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E-grāmata: 'a hole worlde of things very memorable': Essays in Architecture, Archaeology, Topography and the History of Oxford Presented to Julian Munby for His 70th Birthday

Edited by , Edited by (Department of History, University College London)
  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Jun-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781803277059
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'a hole worlde of things very memorable': Essays in Architecture, Archaeology, Topography and the History of Oxford Presented to Julian Munby for His 70th Birthday
  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-Jun-2024
  • Izdevniecība: Archaeopress Archaeology
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781803277059

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Julian Munby has gained a reputation over half a century in many branches of archaeological and historical knowledge, from his meticulous publication of the medieval timber structure of 126 High Street and his later elucidation of Tackleys Inn from J. Bucklers nineteenth century records when he was an undergraduate, to more recent work on the Historic Towns Atlas for Oxford. He has taken in the publication of the medieval castle at Portchester, the roofs of Chichester and many other cathedrals, the landscape history of Levens Park, Westmorland, the Round Table at Windsor Castle and the Field of the Cloth of Gold. He is an enthusiast for the history of Antiquity, topographical art, and for reading historical sources in the original.













His lively and warm character and sense of fun has made him many friends who also in some sense feel they are his pupils, and this collection of papers has been assembled as a tribute. The first part comprises a preface by the editors, his daughter and son share accounts of being brought up in a household where it was normal for parents to be archaeologists, Jane Woodcock remembers ten years when Julian spent his day in an office arranging exams and cooking gourmet meals, and Deirdre Forde and others reveal his pioneering work teaching building archaeology.













The second part consists of papers by friends who share his enthusiasm and in each case write on a facet of his interests, from his brothers paper on the superbly engineered tunnel at Box, a reminder that railways and railway architecture has always been one of Julians loves, to Oxford topography in a number of papers and the later decor of Windsor Castle.
Preface by Martin Henig and Nigel Ramsay Contributions by Hal Munby,
Bea Munbu, Jane Woodcock, and Deirdre Forde


Julian Munbys Publications







OXFORD


The Development of Oxford Dendrochronology Daniel Miles


The Oxford Races and the Racecourses on Port Meadow George Lambrick


Oxford Preservation Trust takes the long view: J. M. W Turner and Michael
Angelo Rooker Debbie Dance


Evacustes Phipson (1854-1931) and his watercolours of Oxfords old houses
Malcolm Graham







ARCHITECTURE AND TOPOGRAPHY


The Temple at Bath: Classical, Romano-Celtic or somewhere in between?
Anthony C. King


Winchester: a northern boundary Martin Biddle


Rustic dwellings in rugged protuberances: Two case studies in using buildings
archaeology

to understand rock-cut buildings Edmund Simons


The Legend of Box Tunnel James Munby







ART AND THE ANTIQUARY


Rediscovering Romanitas: Bronze statues, statuettes and figurines from
Britannia, c. 1660 1900 Martin Henig


A medieval Limoges corpus of Christ from Christ Church, Oxford Marian
Campbell


Rescued from oblivionby the magic of art: Making Pynes History of the
Royal Residences Kate Heard


From Microcosm to Radiohead: A Schoolboy Publication by the Artist Oswald
Jennings Couldrey while at Abingdon School Lauren Gilmour Gale and Sarah
Wearne







THE WRITTEN WORD


Before there were Guidebooks: Tabulae in Medieval English Cathedrals and
Greater Churches Nigel Ramsay


Thomas Baskerville on the Upper Thames: Verse and Prose by a
Seventeenth-Century Maverick John Blair


The Study of Palaeography in England: Thomas Astle David Ganz
Martin Henig lectured on Roman Art in the University of Oxford for many years, where he was latterly a Supernumerary Fellow of Wolfson College. He is the author of many books and articles on Roman gems and on the art and culture of Roman Britain. Martin serves as an Anglican priest in the Diocese of Oxford.













Nigel Ramsay is Honorary Senior Research Associate in the Department of History at University College London. He has written on medieval and Tudor legal history, religious history (especially monasticism), art history and heraldry.