... Britannic Majesty, giving it the name, New South Wales, ” on account of the resemblance of its coasts to the southern shores of Wales. was no hope of defending themselves till the powder was ... Port of Melbourne, 183 A Maori Dwelling, 185 Milford Sound, South Island, New Zealand, 191 Rev. S. Marsden, “the Apostle ofNew Zealand, ” 195 Auckland, from the Wharf, 206 Stronghold of the ... enormous were the profits made in this debasing trade that very few of the officers could refrain from joining it. Soon the New South Wales Corps became like one great firm of spirit merchants,...
... for 20 miles. Tales of drowned lands are told of the sands of Lavan, of the feast of drunken Seithenyn, and of the bells of Aberdovey. But the sea is a kind neighbour. Its soft, warm winds bathe ... battles. North Wales archers, wearing the three feathers of the Prince of Wales, fought for Lancaster in the snow at the great defeat of Towton on the Palm Sunday of 1461; the archers of Gwent, ... the officers of the shire found that it was a nest of brigands and outlaws. In the more peaceful and humane days of Queen Elizabeth, Sir Henry Sidney became President of the Court of Wales. ...
... Slow progress of Christianity towards Antipodes—Moslem barrier—Effect of the Renaissance—Europeans south of the barrier—Dutch in East Indies—Tasman's discovery ofNewZealand "Three ... Three Kings Island), on account of this being the day of Epiphany." Here then, at last, was a spot ofNewZealand soil to which a name was attached which told of something Christian. The name ... this man of faith was able to gather hope for the future. A History of the English Church in New Zealand [ii] To the RIGHT REVEREND WILLIAM LEONARD WILLIAMS, sometime Bishop of Waiapu....
... 1Flow diagram of the Medical Emergency Team (MET) status of 172 hospitals in Australian and NewZealand with intensive care unitsFlow diagram of the Medical Emergency Team (MET) status of 172 hospitals ... to reduce the incidence of in-hospital CAs in anumber of single-centre before-and-after studies [5-9]. AANZ = Australia and New Zealand; ANZICS = Australian and NewZealand Intensive Care Society; ... [7].Figure 3Uptake of Medical Emergency Team (MET) services into various cate-gories of hospitals in Australia and NewZealand for which the MET sta-tus is knownUptake of Medical Emergency...
... appointment of the present Committee, however,arose out of a suggestion forwarded tothe Chairman of the Board of Health,under date of the 20th June, 1922, fromthe Council of the NewZealand Branch of ... atwww.gutenberg.netTitle: Venereal Diseases in New Zealand (1922)Report of the Special Committee of theBoard of Health appointed bythe Hon. Minister of HealthAuthor: Committee Of The Board Of HealthRelease Date: ... large amount of informationwhich has been of material assistance in REPORT OF THECOMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF HEALTHAPPOINTED BYTHE HON.MINISTER OF HEALTH.Presented to both Houses of theGeneral...
... NewZealand banks may need to consider increasing the number of branch offices into those areas with high concentrations of current and prospective customers. Over the years, banks in NewZealand ... of loyalty more complicated. In the case of the new bank, called Kiwibank, its relative youth compromises interpretations of durability. In contrast, the four major banks operating in NewZealand ... Zealand all have histories of well over 100 years. These include the Auckland Savings Bank (ASB), the Australia and NewZealand Bank (ANZ/National), the Bank ofNewZealand (BNZ), and Westpac...
... resolution of any doubts as to the validity of the report was a matter of great public concern. Also the report contained very severe criticism of certain senior officers of Air New Zealand. ... to the old s. 4A, now replaced by the section C.A. 95/81 In the Court of Appeal ofNewZealand Between Air NewZealand Limited. First Appellant, and Morrison Ritchie Davis, Second Appellant, ... conclusions as to the cause of the crash must and do stand. Late in 1976 Air NewZealand decided to commence a series of non-scheduled sightseeing journeys from NewZealand to the Ross Dependency...
... habits of all primitive peoples, and one accustomed to the study of the early races of Europe can form a general opinion of the habits and mode of living of a tribe merely from the inspection of ... by two young men of the name of Allen. They were friends of an acquaintance of Mr. Renshaw, who, hearing that they were journeying by the same ship to New Zealand, out of the question; but ... of the islands, take what they fancied out of her, and make off in boats, or perhaps take her into one of those nests of pirates that abound among the islands. "They felt so certain of...
... publication by Brian Abel Smith in 1960 of A Historyof the Nursing Profession marked a new phenomenon, the direction of serious attention to the historyof nursing by non-nurses.1 However, ... critique of tradi-tional American nursing historiography. She spoke of a profession that ʻhas had its past to itselfʼ, of a ʻcongealed history , of texts that were ʻreflections of the professionʼs ... ʻConstructing colonial dirt: a cultural history of dirt in the nineteenth century colonial settlement of Dunedin, NewZealand , PhD thesis, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand, 1997. 82 J. Lawler,...
... paper provides new evidence on the information content of interest rateprojections for market expectations and the behavior of long-term interest rates in New Zealand. The role of interest rate ... crucial to shape the market expectations aboutthe future path of the short-term rates. Therefore, starting with the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, several central banks have adopted a quantitative ... 20 denotes the number of business days after the publication of aninterest rate projection and j = 1, . . . 6 denotes the horizon of the futures in quarters.The vector of control variables X(t...
... and impact of each wave ofnew ideas. It is the first volumein a magisterial new series, which brings the historyof philosophy alive toanyone who wants to understand the roots of Western civilization.Sir ... President of the British Academy, andPro-Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford. He has written manyacclaimed books on the philosophy of mind, the philosophy of religion,and the historyof philosophy, ... Wittgenstein.A NewHistoryof Western PhilosophyAnthony KennyVolume 1: Ancient Philosophy Volume 3: The Rise of Modern PhilosophyVolume 2: Medieval Philosophy Volume 4: Philosophy in the Modern World of...
... development of philosophy in the ancient world up to the conversion of St Augustineat the end of the fourth century of our era. The life of Augustine marks anepoch in the historyof ideas. In ... of the Greekphilosophers (XVIII. 37).In Augustine’s narrative Jerusalem becomes the emblem of the City of God and Babylon becomes the emblem of the city of the world. Babylonwas the city of ... cruciWed King of the Jews, atthe apex of the idealized city-state of pagan philosophy.Like Aristotle in his Metaphysics. Augustine surveys the historyof phil-osophy from the distant days of Thales,...
... no proof could be offered of its articles. In thecourse of dealing with this question in The Grammar of Assent, Newman hadmuch to say of general philosophical interest about the nature of belief, ... philosophy; but no historyof philosophy can omit to mention Darwin,because of the implications of his biological work on philosophy of religionand on general metaphysics.4John Henry NewmanThough ... religious writer of the Victorian age, John Henry Newman. Shortly after the appearance of Onthe Origin of Species Newman observed that if one were to believe in theseparate creation of each species...
... records of extraordinary marvels, and manuals of technology. Bacon’s own contribution to natural history consisted of two compilations of research material, a Historyof the Winds, and a History of ... discipline of broadscope with three subdivisions: the historyof ‘nature in course, of natureerring or varying, and of nature altered or wrought’. It will include, then,treatises of natural ... important parts ofhistory are Natural and Civil. ‘Civil history is what we would nowadays call history: Bacon himself contributed to it anarrative of the reign of Henry VII. ‘Natural history is...