145,544 research outputs found
Excavation at Goldsmith Street, Exeter 1971 (Exeter archive site 37)
From August 1971 to May 1972, the Exeter Museums Archaeological Field Unit (EMAFU) undertook excavation on a large plot of land between Goldsmith Street and St Pancras Lane. This plot was designated for development as part of the Guildhall Shopping Centre. The excavation was funded jointly by Exeter University and Exeter City Council with additional financial assistance from the Department of the Environment
Excavations at 196-197 High Street, Exeter 1972-73 (Exeter archive site 43)
At various periods between late 1972 and early 1973, the Exeter Museums Archaeological Field Unit undertook excavation within the surviving archaeologically intact areas of Nos. 196-97 High Street prior to the demolition of the major part of these buildings as part of the Guildhall shopping centre development
Excavations at Trichay Street, Exeter 1972-74 (Exeter archive site 42)
From June to December 1972 and from March to April 1973, the Exeter Museums Archaeological Field Unit undertook excavation on a plot of land between Pancras Lane and the rear tenement boundaries of North Street. The plot was adjacent to Trichay Street and it was designated for development as part of the Guildhall Shopping Centre
Excavations at Goldsmith Street, Exeter 1971-72 (Exeter archive site 39)
From August 1971 to May 1972 the Exeter Museums Archaeological Field Unit undertook excavation on a large plot of land between Goldsmith Street and Pancras Lane. This plot was designated for development as part of the Guildhall Shopping Centre. Remains of the post-medieval, the medieval and the Roman civil periods were recorded overlying deposits of the Roman military period which, at Exeter, is dated from c.AD 55/60 - c.75/80. Damage to the Roman military deposits caused by pits of medieval and post-medieval date was quite severe
Excavation at Southernhay Gardens, Exeter 1974 (Exeter archive site 49)
From August to September 1974 the Exeter Museums Archaeological Field Unit undertook an excavation on a plot of land on the south-east side of the city between Southernhay East and Western Way to the south-west of Barnfield Road. The site was to be developed and would include an underground car park, the foundations of which would clearly destroy all archaeological levels within its footprint
Excavations at the Valiant Soldier, Exeter, 1973-74 (Exeter archive site 44)
From July 1973 to June 1974 excavations took place on the site of the former Valiant Soldier Public House at the top of Holloway Street in advance of a new road scheme
Food in Antiquity, J. Wllkins, D. Harvey, M. Dobson éd., préf. A. Davidson. — Exeter : University of Exeter Press, 1995
Amouretti Marie-Claire. Food in Antiquity, J. Wllkins, D. Harvey, M. Dobson éd., préf. A. Davidson. — Exeter : University of Exeter Press, 1995. In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 99, 1997, n°3-4. Mélanges dédiés à la mémoire de J. Coupry. pp. 567-568
The role of special schools for children with profound and multiple learning difficulties: is segregation always best?
This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article 'The role of special schools for children with profound and multiple learning difficulties: is segregation always best?' British Journal of Special Education 34(1) pp.19-24, which has been published in final form at http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/117989211/PDFSTART.The education of young people with profound and multiple learning difficulties continues to raise challenges and controversies. In this article, Ben Simmons, an ESRC funded PhD student and research assistant, and Phil Bayliss, programme director for the masters degree in special education and disability, both based in the School of Education and Lifelong Learning at the University of Exeter, describe their research into provision for pupils with profound and multiple learning difficulties in a special school in the south west of England. Their work, based in an interpretivist, qualitative approach, set out to illuminate issues relating to the inclusion of pupils with profound and multiple learning difficulties. The findings presented here suggest that the school, in spite of its strong reputation, struggled significantly to provide appropriate learning experiences for pupils with profound and multiple learning difficulties. Ben Simmons and Phil Bayliss discuss the need for improved staff development opportunities focused on enhancing current levels of knowledge and skills. They conclude by calling for a reappraisal of the established view that special schools necessarily provide the best learning environment for pupils with profound and multiple learning difficulties
Devon's Community Care and Children's Services Plan 1998-2000 Progress and plans for 1999/2001; Exeter locality
Developed in partnership with Devon and Cornwall Constabulary, Devon Probation Service, Exeter City Council, North and East Devon Health Author.Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3363.59825(1999/2001) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo
The Problems of Performing Piety in some Exeter Dissenting Sermons c. 1660–1745
This essay explores the theme of hypocrisy in a multi-volume collection of hitherto unstudied manuscript sermons by Exeter Dissenting ministers from the Restoration to the mid-eighteenth century held by the Devon and Exeter Institution. In these sermons, the theme of hypocrisy is addressed in a variety of senses and contexts, including the imposition by conformists of forms of worship not required by Scripture, the false accusations of hypocrisy made against Dissenters, the insincere performance of piety even by professing Dissenters, the tendency of sinners to justify vice as virtue and virtue as vice, and the incompatibility of persecution with true New Testament Christianity. These sermons trace a move from Reformed orthodoxy towards rational Dissent, with a soteriology that increasingly makes moral performance a condition of final salvation. The possibility of insincere performance of piety and virtue by hypocrites may have created increased anxiety in a context in which soteriology and ethics were increasingly entangled
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