Books by "Sir Grafton Elliot Smith"

12 books found

THE EVOLUTIN OF MODERN MEDICINE

THE EVOLUTIN OF MODERN MEDICINE

by SIR WILLIAM OSLER

1921

The Evolution of Modern Medicine

The Evolution of Modern Medicine

by Sir William Osler

1922

Evolution of Modern Medicine

Evolution of Modern Medicine

by Sir William Osler

1921

Na to Hoa Aroha, from Your Dear Friend, Volume 1

Na to Hoa Aroha, from Your Dear Friend, Volume 1

by Sir Peter Buck, Sir Apirana Ngata

2013 · Auckland University Press

The leading historian Keith Sorrenson has collected in three volumes the complete correspondence (174 letters in all) between two distinguished twentieth-century Māori scholars and statesmen, Sir Apirana Ngata and Sir Peter Buck (Te Rangi Hiroa). 'The letters confirm that each man was indeed a totara tree of some magnificence and that each was a tree that stood alone. Even today such trees remain rare,' writes Hirini Moko Mead.

The Antiquity of Man

The Antiquity of Man

by Sir Arthur Keith

1925

On Diseases of the Lungs and Pleuræ

On Diseases of the Lungs and Pleuræ

by Sir Richard Douglas Powell, Sir Percival Horton-Smith Hartley

1921

Shell shock and its lessons

Shell shock and its lessons

by Sir Grafton Elliot Smith

1917

Creation by Evolution

Creation by Evolution

by David Starr Jordan, John Arthur Thomson, Herbert Spencer Jennings, George Howard Parker, Ernest William MacBride, Edwin Grant Conklin, William Berryman Scott, Francis Arthur Bather, John Walter Gregory, Arthur Smith Woodward, Charles Stuart Gager, Edward Wilber Berry, Sir Edward Bagnall Poulton, Sir Arthur Everett Shipley, William Morton Wheeler, Frederic Brewster Loomis, David Meredith Seares Watson, Richard Swann Lull, William King Gregory, Grafton Elliot Smith, Samuel Jackson Holmes, Julian Huxley

1928

Na to Hoa Aroha, from Your Dear Friend, Volume 3

Na to Hoa Aroha, from Your Dear Friend, Volume 3

by Sir Peter Buck, Sir Apirana Ngata

2013 · Auckland University Press

The leading historian Keith Sorrenson has collected in three volumes the complete correspondence (174 letters in all) between two distinguished twentieth-century Māori scholars and statesmen, Sir Apirana Ngata and Sir Peter Buck (Te Rangi Hiroa). 'The letters confirm that each man was indeed a totara tree of some magnificence and that each was a tree that stood alone. Even today such trees remain rare,' writes Hirini Moko Mead.