Stevenson, Robert Louis, and Fleeming Jenkin. “Memoir of Fleeming Jenkin”. Papers, Literary, Scientific, &c., edited by Sir Sidney Colvin et al., Longmans, Green, 1877, p. 1: xi - clxx.
cxiv-cxvi
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Reception | Muriel Spark | Three more Scottish universities followed Strathclyde's lead: MS
received Honorary DLitts from Edinburgh University
in 1989, Aberdeen
in 1995, and St Andrews
in 1998. In 1995, she received a DUniv from Heriot-Watt University
, where... |
Reception | Olive Schreiner | The Olive Schreiner Letters Project
at the University of Edinburgh
(website at www.oliveschreinerletters.ed.ac.uk) has been funded by the Economic and Social Research Council
to transcribe, analyse and publish the complete text of Schreiner's 7,000 or... |
Residence | Henrietta Camilla Jenkin | HCJ
lived in the suburb of Merchiston, Edinburgh, where her son Fleeming held a professorship at Edinburgh University
and where she became a much respected figure in local society. Stevenson, Robert Louis, and Fleeming Jenkin. “Memoir of Fleeming Jenkin”. Papers, Literary, Scientific, &c., edited by Sir Sidney Colvin et al., Longmans, Green, 1877, p. 1: xi - clxx. cxiv-cxvi |
Residence | Mary Stewart | Frederick Stewart
, husband of MS
, accepted a position at Edinburgh University
as Regius Professor of geology. The couple moved to Edinburgh and MS
decided to make writing her full-time occupation. Stewart, Mary. About Mary Stewart. Musson. 8-9 |
Residence | Mary Stewart | MS
's husband, Sir Frederick
, retired from the University
of Edinburgh as Professor Emeritus, and in the same year the couple moved to the House of Letterawe in the Argyll village of Loch Awe (or Lochawe). Wright, Pearce. “Sir Frederick Stewart: Master geologist steering science for academic and practical ends”. The Guardian, 19 Dec. 2001. Craig, Gordon. “Sir Frederick Henry Stewart”. The Royal Society of Edinburgh. Thompson, Raymond H., and Mary Stewart. “Interview With Mary Stewart”. Taliesin’s Successors: Interviews with Authors of Modern Arthurian Literature, edited by Raymond H. Thompson, The Camelot Project at the University of Rochester. |
Textual Features | Elizabeth Melvill | The volume closes with A comfortabill Song (beginning Away, vain world), which expresses faith in God's mercies and a resolution to pursue the Christian calling. It takes off from or parodies a recent madrigal... |
Textual Features | Emily Jane Pfeiffer | The poem is framed by a substantial first-person prose narrative about a party of people visiting the Isle of Mull, off the west coast of Scotland. The speaker, evidently EJP
herself, relates how her... |
Textual Production | Annie S. Swan | Her papers are held at the University of Aberdeen
, Edinburgh University
, and Columbia University
, New York, which holds both catalogued and uncatalogued correspondence by her in its collection of the papers... |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Melvill | Some of EM
's letters, dating between 1625 and 1631, survive among her papers at the University of Edinburgh
and were printed as Letters from Lady Culross, Etc., in Select Biographies, edited for the... |
Textual Production | Lady Margaret Sackville | LMS
published much of her work with small publishers and in limited edition chapbooks, now fragile and rare, though both the British Library
and the Bodleian
have most of her publications. She was a Fellow... |
Textual Production | Sophia Jex-Blake | |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Sophia Jex-Blake | |
Violence | Sophia Jex-Blake | Male students and other protesters gathered in front of University of EdinburghSurgeons' Hall in Edinburgh, in an effort to harass and intimidate SJB
and the other female medical students. Blake, Catriona, and Wendy Savage. The Charge of the Parasols: Women’s Entry to the Medical Profession. Women’s Press, 1990. 125-8 |
Wealth and Poverty | Sophia Jex-Blake | The Times informed readers that each female medical student at Edinburgh University
had to guarantee to pay 100 guineas for each class in their first year. SJB
had to borrow money from her mother, not... |
Wealth and Poverty | Emily Jane Pfeiffer | Money from the Pfeiffer trust was also given to Newnham
, Girton
, and Somerville College
s, and many other institutions and agencies promoting women's education, including the Maria Grey Training College
and the Society for Promoting the Employment of Women |
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