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Ashbee and was
The movement was associated with socialist ideas in the persons of Morris, Crane and Ashbee.
The use of these rooms has been the subject of academic debate: historian Arnold Taylor argued that the first floor of the gatehouse was used by the constable as living accommodation, with the second floor used by senior visitors ; Jeremy Ashbee has since challenged this interpretation, suggesting the high status accommodation may instead have been located within the inner ward, and the gatehouse used for other purposes.
His time with Ashbee was short and, in October 1899, he became chief assistant in H. Percy Adams ' practice, where he remained for the rest of his career.
The pornographic publisher John Camden Hotten claimed that his series of flagellation reprints The Library Illustrative of Social Progress had been taken from Buckle's collection, but this was untrue, as reported by Henry Spencer Ashbee.
Ananda Coomaraswamy, the Sri Lankan philosopher and art critic who was a colleague of Ashbee, settled at Broad Campden where Ashbee adapted the Norman chapel for him.
Ian Gibson, in The Erotomaniac speculates that My Secret Life was really written by Henry Spencer Ashbee and therefore it is possible that " Walter " is a fiction.
Henry Spencer Ashbee ( 21 April 1834 – 29 July 1900 ) was a book collector, writer, and bibliographer, notorious for his massive, clandestine three volume bibliography of erotic literature written under the pseudonym of Pisanus Fraxi.
Ashbee was born in Southwark, London.
Gershon Legman was the first to link " Walter " and Ashbee in his introduction to the 1962 reprints of Ashbee's bibliographies ; the 1966 Grove Press edition of My Secret Life included an expanded version of that essay.
However they also wrote explicit erotica, perhaps the most famous being the racy tell-all My Secret Life by the pseudonym Walter ( allegedly Henry Spencer Ashbee ), and the magazine The Pearl, which was published for several years and reprinted as a paperback book in the 1960s.
It was excavated between 1964 and 1966 by Paul Ashbee who found no evidence of burials beneath the barrow and conjectured that it was a kind of cenotaph.
The present station, to the design of Neville Ashbee, was inaugurated in 1900.
He was brought in to solidify the Flyers defence and that he did as he won the first of what would be seven Barry Ashbee Trophies, an award given annually to the Flyers top blueliner.
Ashbee was opened by the Great Eastern Railway on Monday 27 February 1888, replacing a station further to the east which dated from the opening of the branch line from Broxbourne in 1843.
He was part of the Hull City team which won promotion to the Premier League for the first time in May 2008, and along with teammates Ian Ashbee, Andy Dawson and Ryan France, joined an elite band of players to have taken their club up through four divisions.

Ashbee and part
As a young man he worked in graphic design for Charles Robert Ashbee, becoming part of his community at Chipping Campden, and illustrating Conradin: A Philosophical Ballad ( 1908 ).

Ashbee and English
* July 29 — Henry Spencer Ashbee, English book collector, writer and bibliographer ( born 1834 )
* The Survey of London — a multi-volume publication originated in 1894 by Charles Robert Ashbee, adopted first by the London County Council, then the Greater London Council, and now domiciled with English Heritage.

Ashbee and sexual
Ashbee is also suspected to be " Walter ", the author of My Secret Life, a lengthy sexual memoir of a Victorian gentleman.

Ashbee and with
British designers with works in the collection include William Kent, Henry Flitcroft, Matthias Lock, Thomas Chippendale, James Stuart, William Chambers, Robert Adam, John Gillow, James Wyatt, Thomas Hopper, Charles Heathcote Tatham, Pugin, William Burges, William Morris, Charles Voysey, Charles Robert Ashbee, Baillie Scott, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Edwin Lutyens, Edward Maufe, Wells Coates & Robin Day.
Ashbee and his followers also practiced some of these ideas, thus linking simplicity with the Arts and Crafts Movement.
In the early 20th century, the town became known as a centre for the Cotswold Arts and Crafts Movement, following the move of Charles Robert Ashbee with the members of his Guild and School of Handicraft from the East End of London in 1902.
Ashbee includes plot summaries of the works listed, with liberal quotations.
Ashbee in the domestic revival style using red brick with stone dressings and a pantile roof.

Ashbee and at
Holden left Leeson's practice in 1896 and worked for Jonathan Simpson in Bolton in 1896 and 1897, working on house designs there and at Port Sunlight, before moving to London to work for Arts and Crafts designer Charles Robert Ashbee.
* Charles Robert Ashbee, son of erotomaniac Henry Spencer Ashbee, created his Guild of Handicraft whilst a resident at Toynbee Hall in the late 1880s
Ashbee during his residence at Toynbee Hall.

Ashbee and Victorian
An important and entertaining conspectus and evaluation of 19th century ( pre-1885 ) and earlier underground erotica, from the author's own private archive, is provided by Victorian writer Henry Spencer Ashbee in his bibliographical trilogy Index Librorum Prohibitorum ( 1877 ), Centuria Librorum Absconditorum ( 1879 ) and Catena Librorum Tacendorum ( 1885 ).

Ashbee and ;
Inside, the ward contained the chambers for the royal household, their immediate staff and service facilities ; today, historian Jeremy Ashbee considers them to be the " best preserved suite of medieval private royal chambers in England and Wales ".
*" Ashbee Bibliography of Prohibited Books 1877-1885 ;
Janet E. Ashbee, 1901 ); A book of the Office of Servantes ( 1543 ), translated from Gilbert Cognatus ; and An homilie of Saint John Chrysostome ... Englished by T. C. ( 1544 ).

Ashbee and Charles
In Austria, the style became popular in Vienna, inspired by an exhibition of the works of Charles Rennie Mackintosh and Charles Robert Ashbee.
* Charles Robert Ashbee
They had one son, Charles ( the designer Charles Robert Ashbee, born 1863 ), and three daughters.
Ashbee, Christopher Dresser, Ernest Gimson, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, William Morris, M. H.

Ashbee and others
Morris and others, for example, Walter Crane and C. R. Ashbee ( 1863 – 1942 ), advocated a society of free craftspeople, which they believed had existed during the Middle Ages.

Ashbee and .
In 1888, C. R. Ashbee, a major late practitioner of the style in England, founded the Guild and School of Handicraft in the East End of London.
In 1902 Ashbee relocated the guild out of London to begin an experimental community in Chipping Campden in the Cotswolds.
Ashbee designed jewellery and silver tableware.
Ashbee, in some respects, began as even more " medievalist " than Morris.
Ashbee established a community of craftsmen, the Guild of Handicraft, in east London, later moving to Chipping Campden.
Gordon Russell, chairman of the Utility Furniture Design Panel, manufactured in the Cotswold Hills, which had become a region of Arts and Crafts furniture making when Ashbee relocated there.
* 1986-Alan Crawford, C. R. Ashbee: Architect, Designer, and Romantic Socialist
Ian Gibson, The Erotomaniac: The Secret Life of Henry Spencer Ashbee, 2001.

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