7,054 research outputs found
Graham Clarke's childhood home, Spaniard's Bay.
Graham Clarke’s childhood home, Conception Bay Highway, Spaniard’s Bay
Photograph - Barrett, Dr Graham, Physiology. Alzheimer’s disease brain cell research
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/290852Barrett, Dr Graham, Physiology. Alzheimer’s disease brain cell research.310438
Item: [2003.0003.07915] "Photograph - Barrett, Dr Graham, Physiology. Alzheimer’s disease brain cell research
Dr Hannah Graham on Australian leadership: Integrity, relational leadership and tenacious courage of conviction
Hannah Graham talks to Victor Perton about Australian Leadership. Criminologist, author and university lecturer Dr Hannah Graham was born in Tasmania and studied and worked at the University of Tasmania, before moving to Scotland to work in the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research at the University of Stirling. Hannah has worked on justice and health-related projects with the EU, the Scottish Government, the Australian Government and Tasmanian Government, and she does ongoing research and writing on innovation and justice. Connect to Hannah on Twitter: @DrHannahGraham and @Innovative_Jus
The Second Council of Toledo (527/531): Introduction and Annotated Translation
This article offers a translation of and commentary on the Second Council of Toledo, inaugurating a new, collaborative project to translate the Church councils of late antique Iberia. I begin by considering the context of the synod, which took place during the period of Arian kingship and Ostrogothic overlordship in Iberia. I then outline the three main lines of transmission of its text in the sixth- and seventh-century conciliar compilations known as the Collectio Hispana, Collectio Novariensis, and Epitome Hispana, before noting the implications for dating the Council and reconstructing its contents. I argue for a date of 531 over 527 and for the priority of the Collectio Novariensis and Epitome Hispana over the Collectio Hispana, which affects how we should read the distinct lists of subscribing bishops in the manuscripts. Finally, I review the five canons decreed by the Council on child oblation and education, clerical hierarchy and celibacy, usufruct of Church property, and incestuous relations as a preface to the Latin text and English translation
Ordeal by Innocents: the Law and Liturgy of Trial by Water in Early Medieval Iberia
This article studies trial by hot water in late antique and early medieval Iberia across three genres of source material. I first consider the marginal position of the law on “the ordeal of the cauldron” in the oldest copies of the Visigothic code, and translate its text. I then catalogue and synthesise the rich casebook of charters from Asturias-León, Navarra, and Catalunya down to 1031 which document the practice of ordeal. Finally I introduce a guide to the liturgy of trial by hot and cold water in a manuscript copied at Barcelona in 1011, and translate its text. I argue that the law is not of Visigothic origin, but emerged out of the liturgy and practice of ordeal from the ninth century, and was then read back into the code to acquire the legitimacy of a Visigothic past
Annual budget (Graham County, Ariz.)
The Board of Supervisors make an estimate of the different amounts required to meet the public expenditures/expenses for the ensuing year, also an estimate of revenues from sources other than direct taxation, and the amount to be raised by taxation upon real and personal property of Graham County.Electronic version includes only selected pages and lacks a title page
Stephen Graham Jones - Sowell Conference 2017
Stephen Graham Jones, University of Colorado-Boulder, author of "Mongrels" and "Growing Up Dead in Texas
Introducing Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Sources. A Statement of Purpose
Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Sources, the transformative successor to Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History (first published in 1964), provides a unique venue for scholars to offer fresh readings of evidence from the period 400–1600. This annual is dedicated to the fundamental scholarship of analysis and interpretation led by direct engagement with the sources—written, visual, material—in any form, from editions, translations, and commentaries to reports, notes, and reflections. By foregrounding the most basic approach of working outwards from the evidence, it aims to foster conversations across disciplines, regions, and periods, as well as to become a reference point for original approaches and new discoveries
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