• The early 19th century saw a proliferation in the production of printed material, including music. (earlydancecircle.co.uk)
  • dancers of the early 19th century were encouraged to invent fresh figure sequences each time they danced. (earlydancecircle.co.uk)
  • It's unclear at what date this convention emerged, but it was widely adopted by the start of the 19th century. (earlydancecircle.co.uk)
  • Cotillion dancing fell out of fashion in the early 19th century, but returned in the form of the Quadrille from the mid 1810s. (earlydancecircle.co.uk)
  • Take for instance the coffeehouses in Stuart England, tea houses in China during it's early republican phase, marketplaces in today's Morocco, runner networks in the Mogul Raj of India, poetry from the street in 17th century Rome, slave rebellions in 19th century Brazil, and even the bread and circuses of the great Roman Empire. (historycooperative.org)
  • The fashion historian Valerie Steele noted that after 19th-century writers catering to audiences for tightlacing and sexual fetishism played up the sadomasochistic idea of a "cruel, tortuous fashion" enforced by a dominant queen who demanded unrealistically small waists from her subjects, this mythical royal connection captured public imagination and became part of fashion mythology. (wikipedia.org)
  • Harold Koda, the former curator of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute, states that the excessive, mechanically produced regularity of the garment's structure is evidence for its being a 19th-century fabrication. (wikipedia.org)
  • Koda's take on the significant percentage of extant 19th-century metal corsets made in emulation of purported 16th-century models is that they were created to cater to a specialist market, perhaps for inclusion in collector's cabinets. (wikipedia.org)
  • Raeburn (1756-1823) was considered the top Scottish portrait painter of the late 18th and early 19th century and painted more than 1,000 canvases in his lifetime, despite lacking any formal artistic training. (stv.tv)
  • Art, Modern -- 19th century -- Exhibitions. (yale.edu)
  • Early historians and archaeologists first realized the historical importance of the River Thames through dredging works carried out during the 19th century. (hnn.us)
  • Thomas Layton, Charles Roach Smith and G. F. Lawrence were antiquarians in London who collected valuable and historically important artifacts that were dredged from the river in the 19th century. (hnn.us)
  • The flintlock, be it fusil, musket or rifle was still in use in wilderness areas in the 19th century long after the production of the percussion lock. (blogspot.com)
  • 19th Century U.S. Newspapers database provides access to primary source newspaper content to historical events, daily life and 19th century American culture. (wa.gov.au)
  • During the second half of the 19th century, a personal courtesy in formal attire was required from the curator to borrow the key to the collection. (lu.se)
  • The zoological collection has extensive collections of this group of animals, collected during expeditions or research projects since the first half of the 19th century and until today. (lu.se)
  • Since the middle of the 19th century, the zoological collection has had a regular increase in the collection of marine material from the coast of Skåne, including Öresund, in both Swedish and Danish waters. (lu.se)
  • Although diet and nutrition continued to be judged important for health, dietetics did not progress much till the 19th century with the advances in chemistry. (who.int)
  • Skip to search results (Press Enter). (ala.org)
  • The papers are especially strong in 20th century material. (si.edu)
  • Metal medical corsets were still being made in the 20th century, whilst, since the late 20th century, fashion designers such as Alexander McQueen and Issey Miyake have made contemporary metal bodices and corsets from wire and aluminium coils. (wikipedia.org)
  • From the late 14th century until the early 20th century ce , these ornate rank badges (called buzi or Mandarin squares) featured fierce animals to denote military officials, various bird species to identify civic officials, and exotic and imaginary creatures to signify members of the imperial court. (cdc.gov)
  • In 100 detailed chapters, masterpieces of the visual arts from eight cultural eras - from antiquity to the 20th century - are shown. (lu.se)
  • Eager to enjoy its hard-won privileges but at the same time unable to cultivate the same tastes as the nobility, the middle class demanded something less artificial and formal than the theatre of the late 17th century-something more realistic and genteel. (britannica.com)
  • Competence and skills · be able to discuss the history of the Jewish people in relation to the attitudes and reactions of the majority social groups in Sweden · be able to reflect on the minority situation of the Jewish people in Sweden in terms of identification, integration and assimilation · be able to execute basic searches for information on the subject in both physical and virtual libraries. (lu.se)
  • The course provides the students with insight into Jewish immigration to Sweden from the 18th century until the forced migration of the second World War. (lu.se)
  • The metal corset was popularly claimed to have been introduced to France by Catherine de' Medici in the 16th century, although this is now considered a myth. (wikipedia.org)
  • Such garments were described by the French army surgeon Ambroise Paré in the 16th century as a remedy for the "crookednesse of the Bodie. (wikipedia.org)
  • Early fashion historians and writers have often attributed the introduction of fashionable corset-wearing to Catherine de' Medici, who is said to have brought metal corsets to France from Italy in the 16th century. (wikipedia.org)
  • The 16th-century French army surgeon Ambroise Paré described metal corsets as intended "to amend the crookednesse of the Bodie," recommending that the iron should be perforated in order to make the garments lighter, and that they be made to fit and padded for comfort. (wikipedia.org)
  • A steel corset in the Stibbert Museum, Florence, Italy, is dated to the mid-16th century, and thought to be similar to the metal stays recorded as having been made by a corazzaio mastro (master armour-maker) for Eleanor of Toledo, and delivered to her on 28 February 1549. (wikipedia.org)
  • Pair of large Louis XIV mirrors Italy (Rome), early 18th century Carved and gilded wood, with original mercury silvered glass mirror Height cm. (1stdibs.com)
  • The only portrait known to have been painted by Sir Henry Raeburn in 18th century Rome has been saved for the nation. (stv.tv)
  • Our results were inde- pmol of each primer, 200 µmol/L each deoxyribonu- pendently confirmed on 6th-century Bavarian teeth ( 6 ). (cdc.gov)
  • 7 ). This hypothesis was challenged by our multispacer- typing detection of an Orientalis-like biotype in 5th- to 14th-century dental pulp specimens ( 5 ). (cdc.gov)
  • It is through all of these objects that we can discover and understand London's rich history and its inhabitants who have lived along the river, from prehistoric man to modern Londoners in the 21st century. (hnn.us)
  • A history of (a) language in the 21st century. (ceeol.com)
  • This article combines postcolonial and literary approaches in an analysis of literary texts about the Haitian Revolution in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. (openedition.org)
  • Musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) were recognized as having occupational etiologic factors as early as the beginning of the 18th century. (cdc.gov)
  • Poems of Nerses IV, etc., 18th cent. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Homilies of St. Gregory of Armenia, etc., 18th cent. (ox.ac.uk)
  • A replica 18th Century Russian frigate, the Shtandart , even sailed into the marina on its way to Rochefort in France. (lu.se)
  • In the Middle Ages, and even than with medication, "Wherefore one through the 18th century, hospital diet was ought to control all such diseases, so far as based on bread. (who.int)
  • Most commonly, the conversations surrounding the 18th century point to the major stories or developments of the American Revolution, French Revolution, and Industrial Revolution. (gale.com)
  • Hospital dietetics appeared in the 12th very similar to the current Mediterranean century as shown in the records of the his- diet [ 3 ]. (who.int)
  • The object of this project is to put together a digital repository of the entire production in the Galician language in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries while also creating and making available to scholars and the interested public a range of tools to assist in their study and interpretation. (usc.es)
  • The Brockhaus Enzyklopädie (Brockhaus Encyclopedia) is the most comprehensive editorially maintained German-language encyclopedia, it has been published in different editions since the 18th century. (lu.se)
  • Despite the disabling and chronic illness, he produced several works of great expression in the 18th and 19th centuries. (bvsalud.org)
  • Bassi was the chief popularizer of Newtonian physics in Italy in the 18th century and enjoyed significant support from the Archbishop of Bologna, Prospero Lambertini, who - when he became Pope Benedict XIV - elected her as the 24th member of an elite scientific society called the Benedettini. (openculture.com)
  • Creator Gender: unknown / Collection: Reference Library / Subject Terms: Art, Modern -- 17th-18th centuries -- Exhibitions. (yale.edu)
  • Subject Terms Art, Modern -- 17th-18th centuries -- Exhibitions. (yale.edu)
  • To find a database or website, search by title or filter the list by subject. (wa.gov.au)
  • It contains references of documents dating from the 18th Century up to the present date. (bvsalud.org)
  • While a handful of London based publishers had been responsible for most of the dance publications of the late 18th century, the 1790s through 1810s saw many more music and dance publishers emerge. (earlydancecircle.co.uk)
  • O great mystery [sound recording] : unaccompanied choral music of the sixteenth & seventeenth centuries. (nypl.org)
  • A Baroque festival [sound recording] : music from the Nonesuch repertory of the 17th & 18th centuries. (nypl.org)
  • You can search for it on music sites all over the Internet or visit one of our advertisers. (tagtuner.com)
  • The term "Mudlark" was first used during the 18th century and was the name given to people literally scavenging for things on the riverbank. (hnn.us)
  • If you like to know more about what our collections contain, please search for information in our database or contact the museum. (lu.se)
  • LILACS can be accessed through the VHL Search Portal, the LILACS Portal and by Google. (bvsalud.org)
  • Equipped with a mandatory license, mudlarks use a variety of methods to search the foreshore and have discovered and recovered an incredibly wide range of artifacts. (hnn.us)
  • Since the 18th century, the collections have grown continuously through private donations and researchers' collections of animals on land and in water, which means that today we have a rich collection of both domestic and foreign species from around the world and which we still proudly manage for the future. (lu.se)
  • This month's cover image is an 18th century Qing military rank badge that depicts a muscular leopard standing on a small piece of light brown, green-tinged land amidst flowering plants and fruit trees. (cdc.gov)