RHS Digital Collections | View | RHS Plant Collector Archive - papers and journeys of twelve 19th century plant collectors now digitised and online https://t.co/9iygpgyCD5 #twitterstorians#gardenhistory#travel
📚@YaleBooks is having a fabulous promotion for November only…
🥳50% off all my books!
Order now and use the promo code FIFTY at check out
💌Free UK postage
from https://t.co/d2dVf1vM9P
Follow the link below and finish your Christmas shopping early!👇
https://t.co/72VDUSxe8L
This looks very useful for those of us who are working with documents discussing historical travel.
Viabundus 2 is an online map of long-distance routes in late medieval and early modern Europe (1350-1650) https://t.co/Eln9JR51Nn h/t @yvonneseale.bsky.social #twitterstorians
Kate Lycett
When she left her position in full time employment to be an artist she began by painting the Lost Houses and Statel Homes of Yorks The Harrowins Queensbury
Owned by the Foster Family who built Black Dyke Mills. Now only the brass band remains as a reminder
'The Researchers.' (1970) An interesting addition to this work by William Roberts' is the inclusion of the pink-ish cover of 'Blast,' the short-lived magazine of the Vorticist movement which was referred to by its editor Ezra Pound as the 'great magenta cover'd opusculus.'
We’re delighted to announce the publication of Dr Shaun Evans’s new book!
Coming of Age Celebrations on Welsh Landed Estates: Gentry, Culture and Society, c.1770-1920
See more at:
https://t.co/2JX1K37Nd6
@boydellbrewer
For UK readers, mark your calender for Oct. 17, where award-winning Professor Andrew O’Shaughnessy delivers a fresh look at the American Revolution as a major global event @RAIOxford!
https://t.co/30674eoURm
‘It has been destroyed beyond repair, not by the effect of gunfire, but by a deliberate act of vandalism’: Britain’s long lost great houses that live on only inside the Country Life archive https://t.co/mILlSJZroK
#GawthorpeHall's ghost garden is back, showing through the main lawn. The original photograph was taken around 1910, but the parterre was expensive to maintain. If you want to see it make sure you visit before it rains! https://t.co/xHWsYlSw9b
Unusually, St Bartholomew's gatehouse in London looks older today than it did in a photograph from the early 1900s. 👀
Its Tudor frontage (right) was hidden (left) until a bomb from a German Zeppelin raid in 1917 uncovered its original timber. It was then fully restored in 1932.
My article on the destabilization of the British Empire in the eighteenth century has been published open access in the @HistoricalJnl. I argue that we need to think more about the imperial transformations of the public sphere.
https://t.co/O0VDn0MFT2
Anyone missing a kangaroo? 🔍🦘
This letter, unearthed from our archives, was sent 124 years ago to Mr Richardson Carr, the estate manager at Tring Park.
Claire Hubbard-Hall will be drawing on private and previously classified documents to tell the story of women have worked at the very heart of British secret intelligence who had their contributions written out of history @spyhistory
Link in our bio to buy tickets.
Did you know the iconic white-tie-and-cape look for #Dracula in the 1931 film was premiered in Derby in 1924? Find out more in our latest blog: https://t.co/rWI0CIIeh5
#Archive30#SoundAndVision