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David Hilton

Kennan Institute (covering Russia and surrounding states) : Media : - 0 views

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    The Kennan Institute and National Public Radio in the USA has established an online audio archive of Soviet and Russian history. "The archive consists of recordings dating back to the earliest years of the Soviet state. Included are the voices and speeches of key political figures, including Lenin, Kerensky, Kirov, Beria, Stalin, Gorbachev, and others. Among the recorded interviews are Anna Larina (Bukharin's widow); Valentin Berezhkov, Stalin's wartime interpreter; Yelena Bonner, Sakharov's widow; and Lev Pevsner, a survivor of the Leningrad Blockade. There is also on-the-scene recorded sound of many events in Soviet history, including: the Russian and American armies meeting at the Elbe; Stalin's funeral; the August 1991 coup against Gorbachev. [...] The material comes from Soviet and Russian sources, the NPR archives, the archives of the BBC, and individual donors. Some of the material is in Russian, some in English. "
David Hilton

Teaching With Documents - 0 views

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    This section contains reproducible copies of primary documents from the holdings of the National Archives of the United States, teaching activities correlated to the National History Standards and National Standards for Civics and Government, and cross-curricular connections.
David Hilton

Internet Mission Photography Archive - 0 views

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    The Internet Mission Photography Archive offers historical images from Protestant and Catholic missionary collections in Britain, Norway, Germany, and the United States. The photographs, which range in time from the middle of the nineteenth to the middle of the twentieth century, offer a visual record of missionary activities and experiences in Africa, China, Madagascar, India, Papua-New Guinea, and the Caribbean
David Hilton

The English Emblem Book Project - 0 views

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    The English Emblem Book Project of the Penn State University Libraries in Pennsylvania, USA, has digitized older form of texts, the emblem books, for the 16th to the 19th centuries. "An emblem book is a collection of images with adjoining text. In an emblem there is a dialog or tension between image and word. Emblems are frequently allegorical in theme. Emblem books are a form of text not altogether familiar to us today. An emblem book represents a particular kind of reading. Unlike today, the eye is not intended to move rapidly from page to page. The emblem is meant to arrest the sense, to lead into the text, to the richness of its associations. An emblem is something like a riddle, a "hieroglyph" in the Renaissance vocabulary -- what many readers considered to be a form of natural language."
David Hilton

French Revolution Pamphlets - 0 views

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    The Ball State University Libraries Digital Media Repository Collections in Indiana (USA) offers a French Revolution series of pamphlets which is "ranging from 1779 to 1815. Although the French Revolution happened in the decade ranging from 1789 to 1799, this collection of pamphlets documents the time leading up to the revolution through the Napoleonic Wars (1799-1815).
David Hilton

World History Connected | Vol. 3 No. 1 | David Christian: What's the Use of "Big History?" - 0 views

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    Our new National Curriculum takes a world history approach, which is a new direction for history in my State. This is an interesting argument for big-picture, as opposed to civilisational or thematic, approaches to conceptualising history. 
David Hilton

Open Collections Program: Women Working - 0 views

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    Women Working, 1800 - 1930 focuses on women's role in the United States economy and provides access to digitized historical, manuscript, and image resources selected from Harvard University's library and museum collections. The collection features approximately 500,000 digitized pages and image
David Hilton

Welcome to The Anti-Saloon League Website... - 0 views

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    From 1893 to 1933, the Anti-Saloon League was a major force in American politics. Influencing the United States through the printed word and lobbying, it turned a moral crusade into a Constitutional amendment. The League left a legacy of printed material at a site bequeathed to the Westerville Public Library which houses the Anti-Saloon League Museum
anonymous

Simpson Prize - 0 views

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    The Simpson Prize is a national competition for year 9 and 10 students which will see a winner and runner up from each State and Territory, participate in a trip to Canberra where they will be awarded at a ceremony at Parliament House.
Maddy Stockton

Encyclopedia | Australian War Memorial - 1 views

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    This reference is from the Australian War Memorial so it is very trustworthy. It has stated on the site how many Australians died in the Gallipoli Campaign. There is a table which describes the people who died in action, from diseases, wounds and gives you the month these soldiers were killed in.
Nezzie Cahill

The Gallipoli Campaign - 1 views

http://www.skwirk.com.au/p-t_s-56_u-416_t-1378/gallipoli-and-the-anzacs/qld/sose-history/australia-and-world-war-i This website states what happened in sections/chapters.

started by Nezzie Cahill on 23 May 12 no follow-up yet
Rachel Mansfield

Are the qualities that make up Anzac Spirit still alive in society today? - 4 views

This site was really helpful with why we commemorate Anzac Day and it clearly states the Anzac Legend

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