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61. GCMRS Staff
email C.Morris@archaeology.arts.gla.ac.uk. law, against a general background ofEuropean and Scots later medieval France and the low countries; Valois Burgundy
http://www.gla.ac.uk/centres/mars/CMRSsta2.htm
Staff research interests Dr Alison Adams (French)
Emblems studies, especially textual criticism; particular interest in study of vernacular translations in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Descriptive bibliography.
e-mail: A.Adams@french.arts.gla.ac.uk Susan M. Anthony (English literature)
Shakespeare; Renaissance Literature; 19th century women's literature
e-mail: S.Anthony@englit.arts.gla.ac.uk Dr Stuart Airlie (History)
The political and cultural development of the barbarian kingdoms in the post-Roman/early medieval west; specifically, the nature of authority and power in the royal and aristocratic families in Carolingian Europe; the construction and 'use' of the Middle Ages in modern culture.
e-mail: S.Airlie@medhist.arts.gla.ac.uk Prof. David Bates (History)
Britain and northern France from the tenth to the early thirteenth centuries; the Duchy of Normandy, 911-1204; charter diplomatic in the central medieval period.
e-mail: D.Bates@medhist.arts.gla.ac.uk Dr Donal Bateson (Hunterian Museum)
Medieval numismatics.

62. Art History And Archaeology ARTH Courses - Graduate Catalog Fall 2003 - Universi
ARTH 407 Art and archaeology of Mosaics (3 credits France, Germany, England, and theLow countries from the as a specifically Westeuropean cultural phenomenon.
http://www.gradschool.umd.edu/catalog/courses/ARTH.html
Graduate School Application Financial Aid Registration ... Courses Courses by Code
Graduate Courses for ARTH
Schedule of Classes: Fall Winter Spring Summer
(Only current and next semester available) ARTH 407 Art and Archaeology of Mosaics (3 credits)
Mosaic pavements in their archaeological, art historical, and architectural context from circa 300 B.C. through circa A.D. 700. ARTH 418 Special Problems in Italian Renaissance Art (3 credits)
Repeatable to 6 credits if content differs.
Focus upon aspects of painting, sculpture, and architecture of Renaissance. ARTH 426 Renaissance and Baroque Sculpture in Northern Europe (3 credits)
Sculpture in France, Germany, England, and the Low Countries from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century. ARTH 444 British Painting, Hogarth to the Pre-Raphaelites (3 credits)
A survey of British painting focusing on the establishment of a strong native school in the genres of history painting, narrative subjects, portraiture, sporting art, and landscape. ARTH 451 Primitivism in Twentieth-Century Art (3 credits)
Examines the concept of primitivism as a specifically West-European cultural phenomenon.

63. The Graduate Catalog, University Of Maryland, College Park
ARTH 407 Art and archaeology of Mosaics (3) Mosaic France, Germany, England, and theLow countries from the as a specifically Westeuropean cultural phenomenon
http://www.gradschool.umd.edu/catalog/archives/spring1999/COURSES/ARTH.HTM
ARTH Art History and Archaeology ARTH 407 Art and Archaeology of Mosaics (3) Mosaic pavements in their archaeological, art historical, and architectural context from circa 300 B.C. through circa A.D. 700. ARTH 418 Special Problems in Italian Renaissance Art (3) Repeatable to 6 credits if content differs. Focus upon Aspects of painting, sculpture, and architecture of Renaissance. ARTH 426 Renaissance and Baroque Sculpture in Northern Europe (3) Sculpture in France, Germany, England, and the Low Countries from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century. ARTH 444 British Painting, Hogarth to the Pre-Raphaelites (3) A survey of British painting focusing on the establishment of a strong native school in the genres of history painting, narrative subjects, portraiture, sporting art, and landscape. ARTH 451 Primitivism in Twentieth-Century Art (3) Examines the concept of primitivism as a specifically West-European cultural phenomenon. ARTH 452 Between East and West: Modernism in East and Central Europe (3) Explores the modernist movements of Eastern and Central Europe, beginning with Russia, circa 1861.

64. Research Photographs Guidelines, Princeton University Deptartment Of Art & Archa
Decimal Index of Art of low countries, of Dutch containing images of American andEuropean architecture and the Department of Art and archaeology and director
http://www.princeton.edu/~visres/rp/study.htm
STUDY COLLECTIONS
The Study Collections consist of reference tools, such as the Decimal Index of the Art of the Low Countries, scholarly compilations based on a particular research interest such as the Weitzmann Archive, and microfiche collections documenting photo archives such as Archivi Alinari. WAYNE ANDREWS COLLECTION
JAMES AUSTIN COLLECTION
BARTSCH COLLECTION
Photographs of 15th - 17th century German, Italian and Dutch prints described in Adam von Bartsch's catalogue Le Peintre-Graveur (Vienna, 1803-21). The collection includes prints from the British and Metropolitan Museums and other collections not included in the original Bartsch volumes
ANANDA COOMARASWAMY COLLECTION
COURTAULD INSTITUTE ARCHIVES
Illustrations selected from the photographic surveys of Britain and Europe undertaken by the Courtauld Institute of Art in London. The collection includes reproductions of the following:
Cathedrals and monastic buildings in British Isles
Medieval architecture and sculpture in Europe
D.I.A.L.

65. Some Sites Of Historical-geographic Interest
geography, mostly of the low countries and surrounding The Permanent european Conferencefor the study of studies about Germany and some bordering countries.
http://users.bart.nl/~leenders/other.html
Some sites of historical-geographic interest
Historical geography of the region of the former duchy of Brabant The introduction of barbed wire in the landscape of North-Brabant at the same moment of the disappearence of the demand for oak-bark (the leather-industry switched over to tanning with chrome) resulted in a much more open landscape. But also in the USA barbed wire had a deeply felt effect. More about this... Old Maps of Brabant, the duchy and some parts of it. In September 2000 the province of North-Brabant published on CDrom the Map of Cultural-Historical Values (CHW) email , but you can also see a partial presentation on the Net. Everything is in Dutch. An update is in the making but not yet ready. The Identity Factory Southeast (IDentiteitsfabriek Zuid-Oost: IDZO ) creates a cultural infrastructure in the Kempenland, the region in the southeast of the province North-Brabant in the Netherlands, making optimal use of objects present inside (and outside!) museums and of events on many stages, of values of the landscape and natural history peculiarities and of recreational and tourist facilities spread all over the area. Maps and pictures about North-Brabant can be found at the Topographical-Historical Atlas in Tilburg. Go to the

66. MEDCIT00
Colloquium in european History Medieval Cities. Fehring, Günter P. The Archaeologyof Medieval Germany An The Origins of Towns in the low countries and the
http://www.uwm.edu/~carlin/medcit00.htm
HISTORY 850
COLLOQUIUM IN EUROPEAN HISTORY: MEDIEVAL CITIES
PROFESSOR MARTHA CARLIN
History 850 UWM, Fall 2000-1 Colloquium in European History: Medieval Cities Martha Carlin Office: Holton 324, tel. (414) 229-5767 Messages: UWM History Dept., tel. (414) 229-4361 E-mail: carlin@csd.uwm.edu Home page: www.uwm.edu/~carlin Office hours: Tues. 2:00-3:00 or by app't
Course description: This course will have two goals: to familiarize students with in-depth bibliographical research techniques, and to survey the published literature (including materials available on the Internet) concerning medieval cities, c AD 300-1500. Each student will choose an individual city to study. We will cover a different topic every week, for which we will all read a set selection of modern studies on medieval urban history. In addition, each week all students will compile a bibliography on that week's topic for their own city and report on it. At the end of the semester students will submit a complete annotated bibliography on their city, together with a short (4-5 pages) overview of its history in the medieval period. The overview must be fully documented with notes and bibliography.
Topics: origins; topography; local government; economy; town and countryside; demography; religion and the church; work and guilds; standards of living; water supply, sanitation, and public health; childhood and education; crisis and disorder; recreation and civic ceremony.

67. World Wide Web Virtual Library - Dutch History Index - Periods
Netherlands Research School for Medieval Studies Official european mirror of The theChanging Fortunes of Cloth Manufacturing in the low countries and England
http://home.planet.nl/~nijs0104/www-vl-neth/periods.html
Dutch History Index: Periods
Ancient
Medieval Early modern Contemporary ... Anthropological
Ancient History Medieval History

68. Memoirs: Journeys To Venice And The Low Countries EBook
to Venice and the low countries By Dürer artist of the Northern european Renaissance
http://www.ebooks.com/ebooks/ebook.sjc?BID=126416

69. European Countries Banning The Use Of Fluoride
european countries Banning the Use of Fluoride. evidence to be presented to the europeanCommission so but we recommend that doses should be as low as possible
http://100777.com/node/view/210
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70. Northern European Timber Trade In The Later Middle Ages & Renaissance
Signs of wood shortages appear in other countries as well. in the winter when thesap was low, the snow Africa, Asia, and the Americas to european merchants in
http://www.medievalwoodworking.com/articles/lumber_trade.htm
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Furniture
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Bio
Gary R. Halstead
(Ranulf of Waterford)
Introduction
The economies of late medieval and renaissance Europe were heavy users of forest products for heating, industrial processes, and as building material. While unspecialized uses could generally be supplied from heavily managed local woodlands, the long economic and population expansion that began in the late 13 th century and the recovery and economic expansion following the Black Death resulted in an increasing inability of local sources to meet economic needs. These needs were met by a rise in long-distance trade to supply quality timber for building and joinery. While the beginnings of the trade can be documented to the 9 th century, large-scale trade in timber had to await both a sufficient population to produce demand and the development of shipping techniques that reduced transport costs to a profitable level. The falling cost of long-distance trade combined with shortages of local timber led to imported lumber supplanting local products in some markets. Forest products can be divided into timber, underwood, and derivative products such as turpentine and charcoal. Timbers are large pieces of wood from mature trees, suitable for large-scale construction or for conversion into boards and planks. Underwood is composed of smaller pieces of wood, frequently from coppiced or immature trees, used for poles, firewood, hurdles, turnery and other such uses. Derivative products are those produced by burning or other conversion such as charcoal, turpentine, ash, and resin. This paper is concerned with trade and production of timbers.

71. 6th Annual Meeting Of European Association Of Archaeologist (EAA)
that can be found from the low countries in the 5th International Conference on WaterfrontArchaeology was held a total of twenty Northeuropean towns, ranging
http://www.abc.se/~m10354/publ/eaa2000.htm
th Annual Meeting of
European Association of Archaeologist (EAA)
13 to 17 September 2000, Lisbon Preliminary program with abstracts
Section I – Close encounters
Harbours and calls are encounter areas for sea- and river routes and hinterlands characterized by settlements of various kinds and by agricultural and manufacturing activities. The aim of the session is to study the links between trade and local productions through urban archaeology, settlement archaeology, landscape and underwater archaeology, by means of papers focusing on general issues or specific case-studies. Within the specific frame, suggested topics interest are: the mechanisms and organization of trade (local and long-distance exchange); relation between State and free market; the links between the productive areas and the commercial flows; the peculiar role of single areas, harbours, sites.
Speakers, section I:
MARINELLA PASQUINUCCI-ANTONELLA DEL RIO, Università di Pisa
and Dr TIMM WESKI, email KL911ae@mail.lrz-muenchen.de

72. Portuguese Vs Spanish Shipbuilding Practices
of some other wood species such as european oak from Poland and the low Countriesfor the The International Journal of Nautical archaeology and Underwater
http://www.abc.se/~m10354/bld/portspan.htm
Portuguese vs Spanish Shipbuilding Practices
By Paulo Monteiro Portugal created a maritime empire, an empire that relied not on the conquest of land and territories but rested on naval superiority, an empire formed by ephemeral sea routes and fragile harbours of support, like those of Ilha de Mozambique, Santa Helena and Terceira. So, unlike the Spanish empire, nothing substantial remains of this former empire on land. Till now, the Portuguese colonial expansion has been studied principally from its architectural evidence and from the documentary evidence left by its major participants or by the contemporary observers of the process. But nothing is known about the true instrument of the Portuguese expansion: the Portuguese built ship.
Spanish shipfinds
The Emanuel Point Rye A wreck, Cattewater wreck (1), Molasses Reef wreck (2), Highborn Cay wreck (3), Western Ledge Reef wreck (4), San Esteban San Juan (6) and the San Diego (7) are all examples of archaeologically researched Iberian vessels that represent the Spanish part of the Peninsula. Spanish galizabra, 1589. Archivo General de Simancas

73. Web-resources
Association for low countries Studies in Great Britain and Ireland, Ethnic and EuropeanResearch. onestop shop for everything on archaeology, Prehistory, the
http://www.rabbel.info/webres.html
Click ' Translate Dutch words will bring you to the page where you can write or paste your Dutch word in the translation-box. Search this site       powered by FreeFind
Dutch Word

of the Second

by LookWAYup Dictionary
..or use this link to translate Dutch words. Clicking the red text of the logo is offering more options
Read
my Dreambook guestbook!
Sign
my Dreambook! Lists of books about Dutch and Belgian history Lists of books about New Netherland, the WIC and the Atlantic area Webresources
Lists of books about the Dutch and Frisian language
... Take a look at the webmaster's list of books
(opens in a new window) Web-pages containing specialized bibliographies E-Texts (electronic texts) on the Web List of books about Religion in the Netherlands (Folk) Art in the Netherlands Webresources New-Netherland/
New York history and genealogy:
New Amsterdam, 1626 - 1664 Resources in the Bertrand Library. Bucknell University.

74. British Academy - UK Subject Associations And Learned Societies
to represent the interests of low countries Studies in Association for Slavonic andEast european Studies exists to of all periods and all countries to heraldry
http://www.britac.ac.uk/links/uksahssSections.asp?Section=H11

75. Department Of History Second Year Honours Course List, 2001-2002
Charlemagne. archaeology Historical. English Medieval. Politics in an Age of. WesternEuropean. England, 13771547. Catholic Revival. low countries,. Olivier Python.
http://www.dur.ac.uk/History/ugrads/Middle Year Course List.htm
Department of History Second Year Honours Course List, 2001-2002 Name Deg Period European Period British Theme British Theme European Other Module 1 Other Module 2 Askor Ali HIS Early Renaissance Victorian Britain Historical Thought Britain, 1688-1815 France, 1870-1970 Rory Allan HIS Managerial Revolution England, 1377-1547 Slavery and Racial The Crisis of Imperial Republic Jennifer Allatt E/H Econ Pri England, 1377-1547 N.E. England: Regional France, 1870-1970 Econ Pri Economic Data Jennifer Allatt E/H Econ Pri England, 1377-1547 N.E. England: Regional France, 1870-1970 Econ Pri Economic Data Christopher Angus HIS Early Renaissance Law and Society in EME Managerial Revolution Catholic Revival Pre-Reformation French Lang. I (I) Nicholas ap Simon HIS Western European England, 1377-1547 English Medieval Catholic Revival Italy in the Age of Empires on the Nile: Ruth Armstrong HIS Western European Politics in an Age of Low Countries, Empires on the Nile: Early Renaissance England, 1377-1547 Gareth Atkins HIS Victorian Britain Britain, 1688-1815 N.E. England: Regional Western European Hard Times Fifteenth-Century Gareth Atkins HIS Victorian Britain Britain, 1688-1815

76. Handbook, Section 2
archaeology of Medieval British Isles (ARCH7201) Lecturers Dr Thought low CountriesImperial Republic. Nationhood Politics in the US european Nationalism, 1789
http://www.dur.ac.uk/History/ugrads/handbook/DEGRST~12002.HTM
C: DEGREE STRUCTURE General Each student takes the equivalent of six modules each year. Most modules are single, but some are double modules or equivalent, i.e. Special Subject and double module History dissertations. In addition to History Department modules [2(a) below], students may take some modules in other departments. Details are available in the relevant Faculty Final Honours Handbooks . Students may like to know that some modules on hi storical subjects are taught in other departments: these are listed on page Details of dissertations are provided in a separate booklet, Guidance for History Dissertations The regulations, examination conventions and other arrangements for History with French and History with German are described in a separate booklet. History Modules NOTE: All modules listed below are subject to the continued availability of teaching staff to provide them. It is therefore possible that not all the modules listed in this Handbook will be available in particular years. A list of available modules will be posted on the Department Noticeboard at the time when students are asked to make their choices, together with the maximum student numbers for each module.
GROUP A. (2nd or 3rd year)

77. Join HNA
to the Royal Academy of archaeology of Belgium in century architecture in the SouthernLow countries in its where her teaching area encompasses european art of
http://www.hnanews.org/2002/2004Ballot.htm
2004 BALLOT
(Please Print) The HNA Nominating Committee (Linda Stone-Ferrier, Stephanie Dickey, and Reindert Falkenburg) has prepared the following slate for three board members to be installed at the Membership Meeting during the CAA conference in Seattle, February 2004. According to our by-laws, each member of HNA shall be entitled to one vote for each office to be filled. Candidates receiving the majority of votes cast shall be declared elected. CHECK THREE (3) names individually. Julie Berger Hochstrasser Trade Secrets: Unpacking Commodities in Still Life of the Dutch Golden Age is forthcoming from Yale University Press. Laurinda Dixon teaches at Syracuse University, where she is the William F. Tolley Distinguished Professor of the Humanities. Her field is Northern European Art, 1400-1700, specifically the relationship between art and pre-Enlightenment science. She has authored and edited eight books, most recently

78. 2001-2002 Undergraduate Calendar
A survey of Ancient Greek Art and archaeology, with stress The visual arts in theLow countries, the German territories ARTH*2580 european Art, 19001945 F(3-0
http://www.uoguelph.ca/calendar_archives/undergrad/October2001/12arth.shtml
2001-2002 Undergraduate Calendar XIICourse Descriptions, Art History School of Fine Art and Music. Students with a special interest in particular courses in Art History should consult the School concerning prerequisites. ARTH*1510 Art Historical Studies I F(3-0). [0.50]. A consideration of the visual arts in the Western tradition. Emphasis will be placed on historical and critical analysis of key monuments and on the prerequisite technology, as well as on various ways of looking at the visual past and present. Focus will be on the visual arts from prehistory through the Middle Ages. ARTH*1520 Art Historical Studies II W(3-0). [0.50]. A continuation of ARTH*1510 with particular emphasis on the visual arts from the Renaissance to today. Prerequisite(s): ARTH*1510 ARTH*2150 Art and Archaeology of Greece F(3-0). [0.50]. A survey of Ancient Greek Art and Archaeology, with stress on form and function plus stylistic trends and aesthetic values. The course will illuminate the cultural, social, and political life in Ancient Greece. (Also listed as CLAS*2150 Equate(s): CLAS*2150 ARTH*2280 Modern Architecture: Architecture from the Industrial Revolution to Today W(3-0). [0.50].

79. British Archaeology, No 51, February 2000: Books
Iberian peninsula, Germany and the low countries, and the development of the northernEuropeancentred trading the considerable amount of archaeology that has
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba51/ba51book.html
ISSN 1357-4442 Editor: Simon Denison
Issue no 51, February 2000
BOOKS
Stonehenge fiction
Reviewed by Richard Lee
Stonehenge
Bernard Cornwell
ISBN 0-00-225969-9 hb It is notoriously difficult to write a prehistorical novel with any hope of accuracy. How can you guess at the mindset of a people who have left no written records? And even if you guess correctly, how will anyone know if you're right? There is nevertheless a hunger for these books, as shown by the American Jean Auel's multi-million selling Clan of the Cave Bear sequence. Cynics see her stories as little more than proto-feminist sex romps - the gorgeously blond Ayla searching for true love amongst the Neanderthals - but the general public loves them. And for a lot of people, this is where their knowledge of prehistoric times begins and ends. Whether it was the lure of such a lucrative market or some deeper affinity with the subject which drew Bernard Cornwell, author of the Sharpe series of books, to write about Stonehenge, the result is surprisingly pleasing. Cornwell bases his novel on two of the archaeological finds from Stonehenge. One was an archer, with a stone bracer to protect his wrist from the lash of the bowstring, buried beside Stonehenge's north-eastern entrance, who had been killed, evidently at close quarters, by three arrows. The other find was a group of three gold lozenges from one of the burial mounds closest to the monument.

80. History Of Western Architecture --  Encyclopædia Britannica
archaeology has not yet revealed…. Contents of this article Introduction; EuropeanMetal Age Languedoc, and Auvergne; Provence; Germany and the low countries;
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=119558&tocid=47284&query=veritable&ct=eb

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