60 research outputs found

    Pl. VIII : Le miracle de la jambe noire. Miniature d'antiphonaire, Italie, XVe siècle. Londres, Society of Antiquaries, The Brooke Antiphonal

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    Society of Antiquaries. Pl. VIII : Le miracle de la jambe noire. Miniature d'antiphonaire, Italie, XVe siècle. Londres, Society of Antiquaries, The Brooke Antiphonal. In: Revue d'histoire de la pharmacie, 69ᵉ année, n°248, 1981. p. 58

    Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports (SAIR)

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    Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports (SAIR) is an Open Access publication which was established in 2000 by a consortium comprising the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Historic Scotland, and the Council for British Archaeology . Its purpose is to publish freely accessible but fully peer reviewed information more suited to an electronic format than a traditional print journal. SAIR is a fully peer-reviewed Society of Antiquaries of Scotland publication and is edited to the same standard as our books and national journal, the Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. Image-rich and data-rich projects are handled easily within the SAIR format. In the future, the Society will continue to explore new technologies and develop SAIR to ensure that it is fit for purpose. In this way, SAIR will continue to contribute to the dissemination of quality free information on Scotland's rich archaeological heritage

    Research Reports of the Society of Antiquaries of London

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    The Society of Antiquaries of London has a long tradition of publishing scholarly research on the archaeological and historic resource in order to encourage knowledge and understanding of human history and development in its physical and cultural environments. As part of the Society's aim to support research and communicate its results as widely as possible, the Society is digitising titles from its extensive backlist and making these accessible via the ADS as a staged process

    Society of Antiquaries of London Monographs

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    The Society of Antiquaries of London has a long tradition of publishing scholarly research on the archaeological and historic resource in order to encourage knowledge and understanding of human history and development in its physical and cultural environments. As part of the Society's aim to support research and communicate its results as widely as possible, the Society is digitising titles from its extensive backlist and making these accessible via the ADS as a staged process

    Archaeologia or Miscellaneous tracts relating to antiquity.

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    Archaeologia, or, Miscellaneous tracts relating to antiquity /

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    Vols. 51-106 also called 2nd ser., v. 1-56.Vols. 36-62 are each issued in 2 sections.Vol. 1 issued in several eds., with varying imprint dates.Mode of access: Internet.Vols. 1-15. 1 v.; v. 16-30. 1 v.; v. 51-100. 1 v

    Society of Antiquaries of London Catalogue of Drawings and Museum Objects

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    In its early years, the Society of Antiquaries of London (founded in 1707), acted as a centre for gathering information on archaeological discoveries and historical objects in private hands. Many items were drawn for its meetings and publications in the 18th and 19th centuries. As a result, its library holds the most important national collection of historic drawings of portable antiquities found in Britain. The Society commissioned draughtsmen who were especially noted for their skills in accurate recording. A database of over 5000 drawings and museum objects from the Society's collections has been created. The database includes images of over 3000 of these items. The drawings digitised and made available on this website have been taken mainly from albums compiled in rough subject divisions in the 1840s. Some of them are of objects first shown to members of the Society and now in national museums. Other outstanding items are now missing, such as the ring presented by Mary Queen of Scots, and the unique Anglo-Saxon silver hanging bowl from the River Witham. The catalogue also includes over 600 objects from the Society's museum collection. A wide variety of objects is represented, including everything from prehistoric weapons and tools, to Medieval pottery, to eighteenth-century portraits. Highlights include a large bronze shield from Scotland, wood blocks and book-binding tools used by William Morris, and a clock made by Jacob Zech in Prague in the sixteenth century

    The Society of Antiquaries of Scotland

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    The Society of Antiquaries of Scotland have scanned the entire run of the Archaeologia Scotica and the Society's out-of-print monographs. The archive also includes a full run of the Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland from 1851 until the present. The latest editions of the journal are available digitally, although they are embargoed for three years, during which time they are only available to Fellows of the society using a login and password

    Society of Antiquaries of Scotland books and monographs

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    The Society of Antiquaries of Scotland have scanned the Society's out-of-print monographs and books and made them available via the ADS
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