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         Steele Richard:     more books (33)
  1. The Guardian; a corr. ed. with a pref., historical and biographical by Richard, Sir, 1672-1729 Steele, 2009-10-26
  2. The Spectator.Volume the Third by Joseph (1672-1719), editor, with Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729) Addison, 1767
  3. Joseph Addison and Richard Steele: A Reference Guide 1730-1991 (Reference Publication in Literature) by Charles A. Knight, 1994-10
  4. Addison and Steele: The Critical Heritage (Critical Heritage Series) by Lillian D. Bloom, Edward A. Bloom, 1980-11

41. Entries
Theologian. SOUTHWELL, Sir Robert (16351702) SPARROW, John. STARKEY, George (d 1666),Helmontian alchemist-physician Steele, Richard (1672-1729), essayist.
http://www.thoemmes.com/dictionaries/17entries.htm
Dictionary of Seventeenth-Century British Philosophers
A B C D ... P Q R S T U ... W X Y Z
REVISED LIST (September 1999)
A
ABERCROMBY, David (d 1701 or 1702). Scottish philosopher, precursor of Reid
AIRAY, Christopher
ALLEN, Thomas (1542-1632) , mathematician.
ALLESTREE, Richard. 1619-1681, royalist divine.
ASGILL, John (1659-1738), accused of blasphemy.
ASTELL, Mary (1668-1731), feminist, Cartesian, critic of Locke.
ASHMOLE, Elias (1717-1692) occultist, collector, founder of the Ashmolean.
ATTERBURY, Francis (1662-1732). conservative theologian.
ATWOOD, William (d c 1715) Whig politics.
AUBREY, John. (1626-1697), biographer. top B BACON, Francis. (1561-1626), Novum Organum, Advancement of Learning, etc. BACON, Nathaniel. (1587-1657), conservative politics. BAILLIE, Robert (1599-1662) learned Scots Presbyterian. BAINBRIDGE, John (1582-1643), mathematician

42. Nouveautés En Langue Et Littérature Anglaise
En traitement 820.900 5 SWI ra g. Steele, Richard (16721729). The Tatler / Sir RichardSteele ; ed. by Lewis Gibbs. London Dent ; New York Dutton, 1953.
http://osiris.ens-lsh.fr/sicd/ressources/nouveautes/domaine/anglais1002.html

43. Dr. Mamontov's Favorest Writers
Dr. Mamontov's favorest writers (The list below is still under construction.)Joseph Addison (16721719); Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729);
http://fy.chalmers.se/~yem/Dr._Mamontov's_favorest_writers.html
Dr. Mamontov's favorest writers
(The list below is still under construction.)
  • Joseph Addison (1672-1719)
  • Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)
  • Samuel Johnson (1709-1784)
  • Oliver Goldsmith (1728-1774)
  • Maria Edgeworth (1767-1849)
  • Alexandre Dumas (1802-1870)
  • Elisabeth Gaskell (1810-1865)
  • Mikhail Lermontov (1814-1841)
  • Anthony Trollope (1815-1882)
  • Charlotte Bronte (1816-1855)
  • Ivan Turgenev (1818-1883)
  • George Eliot (pseudonym of Mary Ann Evans) (1818-1880)
  • Wilkie Collins (1824-1889)
  • George Meredith (1828-1909)
  • Henry James (1843-1916)
  • Robert (Louis Balfour) Stevenson (1850-1894)
  • Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)
  • Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)
  • W. Somerset Maugham (1874-1965)
  • Andre Maurois (pseudonym of Emile Herzog) (1885-1967)
  • Marina Tsvetayeva (1892-1941)
  • Richard Aldington (1892-1962)
  • Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)
  • Irving Stone (original name Irving Tannenbaum) (1903-1989)
  • Charles Percy Snow (1905-1980), Baron Snow of the City of Leicester
  • Pamela Hansford Johnson (1912-1981)
  • Muriel (Sarah) Spark (born 1918)
  • (Dame Jean) Iris Murdoch (1919-1999)
  • Francoise Sagan (pseudonym of Francoise Quoirez) (born 1935)
  • 44. Spectator
    Joseph Addison (1672 1719) / Richard Steele (1672-1729). Sir Roger de CoverlyEssays from The Spectator, by Addison and Steele - an on line text of the Sir
    http://ace.acadiau.ca/english/rdavies/spectator.htm
    Try these links: Joseph Addison ( ) / Richard Steele (1672-1729) Sir Roger de Coverly Essays from The Spectator, by Addison and Steele - an on line text of the Sir Roger De Coverly Papers without the insight offered by D. F. Bond's notes to his 1965 five volume edition. The San Antonio College LitWeb Joseph Addison Page Spectator Text Project at the Center for Electronic Texts in the Humanities §17. The Coverly Group. II. Steele and Addison. Vol. 9. From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 http://www.hn.psu.edu/Faculty/KKemmerer/18thc/Periodicals/spectator/spectator.htm Illustrations from The Spectator

    45. Index
    Translate this page M. Gutenberg Stead, Robert JC, 1880-1959 Gutenberg Steedman, Amy Gutenberg Steele,Chester K. Gutenberg Steele, Richard, Sir, 1672-1729 Gutenberg Steinmetz
    http://www.elbooks.sk/angautS.html
    KEK Klub Elektronických Kníh VYH¼ADÁVAÈ E-KNIHY LINKY DOWNLOAD ... INDEX
    NOVINKY
    VYH¼ADÁVAÈ E-KNÍH - ANGLICKÉ TITULY - AUTOR - pís. S SLOVENSKÉ ÈESKÉ ANGLICKÉ ANGLICKÉ POD¼A AUTORA ... Z Sabatini, Rafael, 1875-1950 Gutenberg
    Saint-Simon, Louis de Rouvroy, duc de, 1675-1755 Gutenberg
    Saki, 1870-1916 AKA: Munro, H. H. Gutenberg
    Saki, 1870-1916 AKA: Munro, Hector Hugh, 1870-1916 Gutenberg
    Saltus, Edgar, 1855-1921 Gutenberg
    Salza, Giuseppe Gutenberg
    Sand, George, 1804-1876 Gutenberg
    Sands, George W., ca. 1824-1874 Gutenberg
    Sanger, Margaret, 1879-1966 Gutenberg Sangharakshita, Bikshu, 1925- Gutenberg Sangster, Margaret E. (Margaret Elizabeth), 1894-1981 Gutenberg Saunders, Marshall, 1861-1947 Gutenberg Savage, Ernest Albert, 1877-1966 Gutenberg Scavezze, Dan Gutenberg Schiller, Friedrich, 1759-1805 Gutenberg Schiller, Johann Christoph Friedrich von, 1759-1805 Gutenberg Schreiner, Olive, 1855-1920 Gutenberg Schreiner, Olive, 1855-1920 AKA: Iron, Ralph, 1855-1920 Gutenberg Schwartau, Winn Gutenberg Scott, Ernest, 1868-1939 Gutenberg Scott, Leroy, 1875-1929 Gutenberg Scott, Walter Dill, 1869-1955

    46. Murasaki Shikibu JP C978-1031? Novelist. The Tale Of Genji. Omar
    Miss Sara Sampson, Minna von Barnhelm. Richard Steele, GB, 16721729. TheOrdeal of Richard Feverel, The Egoist. Sir Walter Scott, Scot, 1771-1832.
    http://www.angelfire.com/il/townoak/lucent/autag1.htm
    Murasaki Shikibu JP novelist. The Tale of Genji. Omar Khayyam IR poet. Rubaiyat. Murasaki Shikibu JP Omar Khayyam IR Dante Alighieri IT poet. The Divine Comedy. Francesco Petrarca IT poet. Africa, Trionfi, Canzoniere, On Solitude. Giovanni Boccaccio IT poet, storyteller. Decameron, Filostrato. Dante Alighieri IT Geoffrey Chaucer GB poet. The Canterbury Tales, Troilus and Criseyde. Francesco Petrarca IT Giovanni Boccaccio IT Geoffrey Chaucer GB Thomas Malory GB writer. Morte d'Arthur. Frangois Villon FR poet. The Lays, The Grand Testament. Frangois Villon FR Niccolr Machiavelli IT writer, statesman. The Prince, Discourses on Livy. Thomas Malory GB Thomas More GB writer. Utopia. Frangois Rabelais FR writer. Gargantua. Pierre de Ronsard FR poet. Sonnets pour Hilhne, La Franciade. Niccolr Machiavelli IT Michel de Montaigne FR essayist. Essais. Thomas More GB Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra ES novelist, dramatist, poet. Don Quixote de la Mancha. Edmund Spenser GB poet. The Faerie Queen. Frangois Rabelais FR Christopher Marlowe GB dramatist, poet. Tamburlaine the Great, Dr. Faustus, The Jew of Malta. William Shakespeare GB dramatist, poet. Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, King Lear, Julius Caesar, sonnets.

    47. ­^°ê¤å¾Ç(I)
    Sir Thomas Browne (15771640) wrote Religion of a Physician. d. Essay on CriticismJoseph Addison (1672-1719) and Richard Steele (1672-1729) were inseparable
    http://www.ep66.idv.tw/EngLit.htm
    English Literature Before the Romantic Age (to 1798) (I)¦Û­× / ºtÁ¿¤jºõ December 24, 1999
  • Introduction The literature was written in Old English ¡X from the 600's to about 1100 Middle English ¡X from the 1100's to about 1450 Modern English ¡X since the second half of the 1400's The greatest English author ¡X William Shakespeare (1564-1616) Charles Dickens'(1812- 1870) and George Eliot's(1819-1880) realistic novels
  • inspired Russian authors
    Feodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881) and Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)
  • English writers have adopted elements from other literatures. The sonnet from Italy. The essay from France. The novel from Spain. Characteristics of English literature language and form
  • The Danish scholar Otto Jespersen (1860-1943) wrote that English is a methodical, energetic, business-like and sober language, that does not care much for finery and elegance .... English literature reflects these qualities of the language. a.

    48. Authors S-U
    Henry De Vere), 18631951 Stallman, Richard M. Stead, Robert JC, 1880-1959 Steedman,Amy Steele, Chester K. Steele, Richard, Sir, 1672-1729 Steinmetz, Andrew
    http://www.worldwide-library.co.uk/Authors/s-u.htm
    Home Author Title Topic ... Book Club The Worldwide Library making e-books available to everyone worldwide without charge now. WWL Author Index Start A B C ... Z
    S
    Sabatini, Rafael, 1875-1950
    Saint-Simon, Louis de Rouvroy, duc de, 1675-1755
    Saki, 1870-1916 AKA: Munro, Hector Hugh, 1870-1916
    Salza, Giuseppe
    Sand, George, 1804-1876
    Sands, George W., ca. 1824-1874
    Sanger, Margaret, 1879-1966
    Sangster, Margaret E. (Margaret Elizabeth), 1894-1981
    Saunders, Marshall, 1861-1947
    Savage, Ernest Albert, 1877-1966
    Scavezze, Dan Schiller, Friedrich, 1759-1805 Schiller, Johann Christoph Friedrich von, 1759-1805 Schreiner, Olive, 1855-1920 AKA: Iron, Ralph, 1855-1920 Schwartau, Winn Scott, Leroy, 1875-1929 Scott, Walter Dill, 1869-1955 Scott, Walter, Sir, 1771-1832 Scully, W. C. (William Charles), 1855-1943 Seeger, Alan, 1888-1916 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus, ca. 55 B.C.-ca. 39 A.D Service, Robert W. (Robert William), 1874-1958 Seton, Ernest Thompson, 1860-1946 Severy, Melvin Linwood, 1863- Seward, Albert Charles, Sir, 1863-1941

    49. Books For Personall Effectiveness & Personal Success
    Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body. Sir Richard Steele 16721729.As a coach, I never pretend to have all the wisdom my clients need.
    http://www.choicecoach.com/5Books/BookPage.htm
    C hoices
    S uccess
    S trategies
    C oaching
    Diana Robinson, PhD
    Professional Certified Coach
    Books for Personal Effectiveness
    Home FAQ Services Writings ... Top Tens
    "Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body. "
    Sir Richard Steele 1672-1729
    As a coach, I never pretend to have all the wisdom my clients need. Sometimes the best thing I can do for them is to recommend that they read a particular book. One once told me that my suggestion of a specific book was worth my entire six-month coaching fee to her! Obviously, different clients may need different books, but there are some titles that I find myself recommending time after time.
    On this page you will find an assortment of titles that, based either on my own reading or on input from others, I believe will be useful and/or inspiring for you. Should you wish to know more about any of the books, each item is followed by a direct link toAmazon.com so that you can read reviews and gather other information on that book. There are also search boxes (top left of this page and at the bottom) that enables you to search for any other title or author of interest to you.
    (In the interests of integrity and full disclosure, yes, as an Amazon.com Affiliate I do get a small "cut" from the books and other items that you might buy when accessing Amazon.com through my site. However, this does not in any way affect the price charged to you - if I don't get it, Amazon.com does!)

    50. Outside
    Sir Richard Steele (16721729) English dramatist, essayist, editor Days after thetelephone conversation with Addie, Willard purchased a cellular phone with
    http://www.stanmorgan.com/Outsider/page18.html
    Chapter V
    Inquisitive people are merely funnels of conversation. They do not take in anything for their own use, but merely to pass it on to others.
    Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729)
    English dramatist, essayist, editor
    Days after the telephone conversation with Addie, Willard purchased a cellular phone with the associated telepone service. Calling Addie thereby insured privacy. A further meeting with Richard at Bush Gardens provided additional information about the covert terrorist activities. While the parrots talked Richard told Willard that the organization would begin operation within the near future.
    "We should stop them before they begin, " said Richard.
    "Terminate them? " asked Willard.
    "Stop them in any way you can. "
    "I've only killed people during the war. "
    "This is war. "
    "What is the site? " "Wintergarden. "

    51. Introduction To Theatre -- Eighteenth-Century Theatre
    moralistic. Sir Richard Steele (16721729) – sought to arouse noblesentiments…wanted a pleasure too exquisite for laughter. . The
    http://novaonline.nv.cc.va.us/eli/spd130et/18century.htm
    Introduction to Theatre Online Course Dr. Eric W. Trumbull, Professor, Theatre/Speech This page last modified: March 18, 2001 12:52 PM Previous Section Unit III-Page 1 Next Section Back to the Course Schedule E ighteenth C entury T heatre Objectives for this lesson: Students will examine: Rationalism Sentimentalism Serious Drama in the 18th Century Other 18th Century Forms ... Staging in the 18th Century R ationalism Restoration comedy, an aristocratic and seemingly amoral form of theatre, declined, at least in part because of the rise of a conservative Protestant (Puritan) middle class. Such works as Jeremy Collier’s 1698 A Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage helped lead popular sentiment against the Restoration theatre. During the 1700’s, the concept of Rationalism (The Age of Reason), faith in reason, began to take over from faith in God – Rationalism begins to lead away from the strict rules of Neoclassicism. This comes from a faith in man. Part of this led to the movement of Sentimentalism in the theatre. – asserted that each person was essentially good.

    52. FAMOUS PEOPLE Of IRELAND
    and social reformer.Richard Brinsley Sheridan(17511816)politician and dramatist, TheSchool for Scandal 1777.Sir Richard Steele(1672-1729)critic,edited the
    http://www.failte.junglelink.co.uk/famous.htm

    53. DeMaria, British Literature 1640-1789
    BrideWoman's Counsellor Answered A Poem in a Dialogue between Sir John Brute,Sir William Loveall Joseph Addison (1672-1719) and Richard Steele (1672-1729).
    http://www.rc.umd.edu/reference/anthologies/demaria.htm
    British Literature 1640-1789
    An Anthology
    Edited by Robert DeMaria Jr
    Oxford: Blackwell, 1996
    CONTENTS
    Lists of Authors
    Introduction
    Editorial Principles
    Acknowledgements
    Ballads and Newsbooks from the Civil War (1640-1646)
    The World is Turned Upside Down (1646) The King's Last farewell to the World, Or The Dead King's Living Meditations, at the approach of Death denounced against Him (1649) The Royal Health to the Rising Sun (1649) from A Perfect Diurnal of Some Passages in Parliament Number 288 29 January - 5 February 1649 from Mercurius Pragmaticus Number 43 30 January - 6 February 1649
    Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
    from Leviathan Chapter XIII, Of the Natural Condition of Mankind, as concerning their Felicity, and Misery
    Robert Filmer (d. 1653)
    from Patriarcha or the Natural Power of Kings Asserted V Kings are either Fathers of their People, or Heirs of such Fathers, or the Usurpers of the Rights of such Fathers VI Of the Escheating of Kingdoms VII Of the Agreement of Paternal and Regal Power
    Robert Herrick (1591-1674)
    from Hesperides The Argument of His Book To Daffodils The Night-piece, to Julia

    54. Mackenzie, Henry (1745-1831). Novelist.
    Mackenzie hoped to create something in the mould of The Spectator , founded in1711 by Sir Richard Steele (16721729) and Joseph Addison (1672-1719), and he
    http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~crumey/henry_mackenzie.html
    Henry Mackenzie
    Mackenzie was born in Edinburgh on 26 July 1745, the son of a doctor. He was educated at the High School and the University, and after a legal apprenticeship with George Inglis of Redhall he was admitted Attorney in the Court of Exchequer in Scotland in November 1765. By this time he had published some poems in the Scots Magazine, including "Kenneth" and "Duncan". He worked at the London Exchequer until 1769 when he set up his own practice in the Court of Exchequer in Edinburgh. In 1771 he purchased George Inglis's practice and became a leading taxation attorney, frequently visiting London where he got to know many of the prominent legal and political figures of the day. In the same year (1771) he also published the novel for which he is remembered, "The Man Of Feeling". It proved highly popular, and earned Mackenzie the nickname "man of feeling". Robert Burns called the novel "a book I prize next to the Bible". On 6 January 1776 Mackenzie married Penuel Grant, daughter of the Clan Grant chief, and in 1777 he became a member of the Mirror Club, an Edinburgh literary society whose journals, "The Mirror" and "The Lounger", both came under Mackenzie's editorship. Mackenzie hoped to create something in the mould of "The Spectator", founded in 1711 by Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729) and Joseph Addison (1672-1719), and he would be dubbed "our Scottish Addison" by Sir Walter Scott in the dedication of "Waverley" (1814). As well as being one of the great literary figures of his day, Mackenzie was a founder member of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (1783) and helped form the Highland Society of Scotland (1784). For the "Lounger" of 7 December 1786 he wrote a review of the Kilmarnock Edition of Burns' poems (calling Burns "this heaven-taught ploughman") which helped secure the poet's reputation, and perhaps helps to explain Burns' devotion to "The Man Of Feeling" (he is said to have worn out two copies). From 1799 until his death Mackenzie was Comptroller of Taxes for Scotland. In 1804 he chaired a committee on the authenticity of

    55. World Literature
    Steele, Sir Richard, 16721729, Conscious Lovers, The, 1722, Drama, Search,2, Steele, Sir Richard, 1672-1729, Funeral, The, 1701, Drama, Search,2,
    http://www.realuofc.org/archive/2t.html
    World Literature, Series 2 - Alphabetized by Titles
    Author Dates for Author Title Date of pub. Type of Work Search in Google S AC KL W G U P Edgeworth, Maria Absentee, The Novel Search Huysmans, Joris Karl (Charles Marie Georges Huysmans) Against the Grain Novel Search Sophocles 495?-406 B.C. Ajax c.440 B.C. Drama Search Jonson, Ben Alchemist, The Drama Search Dryden, John All For Love Drama Search Remarque, Erich Maria All Quiet on the Western Front Novel Search Warren, Robert Penn All the King's Men Novel Search U Shakespeare, William All's Well That Ends Well c.1602 Drama Search Conrad, Joseph (Teodor Jozef Konrad Korzeniowski) Almayer's Folly Novel Search James, Henry Ambassadors, The Novel Search U Plautus, Titus Maccius c.254-184 B.C. Amphitryon c.185 B.C. Drama Search Andersen, Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tales Tales Search Terence (Publius Teretius Afer) c.190-159 B.C. Andria 166 B.C. Drama Search Racine, Jean Baptiste Andromache Drama Search O'Neill, Eugene Anna Christie Drama Search Bennett, Arnold Anna of the Five Towns Novel Search Galt, John Annals of the Parish Novel Search Scott, Sir Walter

    56. Antique Portraits
    Add to basket. Richard Steele (Sir) 16721729 author and politician. ArtistR.Cooper Size (HxW)6.3 x 3.5 inches (16 x 9 cms), Sterling, US Dollars, Euros.
    http://www.antiqueportrait.com/index.php?a=listnationality&nationalityid=28

    57. Restoration & 18th C. English Poets
    Opera (1728), a play with ballads, which satirised Sir Robert Walpole the essays ofJoseph Addison (16721719) and Richard Steele (1672-1729); the histories of
    http://www.uwp.edu/academic/english/canary/poets18.html
    RESTORATION AND 18TH CENTURY ENGLISH POETS
    The Restoration era is ushered in with the return of Charles II in 1660. It is marked by anti-Puritanism and Francophilia, a tendency which encouraged its classcism. Both the Restoration era and the 18th century can be thought of a Neo-Classical period. This reacted against Renaissance enthusiasm for man's potential (and against religious strife) and sought to impose reason, order, and a decent sense of limits on man. In art this favored humanistic, didactic, formal art, with the merits of grace, unity, harmony, and proportion. Wit was praised rather than feeling. Nature was seen as a source of natural law, and liked best when it had been reduced to order. The French were admired more than early English writers, and the heroic couplet was especially popular. John Dryden (1631-1700) was Charles II's poet laureate and the dominant literary figure of his time, even though Milton still lived and published Paradise Lost in 1665. He moved easily from a pro forma Puritanism under Cromwell to enthusiastic Anglicanism under Charles II to Catholicism under James II. The period 1660-1700 is sometimes called the Age of Dryden. He loved Virgil and the French, and thought English literature literally unruly, though he loved Shakespeare. He valued concision, preciseness, and order, qualities which drew him to the closed couplet form, and it was his advocacy which made the heroic couplet the dominant form for a century. This neoclassicism should not keep us from noting that he loved Virgil for his musical qualities, too, and that Dryden was a great verse master, as his follower Pope always acknowledged.

    58. Chapter 9 The British Theatre
    Sir Richard Steele—(16721729) Sir Richard Steele was an English essayist,playwright, and statesman, who founded and contributed frequently to the
    http://www.studioupstairs.com/chapter9.htm
    Chapter 9 The British Theatre 1642-1800 William Davenant, engraving William Davenant— (1606-1668) Sir William Davenant, an English poet and dramatist was born in Oxford. Davenant (or D'Avenant) claimed to be Shakespeare's son and Shakespeare may have been his godfather. Despite the Puritan ban on dramatic performances, Davenant produced performances in private houses in London in 1656. He began to openly stage what may be considered England’s first operatic productions. By producing "musical entertainments", he was not violating any law. These first entertainments were held in Rutland House (Davenant’s residence) and The Pheonix/Cockpit. His first play, Albovine, a tragedy, was written in 1628, and his best comedy, The Wits, in 1633. In 1638 he succeeded Ben Jonson as poet laureate. Davenant was an active supporter of Charles I against Parliament, and the king knighted him in 1643. He led an expedition to colonize Virginia, but was captured by Commonwealth forces in the English Channel and sentenced to death. He spent two years, from 1650 to 1652, in the Tower of London. His epic poem Gondibert was written during his imprisonment.

    59. Untitled
    Sir Richard Steele (pseudonym=Isaac Bickerstaff) (16721729) Essayist/Writer/Politician.Wycherly's The Country Wife published in 1675.
    http://www.markris.net/kris/britiline.htm
    Last Updated June 2000
    THESE TIMELINES WERE BEGUN FOR MY OWN PERSONAL USE. THESE TIMELINES SHOULD NOT BE USED AS RESOURCES FOR ANY KIND OF RESEARCH PAPER. THESE TIMELINES SHOULD ONLY BE USED AS AN AID TO GIVE A "JUMPING OFF POINT." THESE TIMELINES ARE NOT PEER-REVIEWED; THEREFORE, THEY ARE SUBJECT TO ANY NUMBER OF UNINTENTIONAL AUTHORIAL TYPING ERRORS AND/OR MISUNDERSTANDINGS. REMEMBER, INTERNET SOURCES (WITH FEW EXCEPTIONS) CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS DEFINITIVE SOURCES!! I cannot stress enough that I received the lion's share of my knowledge from my father-in-law, John's, Western Civilization and Survey of English History classes. He teaches at Maple Woods Community College in Kansas City, MO. Enroll in one of his courses, if you ever get the chancehe's the best!! Or at the very least, visit his Western Civilization sites (they include "Student Notes" and everything!!). Because I did these timelines initially only for my own personal use, I have paraphrased and quoted without citing as one should for a research paper; therefore, anyone using these timelines should consult the sources listed on the Historical Timelines Page DO NOT QUOTE FROM THESE TIMELINES!! ALWAYS DOUBLE-CHECK MY WORK!!!!

    60. 0. Nederlandse Basisclassificatie
    genre voort het tijdschriftessay, zoals gepubliceerd in The Tatler, een tijdschriftdat in 1709 werd opgericht door Sir Richard Steele (1672-1729), en dat
    http://www.leidenuniv.nl/rubr/dig/engels/engels.htm
    Nederlandse Basisclassificatie
    Algemene Informatie

    Engelse taal- en letterkunde

    Engelse taalkunde
    ...
    Anglo-Amerikaanse letterkunde (tevens Canadese en West-Indische letterkunde
    0. Nederlandse Basisclassificatie
    De volgende codes van de Nederlandse Basisclassificatie zijn van toepassing:
    I. Algemene informatie
    Deze sectie bevat algemene informatie: Internet bronnen die verwijzen naar publicaties en andere algemene bronnen met 'links' naar andere diensten. Als algemene ingang tot de dokumentaire informatie op het gebied van de Anglistiek vormen de uitgeverijen, boekhandels en databankleveranciers een goed uitgangspunt. Probeer eens de volgende "gateways." de Oxford University Home Page . Ze hebben zelfs een overzicht van interessante Nederlandse Internet-zaken . Uiteraard heeft de British Library ook een schat aan informatie voor Anglisten, evenals de šHREF="http://lcweb.loc.gov/homepage/lchp.html">Library of Congress . Verder zijn enkele belangrijke uitgevers met hun online fondscatalogi met recente publicaties op het gebied van de Anglistiek het aanklikken waard, zoals: Cambridge University Ôˆ,p-p-p-°°ԌPress

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