Literatura científica selecionada sobre o tema "Cutlers' Company (London, England)"

Crie uma referência precisa em APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, e outros estilos

Selecione um tipo de fonte:

Consulte a lista de atuais artigos, livros, teses, anais de congressos e outras fontes científicas relevantes para o tema "Cutlers' Company (London, England)".

Ao lado de cada fonte na lista de referências, há um botão "Adicionar à bibliografia". Clique e geraremos automaticamente a citação bibliográfica do trabalho escolhido no estilo de citação de que você precisa: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.

Você também pode baixar o texto completo da publicação científica em formato .pdf e ler o resumo do trabalho online se estiver presente nos metadados.

Artigos de revistas sobre o assunto "Cutlers' Company (London, England)"

1

Duncan, Craig. "Cutlers' Surgical Prize". Bulletin of the Royal College of Surgeons of England 90, n.º 6 (1 de junho de 2008): 211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1308/147363508x314816.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
The Worshipful Company of Cutlers, in association with The Royal College of Surgeons of England, each year awards the Cutlers' Surgical Prize, comprising the silver gilt Clarke medal and a sum of £1,000, for the entry judged to be the most outstanding advance in design of a surgical instrument or technique. The award is presented at a dinner held in the spring at Cutlers' Hall in the City of London.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
2

Quarmby, Kevin. "Lazarus Theatre's All-Female Henry V at The Union Theatre, London". Scene: Reviews of Early Modern Drama, n.º 1 (13 de outubro de 2018): 25. http://dx.doi.org/10.18357/scene01201718440.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
3

Brech, Alison, e Anita McConnell. "The Pigott Family: Eighteenth Century Connections with Church, Science and Law". Recusant History 25, n.º 3 (maio de 2001): 449–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0034193200030302.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
This branch of the Pigotts can be traced back to Adam Pigott (d.?1737), a London merchant, member of the Cutlers’ Company where his mark of a dolphin was registered in 1664, who was residing near Temple Gate in 1676. In 1678 Adam Pigott and James Allen negotiated a lease from the Duke of Bedford for the construction of Covent Garden Market, with the obligation to pave the area and construct houses and shops. Adam’s wife is not mentioned in his will and presumably predeceased him, but there were at least two sons, Nathaniel (1661–1737) who died shortly after his father, but through whom this story continues, and Adam (1673–1751) who entered the Society of Jesus at Watten, near St. Omer, was professed in 1694 and, after serving as chaplain at Calehill, Kent, the home of the Darell family, died at Crondon Park, Essex, the seat of the Petre and Mason families, on 30 April 1751. In common with virtually every priest of the period, Adam Pigott used an alias for security reasons, this alias being in many cases the mother’s maiden name. Adam Pigott’s alias was Griffin, which may therefore have been his mother’s original surname.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
4

Wagner, Joseph. "The Scottish East India Company of 1617: Patronage, Commercial Rivalry, and the Union of the Crowns". Journal of British Studies 59, n.º 3 (julho de 2020): 582–607. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2020.38.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
AbstractThe history of the Scottish East India Company of 1617 is a history of partnerships and rivalries within and between Scotland and England. The company was opposed by the merchants of the royal burghs in Scotland and by the East India Company, Muscovy Company, and Privy Council in England. At the same time, it was supported by the Scottish Privy Council and was able to recruit Dutch, English, and Scottish investors. The interactions between these groups were largely shaped by the union of the crowns, which saw James VI accede to the thrones of England and Ireland and move his court to London. Scotland was thus left with an absentee monarch, decreasing the access of Scottish merchants to the king while increasing the importance of court connections in acquiring that access. Regal union also created opportunities for Scots to become part of the London business world, which, in turn, could lead to backlash from English interests. Having developed in this context, the Scottish East India Company speaks to how James VI and I approached patronage and policy in his multiple kingdoms, how commercial rivalries developed in England and Scotland, and how trading companies played a role in constitutional developments in Stuart Britain.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
5

Ackerman, Marianne. "England Mirvish, Marx, and Shakespeare". Canadian Theatre Review 50 (março de 1987): 62–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/ctr.50.009.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
In the beginning, champagne. Monday morning, September, 1986, cast and crew of the newly-formed English Shakespeare Company (ESC) assemble in the drafty Territorial Army Drill Hall, South-West London. Wearing his familiar bankers’ blue suit and white shirt, Torontonian David Mirvish grins his eager-beaver, anything-is-possible grin and toasts the most ambitious theatrical venture launched in London this season. In the next nine weeks, director Michael Bogdanov, 25 actors and a small crew will rehearse some 80 roles in three of Shakespeare’s history plays. Henry IV, Parts 1 & 2 and Henry V will play 12 English cities, plus Paris, Berlin, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, and Toronto. The entire nine-hour trilogy will be performed each Saturday.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
6

Sutton, Anne F. "The Merchant Adventurers of England: their origins and the Mercers' Company of London". Historical Research 75, n.º 187 (1 de fevereiro de 2002): 25–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2281.00139.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
Abstract The history of the adventurers, or overseas merchants, trading to the Low Countries is taken back to their earliest privileges, those from Brabant 1296–1315, to the establishment of their fraternity of St. Thomas c.1300, and to their common origin with the staplers. This discounts the theories that they owed their beginnings to the Mercers’ Company of London. The rise of the London mercers to an increasingly dominant position among the Adventurers to the Low Countries is traced from c.1400, and their records, the frequently misleading acts of court, are re-examined. The theory that the Company of the Merchant Adventurers of England was created at the end of the fifteenth century is similarly discounted.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
7

Hill, Errol. "Morton Tavares: Jamaican and International Actor". Theatre Research International 15, n.º 3 (1990): 213–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307883300009688.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
It is not widely known that the Caribbean island of Jamaica enjoys a tradition of live theatre that may well be second to none in the English-speaking world, save only in England itself. Conquered from Spain in 1655, the island boasted an active theatre as early as 1682, not very long after public playgoing had returned to England following the Cromwellian interregnum. Records are silent about theatre for the next several decades, but by the 1730s troupers from England had begun regular visits which culminated in the two long residencies of the famed Hallam Company that came to Virginia from London in 1752. Under the senior Hallam the company journeyed to Jamaica in 1754 and remained there, after Hallam's death, until 1758 when they returned to America, led by David Douglass. Again from 1775 to 1785 the company sojourned in Jamaica, waiting out the War of Independence, this time under Lewis Hallam junior. The record of their performances in the island has been chronicled in Richardson Wright's book Revels in Jamaica (1937), which has recently been reissued.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
8

Spraakman, Gary. "THE FIRST EXTERNAL AUDITORS OF THE HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY, 1866". Accounting Historians Journal 38, n.º 1 (1 de junho de 2011): 57–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/0148-4184.38.1.57.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
At the request of shareholders, the Hudson's Bay Company had its financial statements audited for the first time in 1866. Two external auditors were hired, one for the shareholders and one for management. Three inter-related forces led to this decision: (1) most importantly, the company's shareholders demanded audited financial statements, (2) there was emerging in London at the time the capacity and willingness among London accountants to provide external audit services, and (3) the British Parliament passed various acts that required financial statements of companies in other industries to be audited. After a few years, only the management's external auditor was retained. He subsequently influenced the company's development of management accounting. In addition, the company's early external auditors were influential in the development of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of England and Wales.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
9

Hewitt, Jon. "Daring to Think Seriously: the Need for Aesthetic Judgements". New Theatre Quarterly 26, n.º 1 (fevereiro de 2010): 77–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x10000084.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
The issue of attitudes towards the arts in England is here compared and contrasted with those evident in the rest of Europe today. This article was written in June 2009, following discussions in Wroclaw during the festival ‘The World as a Place of Truth’, part of the Year of Grotowski. Jon Hewitt is Artistic Director of Admiration Theatre Company, based in London. He has directed several productions, the most recent being Romeo and Juliet Docklands, set in the East End of London. In February 2010 his latest production, Tower Hamlet, opens at the Courtyard Theatre.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
10

Schifferdecker, Christopher. "MAGNESIUM IN CLINICAL PRACTICE. Jean Durlach. John Libbey and Company Ltd., London, England, 1988, 360 Pages". Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition 13, n.º 6 (novembro de 1989): 668–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/014860718901300626.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.

Teses / dissertações sobre o assunto "Cutlers' Company (London, England)"

1

Ritter, Christina. "On hallowed ground the significance of geographic location and architectural space in the indenties [sic] of the Royal Shakespeare Company and Shakespeare's Globe /". The Ohio State University, 2007. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1188510799.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
2

Goncalves, De Aranjo Passos Stéphanie. "Une guerre des étoiles: les tournées de ballet dans la diplomatie culturelle de la Guerre froide, 1945-1968 /cStéphanie Gonçalves de Aranjo-Passos". Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/209106.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
Ma thèse de doctorat explore les tournées de ballet des « six grandes » compagnies mondiales pendant la Guerre froide (1945-1968) :ballet de l’Opéra de Paris, Royal Ballet de Covent Garden, Bolchoï et Kirov, New York City Ballet et American Ballet. Elle envisage le ballet comme un outil de diplomatie culturelle transnationale, avec un focus particulier sur les acteurs, qu’ils soient institutionnels, artistiques ou commerciaux. Outre un aspect quantitatif qui nous a amené à cartographier les tournées, il s’agit d’une histoire incarnée par des femmes et des hommes − les danseurs − dont le métier est de tourner sur les scènes internationales, encadrés par des administrateurs et des gouvernements, qui n’ont pas les mêmes priorités et agendas les uns et les autres.

Cette recherche met justement en avant les tensions, les difficultés et les dynamiques entre les différents acteurs. La thèse se construit autour de tournées représentatives du lien ténu entre danse et politique, des épisodes qui mettent en valeur les points chauds de cette Guerre froide, ayant comme point de départ ou d’arrivée Londres et Paris.

La description de la danse comme un langage, une pratique physique et un métier permet de comprendre en quoi la danse peut être un outil de communication politique et comment il a été utilisé comme tel dans la longue durée et en particulier pendant la guerre froide. Les différentes échelles – le passage régulier de la macro-histoire à la micro-histoire et inversement ainsi que les flux d’échanges culturels multiples à l’échelle internationale – ont permis de mettre en avant une multiplicité d'acteurs (artistiques, gouvernementaux, commerciaux). La constitution du mythe de la danseuse étoile, et ses représentations, résonne également avec d’autres figures mythiques construites dans la Guerre froide, comme celle de l’astronaute.
Doctorat en Histoire, art et archéologie
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished

Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.

Livros sobre o assunto "Cutlers' Company (London, England)"

1

Cutlers, Worshipful Company of. List of members, 1650-1780. London: The Company, 1995.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
2

1940-, Binfield Clyde, e Hey David, eds. Mesters to masters: A history of the Company of Cutlers in Hallamshire. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1997.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
3

Webb, Cliff. London livery company apprenticeship registers. London: Society of Genealogists, 2001.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
4

Webb, Cliff. London Livery Company apprenticeship registers. London: Society of Genealogists, 1998.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
5

Webb, Cliff. London Livery Company apprenticeship registers. London: Society of Genealogists, 1998.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
6

Webb, Cliff. London Livery Company apprenticeship registers. London: Society of Genealogists, 1998.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
7

Webb, Cliff. London livery company apprenticeship registers. London: Society of Genealogists Enterprises, 2003.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
8

Genealogists, Society of, ed. London Livery Company apprenticeship registers. London: Society of Genealogists, 1998.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
9

Webb, Cliff. London livery company apprenticeship registers. London: Society of Genealogists Enterprises, 2003.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
10

Webb, Cliff. London Livery Company apprenticeship registers. London: Society of Genealogists, 1999.

Encontre o texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.

Capítulos de livros sobre o assunto "Cutlers' Company (London, England)"

1

Lee, Daryl. "Anon., ‘Prospectus of a New Joint-Stock Company. the London Suicide Company’". In The History of Suicide in England, 1650–1850, 95–99. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003113973-8.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
2

Morgan, Kenneth. "The Case of the Royal African Company of England (London, Sam. Aris, 1730)". In The British Transatlantic Slave Trade, 59–94. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003113409-3.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
3

Haves, Charles. "The Importance of Effectually Supporting the Royal African Company of England, Impartially Consider'd . . . (London, M. Cooper, 1744)". In The British Transatlantic Slave Trade, 95–145. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003113409-4.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
4

Morgan, Kenneth. "Certain Considerations Relating to the Royal African Company of England. In Which, The Original Growth, and National Advantages of the Guiney Trade, are Demonstrated: As Also That the same Trade cannot be carried on, but by a Company and Joint Stock (London, 1680)". In The British Transatlantic Slave Trade, 1–14. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003113409-1.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
5

Botelho, Lynn, e Susannah R. Ottaway. "Richard Bulstrode, 'On Old Age', in Miscellaneous Essays: viz., I. Of Company and Conversation, II. Of Solitariness and Retirement, III. Of nobility, IV. Of Contentment, V. Of Women, VI. Of the Knowledge of God, and Against Atheism, VII. Of Religion, VIII. Of Kings, Princes, and the Education of a Prince, IX Of Greatness of Mind, X. Of the Education of Children, XI. Of Law, XII. Of Man, XIII. Of Old Age: With the Life and Conversion of St. Mary Magdalen ... also, the Life and Conversion of St. Paul (London: Jonas Browne, 1715), pp. 376–90." In The History of Old Age in England, 1600-1800, Part I Vol 2, 7–12. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003552673-2.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
6

"The Painter-Stainers’ Company of London". In Painting for a Living in Tudor and Early Stuart England, 55–85. Boydell & Brewer Ltd, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv24tr6v2.10.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
7

Felling, Margaret. "Introduction:The College and the Middling Sort". In Medical Conflicts in Early Modern London, 1–24. Oxford University PressOxford, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199257805.003.0001.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
Abstract The College of Physicians of London, With which this study begins, was the premier medical corporation of early modern England. However, it was a comparatively recent body, being founded by Thomas Linacre and other humanists under crown patronage in 1518. London’s Barber Surgeons’ Company, by contrast, formed by the combination of the Barbers with the much smaller group of surgeons in 1540, had its origins from before 1308. The Society of Apothecaries, the ‘third part’ of practice, emerged under the College’s aegis as late as 161 7, but apothecaries had been members of the Grocers’ Company, one of the twelve great livery companies, from the medieval padded.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
8

Kathman, David. "“The Madnes of Tenys” and the Commercialization of Pastimes in Early Tudor London". In Games and Theatre in Shakespeare’s England. Nieuwe Prinsengracht 89 1018 VR Amsterdam Nederland: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463723251_ch02.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
Efforts to control professional theatre in London in the 1570s contained echoes of the authorities’ previous reactions to the commercialization of tennis and bowling. As early as the 1470s, the London authorities had cracked down on tennis playing in the city, and records of the sale of tennis balls by the Ironmongers’ Company show that this attempt was successful in the short term. Over the next 50 years, those records provide a surprisingly detailed account of the surging popularity of tennis in the city, punctuated by occasional attempts by the authorities to ban it. Records from crackdowns on tennis and bowling in 1516 and 1528 provide information about the people who were trying to make money off these sports.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
9

Sharpe, Pamela. "2 Gender at sea: Women and the East India Company in seventeenth-century London". In Women, Work and Wages in England, 1600-1850, 47–67. Boydell and Brewer, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781846152467-006.

Texto completo da fonte
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
10

Careri, Enrico. "The First London Period 1714–1732". In Francesco Genminiani (1687–1762), 8–25. Oxford University PressOxford, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198163008.003.0002.

Texto completo da fonte
Resumo:
Abstract ‘THE year 1714 [Burney recounts] was rendered an important period to the progress of the violin in this country, by the arrival of Geminiani and Veracini; as the abilities of these masters confirmed the sovereignty of that instrument over all others, in our theatres and concerts.’ According to Hawkins, Geminiani came to London in the company of another Lucchese musician, Francesco Barsanti (1690–1772), who was also to spend most of his remaining life in Britain. The choice of England was particularly happy: even allowing that Italian music as a whole was well known and appreciated throughout Europe, in England there was a particularly vigorous and enthusiastic cultivation of the music of Arcangelo Corelli, which conferred a great advantage on any violinist who could claim to belong to his school.3 But England offered other advantages besides. First, violin technique was much less well developed than in Italy, so that it was all the. easier for a pupil of Corelli to make a name as a virtuoso.
Estilos ABNT, Harvard, Vancouver, APA, etc.
Oferecemos descontos em todos os planos premium para autores cujas obras estão incluídas em seleções literárias temáticas. Contate-nos para obter um código promocional único!

Vá para a bibliografia