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Zeitschriftenartikel zum Thema "Pontefract Castle (Pontefract, England)"

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Rogers, Alan. „Building Accounts for Pontefract Castle, Michaelmas 1406–Michaelmas 1407“. Journal of the British Archaeological Association 166, Nr. 1 (September 2013): 140–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/0068128813z.00000000019.

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Marston, Hannah R. „Millennials and ICT—Findings from the Technology 4 Young Adults (T4YA) Project: An Exploratory Study“. Societies 9, Nr. 4 (22.11.2019): 80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/soc9040080.

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Information communication technology (ICT) is becoming a pivotal element in the twenty-first century, and while there has been substantial work conducted to understand ICT use by older adults, there is a paucity of knowledge relating to ICT use and behavior by Millennials. The Technology 4 Young Adults (T4YA) study opens the discussion to the barriers and enablers of ICT by Millennials in their day-to-day activities. Eight participants aged 18–33 years were recruited, and open-ended questions were posed to the focus groups participants. A total of three focus groups were conducted, two focus groups were conducted in Pontefract (West Yorkshire, England) and one focus group was conducted in Swansea (West Glamorgan, Wales); all focus groups were recorded and transcribed verbatim. Primary themes included: hardware, privacy issues/concerns, confidence, usability/functionality, day-to-day activities, and content/sharing of information. Day-to-day activities were undertaken primarily on smartphones, such as online banking and shopping, while privacy and trust concerns was a conversation thread throughout the discussions. Further work is needed with larger sample sizes, taking a multi-methods approach to extract quantitative data to underpin qualitative data analysis and frameworks. This exploratory study intersects at the fields of social sciences and human–computer interaction.
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McHARDY, ALISON, und NICHOLAS ORME. „The Defence of an Alien Priory: Modbury (Devon) in the 1450s“. Journal of Ecclesiastical History 50, Nr. 2 (April 1999): 303–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046999001694.

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Alien priories, the small dependencies of foreign religious houses established in the years following the Norman Conquest, were partly thank-offerings for military success and partly civilising centres and reminders of home for England's new rulers. Their foundation in the newly-conquered lands mirrored the success of the Anglo-Normans in colonising the British Isles, since later examples were planted in southern Scotland and in Ireland too. In England their establishment dated from the late eleventh to the early thirteenth centuries. They passed out of existence over a time-scale which was almost as long, for from the late thirteenth century, during periods of Anglo-French war, they were under attack from the crown as alleged nests of spies and as exporters of wealth to the enemy. The consequent seizure of these small houses by the crown and their vigorous exploitation by the exchequer reduced monastic life in all these houses and extinguished it in many, so that the mother houses found it advantageous to sell smaller properties while some of the larger priories were prompted to seek denization. Such solutions are evident from the last two decades of the fourteenth century. Apparent landmarks in this process of disintegration and change prove, upon close inspection, to be illusory; neither the ‘expulsion’ of 1378 nor the Act of Dissolution of 1414 were such decisive moments in the history of these houses as was once thought. Instead, we may suggest, each of these small houses must be examined separately, for the later history of each was distinctive. The religious life was entirely extinguished in some, which had become merely manors, by the later fourteenth century. Courtiers under Edward III and Richard II acquired a number which they used for the endowment of new religious houses; the Carthusian order was an especial beneficiary. Henry V endowed his new foundation of Sheen with alien priories, while some others were used to augment the endowments of existing monasteries and even hospitals. Pontefract (Yorkshire), thanks to the good offices of John of Gaunt, became denizen in 1393.
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Jago, Indie, und Manda Forster. „Archaeological Excavations and Social Impact at Pontefract Castle (data paper)“. Internet Archaeology, Nr. 61 (Oktober 2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.11141/ia.61.9.

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The Gatehouse Project at Pontefract Castle took place between September 2019 and August 2020. This data paper describes the project data from a community focused archaeological investigation undertaken by DigVentures.
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Wilkins, Brendon. „Social Impact Archaeology: Pontefract Castle and the Gatehouse Project“. Internet Archaeology, 17.03.2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.11141/ia.57.18.

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Archaeology is said to add value to development, creating a deeper sense of place, community identity as well as improving health and wellbeing. Accentuating these wider social values has been welcomed by a profession keen to broaden its public relevance and legitimacy and protect its seat at the table in modern cultural life, but how much, if at all, do the public actually benefit from developer-led archaeology? Benefits to individuals and communities from archaeology projects are often abstract, intangible and difficult to attribute, and the discipline arguably lacks a satisfactory frame of reference around which it can express and design for these additional social values. Drawing on the language of social impact investing, this article will explore how the UK-based collaborative platform, DigVentures, has addressed this challenge. It introduces a 'Theory of Change' and 'Standards of Evidence' framework to account for the impact of development-led archaeology programmes, illustrating the causal links between activity and change through the case of the Pontefract Castle Gatehouse Project. It is complemented by a short documentary film exploring the spectrum of digital and physical opportunities for participation by the public alongside a team of highly experienced professional field archaeologists, demonstrating how development-led archaeology can be designed to accomplish far more than answer a planning brief.
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Jackson, Nat, Chris Casswell und Manda Forster. „A Medieval Drawbridge Pit and the Stories it Tells Us, Excavations at Pontefract Castle, 2019–2020“. Internet Archaeology, Nr. 61 (August 2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.11141/ia.61.4.

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DigVentures was commissioned by Wakefield Metropolitan District Council (WMDC) to undertake a programme of archaeological investigations as part of the Gatehouse Project, a community-focused archaeological research project based at Pontefract Castle, West Yorkshire. The social impact of the archaeological investigations, including project outcomes for heritage, for people and for the community, have been analysed and published in an earlier article. This article focuses on the archaeological evidence recovered during the excavations, and the conclusions drawn about the construction and chronology of the gatehouse at this part of the site.
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Bücher zum Thema "Pontefract Castle (Pontefract, England)"

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Roberts, Ian. Pontefract Castle. Wakefield: West Yorkshire Archaeology Service, 1990.

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Roberts, Ian. Pontefract Castle: Archaeological excavations, 1982-86. Leeds: West Yorkshire Archaeology Service, 2002.

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Fox, George. The three sieges of Pontefract castle. Leeds: Old Hall, 1987.

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History of the Ancient Borough of Pontefract. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2023.

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Roberts, Ian. The thirdsiege of Pontefract Castle. Commissioned and published by West Yorkshire Archaeology Service in association with the Manpower Services Commission, 1988.

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Holmes, Richard H. Pontefract: Its Name, Its Lords, and Its Castle, a Concise History. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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Holmes, Richard H. Pontefract: Its Name, Its Lords, and Its Castle, a Concise History. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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8

Anonyma. Tales of My Landlord : New Series: Containing Pontefract Castle; VOL. I. Gale NCCO, Print Editions, 2017.

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Boothroyd, Benjamin. History of the Ancient Borough of Pontefract, Containing an Interesting Account of Its Castle. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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Paulden, Thomas. Pontefract Castle : An Account How It Was Taken: ... in a Letter to a Friend...Now Reprinted for the Widow; ... Gale Ecco, Print Editions, 2018.

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Buchteile zum Thema "Pontefract Castle (Pontefract, England)"

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Henry II. „2086. Pontefract Priory“. In The Letters and Charters of Henry II, King of England 1154–1189, Vol. 4: Nos. 1892–2575, Beneficiaries N–S, herausgegeben von Nicholas Vincent. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00277574.

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Henry II. „2087. Pontefract Priory“. In The Letters and Charters of Henry II, King of England 1154–1189, Vol. 4: Nos. 1892–2575, Beneficiaries N–S, herausgegeben von Nicholas Vincent. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00277575.

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Cromwell, Oliver. „1648 11 09 Letter from Oliver Cromwell to John Morris, governor of Pontefract Castle“. In The Letters, Writings, and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, herausgegeben von Andrew Barclay, Tim Wales und John Morrill. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oseo/instance.00281356.

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Slack, Paul. „Towns under stress“. In The Impact of plague in Tudor and Stuart England, 256–83. Oxford University PressOxford, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198202134.003.0010.

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Abstract Thomas Pullein, vicar of Pontefract, told the aldermen of York what their duties were during the plague of 1604.In doing so he demon strated that the attitudes described in the last chapter did not deter mine action in any simple linear way. The rulers of towns must not seek refuge in flight. To that extent they had to ignore the fact that plague was infectious, and to assume that God willed their presence and might protect them. On the other hand, they must not be passively fatalistic. They must act, both to relieve the sick and to prevent further contagion. It was the need to encourage this nice balance of selfless dedication and prudence which led the Privy Council so often to attribute the growth of epidemics to negligence on the part of magistrates, rather than to an infected atmosphere which might lead to wholesale magisterial flight. As one might expect, however, the psychological balance was more easily stated on paper than achieved in practice.
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