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Bloomsbury and is
He was admired by and influential among other philosophers, and also by the Bloomsbury Group, but is ( unlike his colleague Russell ) mostly unknown today outside of academic philosophy.
Bloomsbury ( later known as Wake Courthouse ) is made the informal county seat.
However, the claim has been made that ( though factually accurate ) Woolf's formulation is " a little too dogmatic and definite and contributes to the false view that Bloomsbury was an entity, almost a formal body ", as opposed to " an informal group of friends, and nothing more ".
The lives and works of the group members show an overlapping, interconnected similarity of ideas and attitudes that helped to keep the friends and relatives together, reflecting in large part the influence of G. E. Moore: " the essence of what Bloomsbury drew from Moore is contained in his statement that ' one's prime objects in life were love, the creation and enjoyment of aesthetic experience and the pursuit of knowledge '".
Indeed much of the interest in Bloomsbury has been biographically driven, yet it is their achievements as writers, artists, and thinkers that have ultimately made their lives biographically interesting.
If " the contempt or suspicion-the environment that a person or group creates around itself-is always a kind of alter ego, an essential and revealing part of the production ", there is perhaps much to be learnt from the ( extensive ) criticism that the Bloomsbury Group aroused.
The book, which is J. K. Rowling's debut novel, was published on 26 June 1997 by Bloomsbury in London.
Coraline () is a horror / fantasy novella by British author Neil Gaiman, published in 2002 by Bloomsbury and Harper Collins.
The next exit, Exit 6, is for County Route 632 in Bloomsbury.
This one is located in Bloomsbury as 173 begins to parallel the interstate.
That distinction is largely the result of an issue raised in Britain by the conflict between the followers of the Arts and Crafts Movement, including William Morris, and the early modernists, including Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group.
Bloomsbury is an area of the London Borough of Camden, in central London, between Euston Road and Holborn, developed by the Russell family in the 17th and 18th centuries into a fashionable residential area.
Bloomsbury is home to the University of London's central bodies and departments, including the Senate House Library and School of Advanced Study, and several of its colleges, including University College London, Birkbeck, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, the School of Pharmacy and the School of Oriental and African Studies.
Bloomsbury is in the Parliamentary constituency of Holborn and St Pancras.
The earliest record of what would become Bloomsbury is the 1086 Domesday Book, which records that the area had vineyards and " wood for 100 pigs ".
But it is not until 1201 that the name Bloomsbury is first noted, when William de Blemond, a Norman landowner, acquired the land .< ref >< cite > Camden Council Local History.
Retrieved 8 March 2007 .</ ref > The name Bloomsbury is a development from Blemondisberi – the bury, or manor, of Blemond.
An 1878 publication, Old and New London: Volume 4, mentions the idea that the area was named after a village called " Lomesbury " which formerly stood where Bloomsbury Square is now ,< ref >< cite >' Bloomsbury ', Old and New London: Volume 4 ( 1878 ), pp. 480 – 89 Date accessed: 8 March 2007 </ ref > though this piece of folk etymology is now discredited.
The area is bisected north to south by the main Southampton Row-Woburn Place thoroughfare, which contains several large tourist hotels and links Tavistock Square and Russell Square – the central points of Bloomsbury.
The main north-south road in west Bloomsbury is Gower Street which is a one-way road running south from Euston Road towards Shaftesbury Avenue in Covent Garden, becoming Bloomsbury Street when it passes to the west of the British Museum.

Bloomsbury and home
Burlington was a governor of the charity, but did not formally take part in planning the construction of this large Bloomsbury children's home completed in 1742.
In 2007 The Spectator moved its offices from Doughty Street, which had been its home for 31 years, to 22 Old Queen Street in Westminster, leaving Bloomsbury for the first time since the paper ’ s founding in 1828.
* Bloomsbury Square, a small circular garden, but called a square, is also surrounded by Georgian buildings including the former Victorian House and state home of the Lord Chancellor.
Bloomsbury is also home to the disused British Museum tube station.
Garsington Manor, in the village of Garsington, near Oxford, England, is a Tudor building, best known as the former home of Lady Ottoline Morrell, the Bloomsbury Group socialite.
Sloane's collection, which included dried plants, and animal and human skeletons, was initially housed in Montague House in Bloomsbury in 1756, which was the home of the British Museum.
However, the modular ex-BT building occupied by McCann-Erickson was demolished in 2006 after the firm moved to an art deco home in Bloomsbury.
In addition to Bloomsbury, he owned a second home, " Oakland ," in present-day Vance County.
On her wealthy maternal side Rantzen's great-grandfather, Montague Richard Leverson, at the age of 18 accidentally fatally shot the parlour maid Priscilla Fitzpatrick at the family home in fashionable Queen Square, Bloomsbury, London.
Browne, recalled by Dr Johnson ( in 1773 ) to have drunk hard for thirty years, died at his London home in Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury Square, aged fifty-five.
The building, on the west side of Gordon Square in the heart of Bloomsbury, at that time also housed Manchester New College, and is now the home of Dr Williams's Library.
Its immediate success was encapsulated by the decision of another of London's leading freehold landlords, the Duke of Bedford, to choose No. 6 as his London home in preference to a house on his own London estate in Bloomsbury, which had lost its aristocratic cachet.
* Montagu House, Bloomsbury, the first home of the British Museum, also known as Montague House
Montagu House ( sometimes spelled " Montague ") was a late 17th-century mansion in Great Russell Street in the Bloomsbury district of London, which became the first home of the British Museum.
Montagu House in Bloomsbury was sold to the Trustees of the British Museum in 1759 and was the home of that institution until it was demolished in the 1840s to make way for larger premises.
Thomas died at his home in Bloomsbury, London, aged 65, after a brief illness.
Charleston, the country home of the Bloomsbury group is an example of Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant's decorative style within a domestic context and represents the fruition of over sixty years of artistic creativity.
The Charleston Trust is a charity set up in 1980 to restore and maintain the home of the Bloomsbury Group artists for the benefit of the public.
Cellier died at his home in Bloomsbury, London and was buried in West Norwood Cemetery.

Bloomsbury and Senate
The Bloomsbury Campus also contains eight Halls of Residence and Senate House, which houses the Senate House Library, the chancellor's official residence and previously housed the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, now part of University College London ( UCL ) and housed in its own new building.
It is based in the Bloomsbury area of Central London, close to the Senate House complex of the University of London.
Goldsmiths ' students, like all other students in the University of London, have full access to the collections at Senate House Library at Bloomsbury in central London.
It was established on 1 August 1994 and is located in Senate House in Bloomsbury, central London, close to the British Museum, the British Library and several of the Colleges of the University of London.
The main offices of the University of London are at Senate House in Bloomsbury, which includes a substantial library and the residence of the Chancellor.
LCDS is based at The Place in the Bloomsbury area of Central London, close to London's Theatreland and the Senate House complex of the University of London, RADA and University College London.
Senate House is the administrative centre of the University of London, situated in the heart of Bloomsbury, London between the School of Oriental and African Studies to the east, with the British Museum to the south.
Senate House remains a prominent landmark throughout Bloomsbury and is visible from some distance away.
Senate House ( University of London ) | Senate House, in Bloomsbury, is the administrative centre of the University of London, a federation of London higher education institutions.

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