1,725,450 research outputs found
Portrait of William Dargie, of Melbourne, Victoria, 1953 [picture] /
Condition: Good, but has two punch holes and is glued to card.; Title from caption on reverse.; Part of a collection of three photographs of William Dargie, two of which show him painting.; "L.30134, William Alexander Dargie, Australian artist. William Alexander Dargie, of Melbourne, Victoria, one of Australia's leading artists ... Australian official photograph by Cliff Bottomley." --Printed on label on reverse
Portrait of William Dargie, Australian artist, 1953 [picture] /
Condition: Good, but has two punch holes and is glued to card.; Title from caption on reverse.; Part of a collection of three photographs of William Dargie, two of which show him painting.; "L.30133, William Alexander Dargie, Australian artist. William Alexander Dargie, of Melbourne, Victoria, one of Australia's leading artists ... Australian official photograph by Cliff Bottomley." --Printed on label on reverse
Portrait of William Dargie, noted Australian artist, putting the finishing touches to a large mural, 1954 [picture] /
Condition: Good, but has two punch holes and is glued to card.; Title from caption on reverse.; Part of a collection of three photographs of William Dargie, two of which show him painting.; "William Alexander Dargie, noted Australian artist, putting the finsihing touches to a large mural that decorates the interior of a modern agricultural implement factory in Dandenong Road, Dandenong, Victoria. Australian official photograph by Cliff Bottomley, L30452." --Printed on label on reverse
Tree bearing the sign "A native Canoe was cut from this tree", Northern Territory, 1959 [picture] /
Title devised by cataloguer based on accompanying information.; Part of the Australian Information Service collection.; Inscriptions: "Scar on tree from which an Aboriginal canoe was cut. C. Bottomley 1959. L32849"--In ink on card.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6155720
Mr. R. G. Casey, Australia's Minister for External Affairs, talking with two students, Miss Tafa Elisha [left] and Miss Lalita Rajasooria [picture] /
Title from inscription on reverse.; Condition: Good.; Inscriptions: "Asian students run Colombo Plan ball in Australia ... Mr. R.G. Casey Australia's Minister for External Affairs, talking with two students ... A859/6, Australian News and Information Bureau, photograph by Cliff Bottomley" --Printed on reverse. "Australian News and Information Bureau, please acknowledge" --Stamped on reverse
Bottomley, Jack, [No Service Number]
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/372749Surname: BOTTOMLEY
Given Name(s) or Initials: JACK
Military Service Number or Last Known Location: No Service Number
Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 5451183793
Item: [2016.0049.05074] "Bottomley, Jack, [No Service Number]
Heather Bottomley, Wendy Crawford:
The panel displays the text "Heather Bottomley, Wendy Crawford."
This is panel 104, section 5
64827: Letter: To Gordon Bottomley / Pozieres
Postmarked envelope included with letter.Pencil draft of poem included with letter to Gordon Bottomley. Thanks Bottomley for having sent on a copy of his book / discusses the theatre's influence on poetry and W. B. Yeats / describes current activities in France / promises to send on a drawing of Adam and Eve when he is next home, or to have a family member do it for him.Blank page included with letter to Gordon Bottomley. Thanks Bottomley for having sent on a copy of his book / discusses the theatre's influence on poetry and W. B. Yeats / describes current activities in France / promises to send on a drawing of Adam and Eve when he is next home, or to have a family member do it for him. Includes draft of 'Pozieres'.Thanks Gordon Bottomley for having sent on a copy of his book / discusses the theatre's influence on poetry and W. B. Yeats / describes current activities in France / promises to send on a drawing of Adam and Eve when he is next home, or to have a family member do it for him. Includes draft of 'Pozieres'.</p
64826: Letter: To Gordon Bottomley / The Troop Ship / In War / Break of Day in the Trenches
Postmarked envelope included with letter.Discusses Isaac Rosenberg's pleasure at receiving praise from Bottomley for his poems / having read various poems and plays by Bottomley / Rosenberg's idea of writing a play entitled 'Adam and Lilith' / asks Bottomley to write again if he can. Includes two stanzas of 'In War', a sketch of 'The Troop Ship' and a pencil draft of 'Break of Day in the Trenches.Sketch of 'The Troop Ship' included in a letter to Gordon Bottomley. Discusses Isaac Rosenberg's pleasure at receiving praise from Bottomley for his poems / having read various poems and plays by Bottomley / Rosenberg's idea of writing a play entitled 'Adam and Lilith' / asks Bottomley to write again if he can.Pencil draft. Includes the first two stanzas of 'In War'. Included with letter to Gordon Bottomley, discussing Isaac Rosenberg's pleasure at receiving praise from Bottomley for his poems / having read various poems and plays by Bottomley / Rosenberg's idea of writing a play entitled 'Adam and Lilith' / asks Bottomley to write again if he can. Includes sketch of 'The Troop Ship'.Early pencil draft of 'Break of Day in the Trenches', here entitled 'In the Trenches'. Included with letter to Gordon Bottomley, discussing Isaac Rosenberg's pleasure at receiving praise from Bottomley for his poems / having read various poems and plays by Bottomley / Rosenberg's idea of writing a play entitled 'Adam and Lilith' / asks Bottomley to write again if he can. Includes sketch of 'The Troop Ship'.</p
Institutional change and property rights before the Industrial Revolution: Wardship in Britain, 1485-1660
Secure property rights are widely considered to be an essential prerequisite for sustained economic development; in Britain it is debated whether they have been secure since the medieval period or only established in the mid-seventeenth century. Within this context, Sean Bottomley examines wardship - the Crown's prerogative right(s) to appropriate landed estates which had descended to a legal minor until they attained their majority, to take custody of the child and, where they were unmarried, to decide their marriage partner. Bottomley demonstrates that this constituted a significant yet grossly inefficient and corrupted source of crown revenue, one that inflicted tangible economic penalties. It was also indicative of the decaying capacity of the early Stuart state and Bottomley concludes that without the constitutional changes of the mid to late seventeenth-century, Britain would not have industrialised in the eighteenth-century
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