• Beatrice Mary Blackwood (3 May 1889 – 29 November 1975) was a British anthropologist, who ran the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford from 1938 until her retirement...
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  • Algernon Blackwood (1869–1951), British writer of ghost stories Beatrice Blackwood (1889-1975), British anthropologist Lady Caroline Blackwood (1931–1996)...
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    forty universities and academic institutions abroad, including the Beatrice Blackwood Lecture at Oxford, the George Lurcy Lecture at Chicago, the Munro...
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    Ernest and Sarah Chinnery, Catholic priest Patrick O'Reilly, Briton Beatrice Blackwood, and American Douglas L. Oliver. In 1942, Bougainville was occupied...
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    created "Gaza Memorial Garden" planted there. Henry Balfour (curator) Beatrice Blackwood (curator, anthropologist) Leonard Halford Dudley Buxton (anthropologist)...
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  • Museum. In the 1930s he carried research in Oxford with anthropologist Beatrice Blackwood. He collected textiles that are currently in the Pitt Rivers Museum...
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  • Ardener (St. John's) Marius Barbeau (Oriel) Brenda Beck (Somerville) Beatrice Blackwood (Somerville) Maria Czaplicka (Somerville) John Davis (University and...
    41 KB (4,193 words) - 23:00, 24 September 2024
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    Jemima Adeline Beatrice Blackwood, widow of Edward Henry Stuart Bligh, 7th Earl of Darnley, and daughter of Francis James Lindesay Blackwood. They had one...
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  • anthropologist Beatrice Blackwood Anthropologist 1889-05-03 1975-01-29 Beatrice Blyth Whiting American anthropologist 1914-04-14 2003-09-29 Beatrice De Cardi...
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  • of Oxford. The documentary includes the film footage and work of Beatrice Blackwood, another important anthropologist who collected photographs and objects...
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    October Bachelor of Arts : 134  Beatrice Mary Blackwood Somerville College 30 October Bachelor of Arts Beatrice Blackwood : 134  Eveline Blades St Hugh's...
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    Sciences Brenda Beck (c. 1940), anthropologist and Tamil culture icon Beatrice Blackwood (1889–1975), anthropologist; ran the Pitt Rivers Museum Maria Czaplicka...
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    of Buka Passage, which was studied by the British anthropologist, Beatrice Blackwood, in 1930. The third was carried out by [Douglas Oliver] in 1938-39...
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  • January 1899, he married Jemima Adeline Beatrice Blackwood (1880-1964), daughter of Francis James Lindsay Blackwood (1849-1919), by whom he had one daughter:...
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    Yale took her to Europe where she formed a lifelong friendship with Beatrice Blackwood. A 1934 grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York provided for...
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  • She was born Catherine Margaret Blackwood in Dundee and was the daughter of Beatrice Marie Orr and George Blackwood, an actuary. She was a pupil at St...
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  • Evelyn Beatrice Hall (28 September 1868 – 13 April 1956), who wrote under the pseudonym S[tephen] G. Tallentyre, was an English writer best known for her...
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  • Darnley (1851–1900), who married Jemima Adeline Beatrice Blackwood, daughter of Francis J. L. Blackwood. Lady Edith Louisa Mary Bligh (1853–1904), who...
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  • Glenmutchkin Railway" by William Edmondstoune Aytoun, published in 1845 in Blackwood's Magazine, one of the railway directors, Sir Polloxfen Tremens, is said...
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    her scenes were cut from the final film. Daddario starred as Constance Blackwood in We Have Always Lived in the Castle, a film adaptation of Shirley Jackson's...
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    Irish representative peers in the House of Lords. In 1903, he met Lady Beatrice Child Villiers (1880–1970), youngest daughter of The 7th Earl of Jersey...
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  • Ceremony Will Be Back on First Sunday of the Year". IndieWire. Verhoeven, Beatrice (18 May 2023). "Critics Choice Association Sets 2024 Awards Date". The...
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  • Sandy (Series 1), two Scottish bystanders who comment on events. Donovan Blackwood as Baxter (Series 1), a military recruiter and drill instructor with whom...
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    Nicole Kidman in the thriller film Destroyer. Stan portrayed Charles Blackwood in We Have Always Lived in the Castle, an adaptation of Shirley Jackson's...
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    Power[1] Nisbet, Alexander (1816). A System of Heraldry. Edinburgh: William Blackwood. & tartans George Way, Romilly Squire; HarperCollins, 1995; page 84 "Cunningham...
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  • She also starred in the BBC series ShakespeaRe-Told in which she played Beatrice. She returned as GP Katie Roden in series two and three of Mistresses,...
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  • Thumbnail for Beatrice Darbyshire
    Beatrice Dean Darbyshire (31 March 1901 – 31 July 1988) was an Australian artist. She was best known for her etchings, two of which were selected for display...
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    non-Indigenous literature is Algernon Blackwood's 1910 novella The Wendigo. Joe Nazare wrote that Blackwood's "subtly-demonizing rhetoric transforms...
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  • paedophiles were using "an area of internet the size of Ireland". Richard Blackwood stated that internet paedophiles could make computer keyboards emit noxious...
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  • in mid-January. With only five minutes and two seconds of screentime, Beatrice Straight set a record for the shortest performance ever to win an acting...
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