Academic literature on the topic '1788-1830'

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Journal articles on the topic "1788-1830"

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Watson, Nicola J. "Domestic Revolutions: Fictions of National History, 1788-1830." Wordsworth Circle 25, no. 3 (June 1994): 129–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/twc24042459.

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Robbins, William Murray. "Management and Resistance in the Convict Work Gangs, 1788-1830." Journal of Industrial Relations 45, no. 3 (September 2003): 360–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1472-9296.00088.

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Robbins, W. M. "The Supervision of Convict Gangs in New South Wales 1788-1830." Australian Economic History Review 44, no. 1 (March 2004): 79–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8446.2004.00111.x.

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Freudenberger, Herman. "The Schwarzenberg Bank: A Forgotten Contributor to Austrian Economic Development, 1788–1830." Austrian History Yearbook 27 (January 1996): 41–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0067237800005816.

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The supposedly authoritativeÖsterreichisches Staatswörterbuch (1905 edition) states unequivocally that the only joint-stock bank that existed before 1850 was a land bank founded in 1841 by the Galician estates. März, who has written the definitive work on the Credit-Anstalt, also found no place in his otherwise excellent study for the Schwarzenberg Bank, asserting that the Credit-Anstalt was founded simply on the model of the Crédit Mobilier of contemporary France. The only publication that concerned itself with the Schwarzenberg Bank, formally known as the Wiener oktroyirte Commerzial-, Leih- und Wechselbank (Chartered Commercial, Loan, and Exchange Bank of Vienna) in some detail was written in 1918, with the observation that it strongly resembled the Crédit Mobilier type of bank. This work was obviously ignored both in Austria and elsewhere where the history of banking and banks has been discussed.
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Brunell, Thomas L., and Bernard Grofman. "Explaining Divided U.S. Senate Delegations, 1788–1996: A Realignment Approach." American Political Science Review 92, no. 2 (June 1998): 391–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2585671.

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We maintain that the rise and fall in the number of states with divided Senate delegations can be explained primarily in terms of long-run forces of realignment/dealignment and staggered Senate elections. We test our model with election data from 1788–1996 rather than only the post–World War II period, which was common in previous research. We show that a large number of divided Senate delegations is not new; indeed, the highest percentage occurred in 1830. Exactly as predicted by our model, we find a cyclical pattern in divided Senate delegations that is tied to realigning epochs. Our analysis also calls attention to the recent decline in the number of such delegations, and we argue that this trend may well continue.
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Hambach, Ulrich, and Ian Smalley. "Two critical books in the history of loess investigation: ‘Charakteristik der Felsarten’ by Karl Caesar von Leonhard and ‘Principles of Geology’ by Charles Lyell." Open Geosciences 11, no. 1 (August 29, 2019): 447–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/geo-2019-0032.

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Abstract The two critical books, launching the study and appreciation of loess, were ‘Charakteristik der Felsarten’ (CdF) by Karl Caesar von Leonhard, published in Heidelberg by Joseph Engelmann, in 1823-4, and ‘Principles of Geology’ (PoG) by Charles Lyell, published in London by John Murray in 1830-3. Each of these books was published in three volumes and in each case the third volume contained a short piece on loess (about 2-4 pages). These two books are essentially the foundations of loess scholarship. In CdF Loess [Loefs] was first properly defined and described; section 89 in vol. 3 provided a short study of the nature and occurrence of loess, with a focus on the Rhine valley. In PoG there was a short section on loess in the Rhine valley; this was in vol.3 and represents the major dissemination of loess awareness around the world. A copy of PoG3 (Principles of Geology vol. 3) reached Charles Darwin on the Beagle in Valparaiso in 1834; worldwide distribution. Lyell and von Leonhard met in Heidelberg in 1832. Von Leonhard and Heinrich Georg Bronn (1800-1862) showed Lyell the local loess. These observations provided the basis for the loess section in PoG3. Lyell acknowledged the influence of his hosts when he added a list of loess scholars to PoG; by the 5th edition in 1837 the list comprised H.G. Bronn, Karl Caesar von Leonhard (1779-1862), Ami Boue (1794-1881), Voltz, Johann Jakob Noeggerath (1788-1877), J. Steininger, P. Merian, Rozet, C.F.H. von Meyer (1801-1869), Samuel Hibbert (1782-1848) and Leonard Horner (1785-1864); a useful list of loess pioneers. The loess is a type of ground that has only recently been established, and it seems, the peculiarity of the Rhine region, and of a very general but inconsistent spread.” H.G. Bronn 1830
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Carter, Joseph G., Trent McDowell, and Naveen Namboodiri. "The identity of Gastrochaena cuneiformis Spengler, 1783, and the evolution of Gastrochaena, Rocellaria, and Lamychaena (Mollusca, Bivalvia, Gastrochaenoidea)." Journal of Paleontology 82, no. 1 (January 2008): 102–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1666/04-066.1.

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The specimens of Gastrochaena cuneiformis Spengler, 1783, with Spengler-written labels at the Zoologisk Museum, Copenhagen, did not come from Spengler's type locality in the Nicobar Islands, and may instead be syntypes of Chemnitz's (1788) West Indies “Pholas hians”. the identity of Gastrochaena cuneiformis as a senior synonym of Gastrochaena gigantea (Deshayes, 1830) is established on the basis of Spengler's original descriptions and illustrations, and by examination of specimens from the type locality. A neotype for G. cuneiformis is designated and illustrated, and its genus is revised to exclude Rocellaria Blainville, 1829, and Lamychaena Freneix in Freneix and Roman, 1979. Gastrochaena Spengler, 1783 is the most plesiomorphic of these three genera, as shown by its simple boring, short siphons, and diffuse, poorly differentiated anterior pedal muscles. Rocellaria evolved from a close common ancestor with Gastrochaena, and is characterized by a ventral shift and fusion of the posteroventral pallial sinus with the posteroventral pallial band, low, irregular posterior commarginal lamellae, and well defined anterior pedal retractor muscles generally supported by myophores. Lamychaena evolved from Rocellaria during the Oligocene, extending its ctenidia far posterior into the siphonal part of the boring, and, in some species, uniting its anterior pedal retractor and protractor muscles as they approach the byssus apparatus.
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Ott, Franklyn D. "A BIBLIOGRAPHICAL CONTRIBUTION TO OUR APPRECIATION OF E. J. C. ESPER'S DIE PFLANZENTHIERE IN ABBILDUNGEN NACH DER NATUR (1788-1830) AND ITS FORTSETZUNGEN (1794-1806)." TAXON 38, no. 2 (May 1989): 204–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1220835.

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Singh, Sushil Kumar, and Tamás Pócs. "Present status of the genus Taxilejeunea [Lejeuneaceae: Marchantiophyta] in India." Phytotaxa 263, no. 1 (May 27, 2016): 73. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.263.1.9.

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The genus Taxilejeunea (Spruce 1884: 212) Stephani (1889: 262) was originally described as Lejeunea subgenus Taxilejeunea Spruce (1884: 212). Spruce (1884) included 15 species in this subgenus, including the type species Lejeunea pterigonia (Lehm. & Lindenb.) Montagne (1840: 337) [basionym Jungermannia pterigonia Lehm. & Lindenb. in Lehmann (1834: 44)]. Schiffner (1893), when treating the genus Taxilejeunea, included five species namely, Taxilejeunea sulphurea (Lehm. & Lindenb. in Lehmann 1833: 14) Stephani (1890b: 142), T. pterigonia (Lehm. & Lindenb.) Stephani (1890b: 142), T. tenera (Swartz 1788: 143) Stephani (1890a: 98), T. affinis (Lindenb. & Gottsche in Gottsche et al. 1847: 748) Stephani (1890b: 141) and T. lumbricoides (Nees 1830: 40) Stephani (1890b: 141). Since then, many species have been added to the genus (Stephani 1912-1917, 1917-1924, Stotler & Crandall-Stotler 1977, Yano 1984, Fulford & Sharp 1990), especially from South America. All together 218 species names in Taxilejeunea are listed in Index Hepaticarum (Geissler & Bischler 1990, see also Reiner-Drehwald 2005). No detailed account is available on the genus except by Eifrig (1936) who provided a treatment of 26 species from Indomalesia. Recent molecular studies have proved that Taxilejeunea is not a good genus and is nested in Lejeunea (Wilson et al. 2007, Dong et al. 2013, Gradstein 2013, Heinrichs et al. 2013). Earlier, Mizutani (e.g. 1970) showed that various Asian species of Taxilejeunea should be returned to Lejeunea. A review of the species reported or described as Taxilejeunea is very necessary. Söderstöm et al. (2015) gave an account of the validation dates of generic names published by Spruce (1884) as subgenera and revised the publication dates of all species names. In the present paper, we deal only with the Taxilejeunea species recorded from India.
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GOVAERTS, RAFAËL, and TAPAS CHAKRABARTY. "Psychotria nilgherensis (Rubiaceae), a new combination replacing P. elongata." Phytotaxa 321, no. 2 (September 15, 2017): 223. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.321.2.9.

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The genus Grumilea was established by Gaertner (1788: 138, t. 28, f. 2) on the basis of a single species, G. nigra Gaertner from Sri Lanka. The genus was subsequently recognized and treated by a number of authors such as Candolle (1830: 495), Wight & Arnott (1834: 432), Miquel (1857: 295) and Thwaites (1859: 147). However, Bentham & Hooker (1873: 123) combined Grumilea with Psychotria Linnaeus (1759: 929, 1364), nom. cons., a delimitation that was accepted by later workers (e.g., Mabberley 2008: 377). Hooker (1880: 161) treated Grumilea as a Section of Psychotria. Wight (1845: 16, t. 1036) described a species, Grumilea elongata from Tamil Nadu, India which was transferred to Psychotria by Hooker as Psychotria elongata (Wight) Hooker (1880: 163). This name was used in most of the subsequent floristic treatments (e.g., Trimen 1894; Brandis 1906; Gamble 1921; Fyson 1932; Sebastine & Vivekananthan 1967; Matthew & Rani 1983; Swaminathan 1987; Mohanan & Henry 1994). Sohmer (1977: 381), realizing that the name P. elongata is a later homonym of two names published by Bentham (1853: 32) and Beddome (1872: t. 17), applied a new name, P. fosbergii Sohmer which was accepted and used by Deb & Gangopadhyay (1989: 70, f. 29) in their revision of the genus Psychotria. Unfortunately, they overlooked the fact that this name is also a later homonym of P. fosbergii Steyermark (1972: 630). Later, Kiehn published the replacement name P. sohmeri Kiehn (1986: 215) and this was used as the correct name by Sohmer (1987: 339). Two years later, Suresh proposed another replacement name, P. glandulosa Suresh (1988: 229). As this is a later replacement name, it is superfluous and illegitimate. Unfortunately, all these authors overlooked the fact that Kuntze (1891: 957) published the name Uragoga nilgherensis replacing Grumilea elongata which, if transferred to Psychotria, becomes the earliest valid replacement name for the Wight’s species. Hence the necessary new combination is proposed below.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "1788-1830"

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Steenson, J. D. "' The courtesans characters : ''scandalous memoirists'' and their fiction, 1788-1830'." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 2008. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.492317.

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This thesis examines 'character' as the place where issues of public and private reputation and memoir and fiction meet, taking as its focus three of the late eighteenth-century's most notorious courtesans and memoirists - Elizabeth Gooch (1756 - post 1804), Mary Robinson (1758 - 1800) and Harriette Wilson (1786 1845). As figures who had publicly flouted the restraints of the period's conventional definitions of feminine identity, all three women came to write about their lives mindful of the rigorous discourses that governed the expression of female character. While tensions between the intemalisation or performance of culturally scripted femininities and the disclosure of a more subversive self in their autobiographical writing has begun to be critically mapped in recent years, there has been little consideration of their fictional texts. These were written contemporaneously with, or soon after, their memoirs as further sites in which they might negotiate the relationship between experience and its articulation. The thesis considers both of Gooch's autobiographical texts, An Appeal to the Public (1788) and The Life ofMrs. Gooch (1792), and her first novel The Contrast (1795); Robinson's 1799 novel The Natural Daughter is compared with her Memoirs, written during the same period and published posthumously in 1801 and Wilson's 1825 Memoirs are set against the short fiction published only two weeks later, Paris Lions and London Tigers and her last novel Clara Gazul (1830). All three women's novels contain characters and plots obviously informed by their personal experiences. Yet this semi-autobiographical facet has often led to the depreciation and dismissal of their fiction. Such an oversight has suppressed the significant questions that a comparison between the life-writing and fiction of these fascinating personalities might raise: questions concerning the constructedness of gender and the limitations and possibilities of literary genre with which to express the experience of gender.
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KARSKENS, Grace. "THE ROCKS AND SYDNEY: SOCIETY, CULTURE AND MATERIAL LIFE 1788-C1830." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/405.

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This study explores the early history of Sydney's Rocks area at two levels. First, it provides a much-needed history of the city's earliest, oldest-surviving and best-known precinct, one which allows an investigation of popular beliefs about the Rocks' convict origins, and which challenges and qualifies its reputation for lowlife, vice and squalor. Second, by examining fundamental aspects of everyday life - townscape, community and commonality, family life and work, human interaction and rites of passage - this study throws new light on the origins of Sydney from the perspective of the convict and ex-convict majority. Despite longstanding historical interest in Sydney's beginnings, the cultural identity, values, habits, beliefs of the convicts and ex-convicts remained largely hidden. The examination of such aspects reveals another Sydney altogether from that presented by governors, artists and mapmakers. Instead of an orderly oupost of empire, a gaol-town, or a 'gulag', the Sydney the Rocks represents was built and occupied largely according to the tastes, priorities and inclination of the people, with relatively little official regulation or interference. While the Rocks appeared 'disorderly' in the eyes of the elite, it nevertheless functioned according to cultural rules, those of the lower orders - the artisans, shopkeepers, publicans, labouring people, the majority of whom were convicts and ex-convicts.
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KARSKENS, Grace. "THE ROCKS AND SYDNEY: SOCIETY, CULTURE AND MATERIAL LIFE 1788-C1830." University of Sydney, History, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/405.

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This study explores the early history of Sydney's Rocks area at two levels. First, it provides a much-needed history of the city's earliest, oldest-surviving and best-known precinct, one which allows an investigation of popular beliefs about the Rocks' convict origins, and which challenges and qualifies its reputation for lowlife, vice and squalor. Second, by examining fundamental aspects of everyday life - townscape, community and commonality, family life and work, human interaction and rites of passage - this study throws new light on the origins of Sydney from the perspective of the convict and ex-convict majority. Despite longstanding historical interest in Sydney's beginnings, the cultural identity, values, habits, beliefs of the convicts and ex-convicts remained largely hidden. The examination of such aspects reveals another Sydney altogether from that presented by governors, artists and mapmakers. Instead of an orderly oupost of empire, a gaol-town, or a 'gulag', the Sydney the Rocks represents was built and occupied largely according to the tastes, priorities and inclination of the people, with relatively little official regulation or interference. While the Rocks appeared 'disorderly' in the eyes of the elite, it nevertheless functioned according to cultural rules, those of the lower orders - the artisans, shopkeepers, publicans, labouring people, the majority of whom were convicts and ex-convicts.
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Lanza, Andrea. "La recomposition de l'unité sociale : étude des tensions démocratiques chez les socialistes fraternitaires (1839-1847)." Paris, EHESS, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006EHES0101.

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Cette thèse est consacrée à l'analyse du discours des premiers socialistes républicains français, les « socialistes fraternitaires », et de leur tentative de penser la fraternité dans une perspective individualiste. Le I chapitre présente les transformations de la société française qui ont influé sur ce discours socialistes (tissu urbain, industrialisation par ateliers, espace public démocratique en définition, économique en autonomisation progressive, religion dans société sortant de la religion). Les chapitres suivants dégagent des thèmes de ce discours : pouvoir (pouvoir social, association, révolution), propriété individuelle et son dépassement, conflit social. Le chapitre conclusif révèle le modèle d'organisation socio-politique sous-jacent à ce discours, un modèle « corporatiste républicain ». Malgré, ou grâce à, son simplisme, l'idée de « recomposition totale » montre des constructions logiques et des contradictions insurmontables de la première phase de la démocratie
This Ph. D. Thesis studies the discourse of the first French Republican Socialists ("socialistes fraternitaires"), and their attempt to think the brotherhood in an individualist perspective. The first chapter considers what transformations in French society (changes in urban fabric, workshops industrialisation, the creation of a democratic public space, disembedding of economics, the role of religion in a democratic society) influenced such discourse. The following chapters focus on topics central to this discourse : "power" (social power, association, revolution), "individual property" and its overcoming, "social conflict". The conclusion illustrates that the model of socio-political organization implied in such a discourse in a model "corporatiste républicain". In spite of, or thanks to, its simplicity, the idea of "recomposition totale" is shown to partake of the discursive structures and insurmountable contradictions typical of the first phase of democracy
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Mazurel, Hervé. "Désirs de guerre et rêves d'ailleurs : la croisade philhellène des volontaires occidentaux de la guerre d'indépendance grecque (1821-1830)." Paris 1, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009PA010553.

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Webber, Megan. ""Ground Honest in the Reform Mill": The Theory and Experience of Reformation in the Philanthropic Society and Refuge for the Destitute, c.1788-1830." Thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10214/3944.

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This thesis is an investigation of the Philanthropic Society (est. 1788) and Refuge for the Destitute (est. 1804), two subscription charities established to prevent crime and reform members of the “criminal underclass” in London, England. This thesis engages the perspectives of both benefactors and beneficiaries, arguing that beneficiaries (or “objects”) were not passive participants in the charitable exchange, but actively sought to manipulate the institutions’ systems to secure their own desires —desires which did not always align with those of their benefactors. The introductory chapter explores the social, economic, and political conditions which led benefactors to create the institutions and which informed their aims and methods. The first chapter examines the strategies used by objects to secure charitable aid on their own terms. The post-institutional conduct of beneficiaries is the focus of the final chapter. Despite the intensive reformatory regimen of the Philanthropic and Refuge, a significant proportion of beneficiaries —at least one third— refused to fulfill benefactors’ expectations that they become law-abiding, industrious, and pious citizens. From the day of their application to the institutions to long after their departure, objects’ actions were informed by their own expectations and desires.
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
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Books on the topic "1788-1830"

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A rage for curiosity, visualising Australia 1788-1830. Sydney: State Library of New South Wales, 2000.

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High society: A social history of the Regency Period, 1788-1830. London, UK: Viking, 1998.

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Sociedad Estatal para la Ejecución de Programas del Quinto Centenario (Spain), ed. Revolución, contrarrevolución e independencia: La Revolución Francesa, España y América : [exposición ubicada en la] Biblioteca Nacional, Madrid, junio-julio, 1989. [Madrid]: Turner, 1989.

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Sir Robert Peel: The life of Sir Robert Peel after 1830. 2nd ed. London: Longman, 1986.

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Adelman, Paul. Peel and the Conservative Party, 1830-1850. London: Longman, 1989.

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Peel and the Conservative Party, 1830-1850. London: Longman, 1989.

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Romantic identities: Varieties of subjectivity, 1774-1830. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press, 1996.

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Manfredini, Vincenzo. A critical translation from the Italian of Vincenzo Manfredini's Difesa della musica moderna/In defense of modern music (1788). Lewiston, N.Y: E. Mellen Press, 2002.

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Australia, National Library of, ed. The world upside down: Australia 1788-1830. Canberra: National Library of Australia, 2000.

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Karskens, Grace. The Rocks: Everyday Life in Early Sydney 1788-1830. Melbourne University Publishing, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "1788-1830"

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Foley, Dennis. "Leadership: the quandary of Aboriginal societies in crises, 1788 – 1830, and 1966." In Transgressions: Critical Australian Indigenous histories. ANU Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/t.12.2007.08.

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Wodziński, Marcin. "To ‘Civilize’ the Jews: Polish Debates on the Reform of Jewish Society, 1788–1830." In Hasidism and Politics, 9–41. Liverpool University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781904113737.003.0002.

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This chapter provides a general introduction to the issues that shaped Polish policy towards Jews. It emphasizes the most general policy objectives and their implementation, as well as on the way the Jewish community was perceived. Many Polish reformers envisaged that Polish Jews should become “civil Christians”, that is distinct from their Polish Christian neighbors only in their private religious beliefs. The chapter also talks about the proposed new “Mosaic” religion that was essentially devoid of religious ritual and with a minimum of institutional structures. It explains the Mosaic religion as a state-sponsored campaign to purge Judaism of its content so as to facilitate the reform of Jewish society.
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Bohls, Elizabeth A. "3. Colonizing New South Wales, 1788–1791." In Travel Writing 1700-1830. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199537525.003.0027.

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Hiram Wood, The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay (1790) After the loss of the North American colonies in 1776, the new continent claimed by Cook presented a solution to the problem of Britain’s burgeoning criminalized underclass. New South Wales would be developed as...
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Bohls, Elizabeth A. "4. Revolutionary Tourism." In Travel Writing 1700-1830. Oxford University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199537525.003.0006.

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Arthur Young, Travels, during the Years 1787, 1788 and i789. Undertaken more particularly with a View of ascertaining the Cultivation, Wealth, Resources and National Prosperity, of the Kingdom of France (1792) Arthur Young (1741–1820), experimental farmer and agricultural writer, made his reputation with a series...
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