raciological typologies
which established the raciological associations of terms like "Britons," "Anglo-Saxons," and
"Teutons" during the early and middle-Victorian periods. An important aspect of the thesis is a re-evaluation
of the influence of Friedrich Max Muller, the most influential comparative philologist
and mythologist in the Victorian world. I argue that his use of etymological study for archaeological
data greatly contributed to the rapid dissemination of raciological thought among the educated and
educating classes. The first part of the thesis concludes with discussion of issues which animated
raciological discourse.
The second part follows the dissemination of Victorian raciological thought to Canada, and
illustrates its effects in an imperial context. It demonstrates the use of raciology in establishing
Canada's legitimacy as a British nation, and documents the place of raciology in establishing the
authenticity of Canadian continuity with a British culture running into deep antiquity. After
discussing neglected raciological aspects of several important Victorian Canadian source works, it
goes on to outline the importance of raciological mythology to the preservation of the Dominion
from American annexation and Fenian incursion. My epilogue briefly documents the decline of
raciological thought in Britain after the 1890s.
By investigating numerous neglected Victorian sources, Raciological Thought in Victorian
Culture establishes raciology as an important element in Victorian political-and, in particular,
nationalist-thinking.
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La dissolution de l'empire espagnol au XIXe siècle et son contexte économique /Bousquet, Nicole January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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