Books by "Philip Henry Lawrence"

12 books found

The Romance of Empire

The Romance of Empire

by Philip Gibbs

1906

Our Ancient Monuments and the Land Around Them

Our Ancient Monuments and the Land Around Them

by Charles Philip Kains- Jackson

1880

Records of the prehistoric ruins of Britain (with Ireland), including Stonehenge, Old Sarum, the Ring of Brogar, and the Hill of Tara.

Mystics and Messiahs

Mystics and Messiahs

by Philip Jenkins

2000

In this full-length account of cults and anti-cult scares in American history, Jenkins gives accurate historical perspective and shows how many of today's mainstream religions were originally regarded as cults.

Queen Victoria’S Paladins

Queen Victoria’S Paladins

by John Philip Jones

2018 · Xlibris Corporation

QUEEN VICTORIAS PALADINS The unique feature of this book is that it is a dual biography. Garnet Wolseley (18331913) and Frederick Roberts (18321914) were the most important British soldiers during the last quarter of the nineteenth century. They both became field marshals and were both raised to the peerage and entered the House of Lords. Wolseley and Roberts were Queen Victorias paladins. Their reputations were built on the expeditions they led. Wolseley commanded forces in North America and Africa; Roberts commanded in Afghanistan and, at the end of his career, in South Africa. Both men were army reformers, and Roberts dedicated his retirement to a campaign to introduce a brief period of compulsory army service for all physically fit young men, with the objective of building a large reserve of partially trained soldiers. However, this proposal was not acceptable to any British government. Both Wolseley and Roberts left extensive well-written personal memoirs, and their campaigns also generated a substantial literature. They both attracted followers. The officers who surrounded themsome of them highly talentedbecame known as the Wolseley Ring and the Roberts Ring. Queen Victorias paladins devoted their lives to the British Empire. They demonstrated formidable strategic and tactical skills and won a succession of wars against brave but militarily backward opponents. This book compares Wolseley and Roberts as commanders. It also touches on whether Wolseley and Roberts can be compared with generals like Wellington and Montgomery, who won their battles against large, well-organized, and well-armed enemy armies. It is by no means certain that Wolseley and Roberts would have done well in such different circumstances.

The Rynox Murder Mystery

The Rynox Murder Mystery

by Philip MacDonald

2026 · Rare Treasure Editions

A classic Golden Age crime novel, and the first time Philip MacDonald wrote a crime novel without a detective. ‘Rynox’ is at that point where one injudicious move, one failure of judgement, one coincidental piece of bad luck will wreck it. So why would anyone send more than a million pounds in one-pound notes to Mr Salisbury of the Naval, Military and Cosmopolitan Assurance Corporation? Who would shoot F.X. Benedik, the senior partner of the firm, through the head in his study? And where is the choleric Mr Marsh, who had an appointment with F.X. on the night of his death? Rynox is on the edge of big things. But the edge of big things is a narrow edge. And narrow edges are slippery . . . Philip MacDonald’s Rynox is an engrossing murder mystery set in the business world, a crime novel without a detective in which murder and big business are inextricably combined. Beginning with the Epilogue and ending with the Prologue, it is a subtle and exciting book by one of the greatest masters of the mystery story.

Autobiography and Decolonization

Autobiography and Decolonization

by Philip Holden

2008 · Univ of Wisconsin Press

Philip Holden reveals deeply gendered connections between the writing of individual lives and of the narratives of nations emerging from colonialism. Autobiography and Decolonization is the first book to give serious academic attention to autobiographies of nationalist leaders in the process of decolonization, attending to them not simply as partial historical documents, but as texts involved in remaking the world views of their readers. Holden examines Mohandas K. Gandhi's An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments with Truth, Marcus Garvey's fragmentary Autobiography,Joseph Ephraim Casely Hayford's Ethiopia Unbound, Lee Kuan Yew's The Singapore Story, Nelson Mandela's Long Walk to Freedom, Jawaharlal Nehru's An Autobiography, and Kwame Nkrumah's Ghana:The Autobiography of Kwame Nkrumah. Holden argues that these examples of life writing have had significant influence on the formation of new, and often profoundly gendered, national identities. These narratives constitute the nation less as an imagined community than as an imagined individual. Moving from the past to the promise of the future, they mediate relationships between public and private, and between individual and collective stories. Ultimately, they show how the construction of modern selfhood is inextricably linked to the construction of a postcolonial polity.

Durham Deception The

Durham Deception The

by Philip Gooden

2011 · Severn House Publishers Ltd

Second in the gripping new 19th century 'Cathedral' murder mystery series from the acclaimed author of the 'Nick Revill' mysteries - For the newly-weds Tom and Helen Ansell life is no honeymoon, as they are drawn into a murky underworld of Victorian spiritualism and stage magic when they're sent on a mission to the stunning cathedral city of Durham. Not only must they investigate Helen's Aunt Julia, who has mysteriously fallen for a medium, but also solve the riddle of the sinister Lucknow dagger. Until suddenly things go from bad to worse when a body turns up and Helen herself is accused of murder.

F. B. Meyer

F. B. Meyer

by Philip Ilott Roberts

1929

Facts and Ideas

Facts and Ideas

by Philip Gibbs

1905