Institute of Historical Research

- Lists over 3,000 people teaching history in United Kingdom and Irish universities and colleges of higher education
- Gives full degrees and honours for each teacher, with the teaching position held
- Describes each individual’s teaching area and research interests
- Supplies the address, telephone and fax number of all departments of history
- Includes email addresses for the majority of individuals
- Gives website addresses for all universities with history departments

Yate is a town in South Gloucestershire, north-east of Bristol. Its ancient parish extended across a largely flat vale, which until the 13th century lay within Horwood forest, and was then cleared, inclosed and farmed as rich pasture by the tenants of the influential owners of its three manors. A limestone ridge fringing the vale provided good building stone, and across the parish seams of coal and a rare mineral - celestine - have been exploited until recent times. Yate lay on an important early route between Bristol and Oxford, and its mineral wealth attracted early railway links, so that it was well placed for industrial development. Bristol-based industries moved there during the decades after 1900,...

Administering
the Empire, 1801-1968 is an
indispensable introduction to British colonial rule during the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries. It provides an essential guide to the records of the
British Colonial Office, and those of other departments responsible for
colonial administration, which are now held in The National Archives of the
United Kingdom.
As a user-friendly archival guide, Administering
the Empire explains the organisation of these records, the information
they provide, and how best to explore them using contemporary finding aids. The
book also outlines the expansion of the British empire from the early
nineteenth century, and discusses the structure of colonial governments....

The parish of Newport lies in the valley of the river Cam in north-west Essex about three and a half miles south-west of the market town of Saffron Walden, and a short distance from the Hertfordshire and Cambridgeshire borders. It probably originated in the early 10th century as a royal foundation, and it soon developed some urban features such as a market. Its position on an important through route between London and East Anglia gave it a more varied character than some of its neighbouring villages, and the coming of the railway in the 19th century led to the establishment of a gas works and maltings. Even so, it remained a largely agricultural community until the mid 20th century, but thereafter its position as...

Mapledurwell is the first parish history to be published by the New Victoria History of Hampshire group. Since publication of the first Victoria County History account of the parish in 1911, ideas about what constitutes a good parish history have been transformed.
This new history includes much more about the village itself and about its economy and society, highlighting the lives of ordinary people as well as tracing those who owned the parish's land and property. It discusses Quakers and Congregationalists as well as the congregation of the established church, and looks minutely at the history of elementary education, revealing the appalling sanitary conditions suffered by pupils at the local...


