Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Glasgow University Library" ¶ 2
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

library and royal
A manuscript of that period in the royal library, Windsor ( No. 20, E iv.
The first foot-sensor-activated automatic door was made in China during the reign of Emperor Yang of Sui ( r. 604 – 618 ), who had one installed for his royal library.
There were a few institutional or royal libraries which were open to an educated public ( such as the Serapeum collection of the Library of Alexandria, once the largest library in the ancient world ), but on the whole collections were private.
In Burma, a royal library called the Pitaka Taik was legendarily founded by King Anawrahta ; in the 18th century, British envoy Michael Symes, upon visiting this library, wrote that " it is not improbable that his Birman majesty may possess a more numerous library than any potentate, from the banks of the Danube to the borders of China ".
The copyright could be gained through two stages ; first, the registration of the book's publication with the Company, to prevent unintentional infringement, and second, the deposit of copies of the book at the Stationers ' Company, the royal library and various universities.
A large portion of the royal library is destroyed.
After 1657 it was in the French royal library, from which it passed to the Bibliothèque Nationale, where the manuscript was studied by Jacob Grimm in 1815.
* Charles V creates the first royal library in France.
The treasure went first to the Habsburgs in Vienna, then as a gift to Louis XIV, who was not impressed with the treasure and stored it in the royal library, which became the Bibliothèque Nationale de France during the Revolution.
Francis worked hard at improving the royal library.
Not only did Francis expand the library: there is also, according to Knecht, evidence that he read the books he bought for it, a much rarer event in the royal annals.
He first served at the royal library in Huế, and within one year was the district chief, presiding over seventy villages.
Other important works commissioned for the royal library were the anonymous legal treatise the Songe du Vergier, greatly inspired by the debates of Philip IV's jurists with Boniface VIII, the translations of Raol de Presles, which included St. Augustine's City of God, and the production of the Grandes Chroniques de France edited in 1377 to emphasise the vassalage of Edward III.
This copy remained in the royal library and then passed to Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, before reaching Brussels, where it was lost.
The music library, already the greatest in the world, was enlarged as was the royal library and other libraries in the country.
In the 1530s and 1540s, the royal library was reorganised to accommodate hundreds of books that were previously kept in monastic collections.
The most important service Linacre conferred upon his own profession and science was the foundation by royal charter of the College of Physicians in London, and he was the first president of the new college, which he further aided by bequeathing to it his own house and library.
This journey, in which he saw Leiden, Amsterdam and Copenhagen, as well as Stockholm, resulted chiefly in the discovery, in the Swedish royal library, of some fragments of Origen's Commentary on St Matthew, which gave Huet the idea of editing Origen, a task he completed in 1668.
His great library and manuscripts, after being bequeathed to the Jesuits, were bought by the king for the royal library.
His library was one of the most valuable of his time, only second, perhaps, to the royal collection.
The extensive inscription bands of calligraphy and arabesque on most of the major buildings where carefully planned and executed by Ali Reza Abbasi, who was appointed head of the royal library and Master calligrapher at the Shah's court in 1598, while Shaykh Bahai oversaw the construction projects.

library and physician
Lipscomb credits perusing the large medical texts in his physician father's library and the influence of Linus Pauling years later to his undertaking biochemical studies in his later years.
It was known that John Radcliffe, physician to William III and Mary II of England, intended to build a library in Oxford at least two years before his death in 1714.
Today Malvern is a rural community with its own school system recently renamed as East Mills, a golf course, swimming pool, new library and Carnegie Conference Center, agricultural businesses and government offices, a bank, two residential care facilities, physician ’ s offices, Mills County Fair Grounds, the Wabash Trace Nature Trail, and numerous other small businesses.
< font size = 2 > This vacant former office of the physician John Pugh was the site of the former Cotton Valley branch library .</ font size = 2 >
Upon his establishment in Norwich as a physician he was able to begin a lifetime's bibliophilia, building a private library, acquiring and no doubt reading many of an estimated 1, 500 titles.
* April 12-Official opening of the Radcliffe Library in Oxford, built under the will of the physician John Radcliffe ( died 1714 ) ( although it does not become a primarily science library until 1810 ).
In 1745, the elder van Swieten agreed to become personal physician to the Austrian Empress Maria Theresa, and moved with his family to Vienna, where he also became the director of the court library and served in other government posts.
Sir John Williams, physician and book collector, had also said he would present his collection to the Library if it were established in Aberystwyth ; he also eventually gave £ 20, 000 to build and establish the library.
Under his care the Gottorp library and cabinet were greatly enriched in manuscripts, books, and oriental and other works of art: in 1651 he purchased, for this purpose, the collection of the Dutch scholar and physician, Bernard ten Broecke (" Paludanus ").
The following year, Dr McNeeley, a physician who lived in nearby Norris, Tennessee sold the house to the Claiborne County government, on the condition that it be used as a library or museum.
An outstanding example of the physician – humanist, Cotugno was devoted to books and accumulated a large library, was well versed in art, architecture, numismatics, and antiquities, and had a great facility in the Latin language.
This collection was supplemented by the medical library of James Logan's younger brother, a physician in Bristol, England, the best medical library then in North America.

library and Queen
Queen Christina was generous to the university, gave scholarships to Swedish students to study abroad and recruited foreign scholars to Uppsala chairs, among them several from the University of Strassburg, notably the philologist Johannes Schefferus ( professor skytteanus ), whose little library and museum building at S: t Eriks torg now belongs to the Royal Society of Sciences in Uppsala.
The library displays a long illuminated parchment roll showing the pedigree of Queen Elizabeth with ancestors back to Adam and Eve.
The final date of completion is not known, but as late as 1735 the Duchess was haggling with Rysbrack over the cost of Queen Anne's statue placed in the library.
Here in the library, rewriting history in her own indomitable style, the Duchess set up a larger than life statue of Queen Anne, its base recording their friendship.
Cheke fell from favour on the accession of Queen Mary, and departed for mainland Europe in 1554: from that point onwards, and continuing after Cheke's death in 1557, the library was dispersed.
Mazarin's library was sold by the parlement of Paris during the troubles of the Fronde, and Queen Christina invited Naudé to Stockholm.
As part of his role as the Chancellor of the University of Worcester, HRH The Duke of Gloucester was present at the opening of the new University library ; The Hive-Europe's first joint public and university library, which was officially opened by his cousin, Her Majesty the Queen on the 11th July 2012.
Under de Thou, the library was enriched by the collections of Queen Catherine de Medici.
At the end of the Thirty Years ' War, in 1648, after the battle of Prague, it was taken as war booty to Stockholm, Sweden, to the library of Queen Christina of Sweden.
Following extensive fundraising, a £ 57 million new university library ( the Sir Duncan Rice Library ) opened in autumn 2011 at the Kings College campus to replace the outgrown Queen Mother Library and was officially opened by the Queen in September 2012.
This seven-storey tower, clad in zebra-like jagged stripes of white and clear glass, replaced the smaller Queen Mother Library as the university's main library and can be seen prominently from the entire campus and much of the city.
It contains a collection of memorabilia including family portraits, Disraeli's own furnishings, a library including a collection of Disraeli's novels and one written and signed by Queen Victoria along with many of the books he inherited from his father Isaac D ' Israeli.
Maleficent and Pete return to Disney Castle and take Queen Minnie hostage, sending Diablo with a message and Minnie's crown to the Mysterious Tower to summon Mickey, Donald and Goofy, who confront Maleficent in the library.
Queen Christina of Sweden's important library ( mostly amassed by her generals as booty from Habsburg Prague and German cities during the Thirty Years War ) was bought by Pope Alexander VIII on her death in 1689.
In 2007, Queen Beatrix opened the new building for the Peace Palace Library of International Law, housing the entire catalogue of the library, a lecture hall and a new reading room in the bridge to the main building of the Peace Palace.
Despite high-level complaints, Carlyle lost the argument and, miffed, he and his supporters ( which included Queen Victoria's husband ) started their own library, the London Library.
The annexation by Seattle of the city of Ballard brought with it another already established Carnegie library, and a further Carnegie donation of $ 70, 000 in 1911 built the Queen Anne branch ( opened 1914 ) and the Columbia Branch ( opened December 31, 1915 in Columbia City ).
A new library building was constructed in the early 1990s and opened by HM The Queen in 1996.
The Arundell Library, presented in 1837 by Everard, 11th Baron Arundell of Wardour, is the most significant ; it is not only a country-house library from Wardour Castle but also has a notable collection of 250 incunabula, medieval manuscripts and volumes of Jacobite interest, signal among which is Mary Tudor's Book of Hours, which it is believed was given by Mary, Queen of Scots to her chaplain on the scaffold.
The Parish Council, Cuckfield Museum and village library reside within the Queen's Hall, built in 1897 to celebrate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.
One book of an epic poem in Latin hexameters, in honour of Queen Elizabeth, is preserved in MS. in the library of Emmanuel College, Cambridge.
The book exists in several manuscripts, the oldest of which is an 8th century manuscript in the Vatican Library, acquired from the library of Queen Christina of Sweden ( thus MS Reginensis 316 ).
Conan Doyle was one of several authors commissioned to provide books for the library of Queen Mary's Dolls ' House ; others included J. M. Barrie, Thomas Hardy, Rudyard Kipling and W. Somerset Maugham.

4.006 seconds.