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  • The streets in Edinburgh's Old Town that run from Holyrood Palace to Edinburgh Castle.
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  • * [http://www.ed.ac.uk/ University of Edinburgh] Homepage ...uk/ International Office]. Information about applying to the University of Edinburgh
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  • {{Image|640px-Edinburgh Castle Autumn.jpg|right|640px|Edinburgh Castle from Ross Fountain}} ...gazine (online) https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryMagazine/DestinationsUK/Edinburgh-Castle/, last access 9/3/2020</ref>.
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  • (1739-1795) Architect remembered for his design for the layout of Edinburgh's New Town.
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  • (1792 - 1829) Prisoner hanged in Edinburgh's Lawnmarket in 1829 for his role in the [[West Port Murders]].
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  • ...ciety, founded in 1908 with the aim of recording the vanishing evidence of Edinburgh's history, its buildings and its past inhabitants.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} * Holyrood Abbey: Augustinian Abbey in Edinburgh; built in 1128, now a ruin.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • ...e/record.php?usi=000-000-579-021-C Title-page from Robert Fergusson Poems, Edinburgh, 1773] from the [http://www.burnsscotland.com/?PHPSESSID=f2c7ec7qtbk49eiinu ...ychiatry'' [http://hpy.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/1/3/309 1:309-29]("Edinburgh's Poet Laureate, Robert Fergusson died in the City Bedlam at the age of 24.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • ...f Sir R. Walpole (4 vols. London, 1816); Alexander Carlyle, Autobiography (Edinburgh, 1860), gives the account of an eye-witness of the execution of Wilson;
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Edinburgh University]]
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Edinburgh Phrenological Society]]
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  • Seaport of Edinburgh.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Edinburgh Phrenological Society/Definition]]
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r| Edinburgh Castle}}
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  • ...re]], London, he was an orphan at the age of six, and in 1794 he came to [[Edinburgh]] to live with his uncle [[John Playfair]], the mathematician, geologist a |publisher=[[The Royal Society of Edinburgh]]
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  • #redirect [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]]
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • Edinburgh hotel designed by Robert Adam.
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  • ....uk/home/scotland/arbroath_latin.html Latin Original Text at University of Edinburgh] ...scotland/arbroath_english.html Text Translated to English at University of Edinburgh]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh/Related Articles]]
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  • ...www.chem.ed.ac.uk/public/professors/black.html Joseph Black] University of Edinburgh ....html Lectures on the Elements of Chemistry delivered in the University of Edinburgh by the Late Joseph Black, M.D.]
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  • ...Wales|Prince Charles]], who succeeded his father [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh|Philip]] in April 2021. The title merged into the crown when Charles became
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A medieval castle perched over the city of Edinburgh, Scotland
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  • (1697 – 1767) Anatomist; the founder of Edinburgh Medical School.
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  • An official residence of the monarch, located in Edinburgh, Scotland.
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  • *[http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/s/stevenson/robert_louis/s848lm/part5.html Edinburgh Students in 1824] from ''College Papers'' by [[Robert Louis Stevenson]]
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  • Cantilever railway bridge, built in 1883-1890, that connects Edinburgh to Fife
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  • 15th century town house in Edinburgh, it displays exhibits about John Knox.
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  • {{Image|George Hotel, Edinburgh.jpg|350px|right|The hotel at night}} ...of Edinburgh, Scotland, close by Princess Gardens and down the hill from [[Edinburgh Castle]]. Broadband Internet access is available in many rooms.
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  • ...9) Followed his father and grandfather in becoming professor of anatomy at Edinburgh University.
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  • The graveyard surrounding Greyfriars Kirk in Edinburgh, Scotland, and burial place of many famous Scots.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh University}} {{r|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • * ''The Edinburgh Visitor Guide'' by Colin Baxter (Photographer) Illustrated reference for a ...transformation to its system of education, especially the universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow. The 18th-century Scottish Enlightenment, embodied by such thin
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  • ...Dr Alexander Carlyle of Inveresk'', edited by John Hill Burton (London and Edinburgh 1910) p.312. quoted in – ...Scottish Enlightenment: 1730 - 1790 A Hotbed of Genius'' The University of Edinburgh, 1986. In paperback, The Saltire Society, 1996 ISBN 0-85411-069-0
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  • Old nickname for Edinburgh, Scotland, meaning ''old smokey''.
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  • ...2)Pioneer in endocrinology, and the first woman to hold a medical chair at Edinburgh University.
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  • {{rpl|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}} {{rpl|Edward, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • ...dical started in 1817 by William Blackwood as a Tory rival to the Whiggish Edinburgh Review.
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  • The plug of a long extinct volcano that forms the largest hill in Edinburgh.
    112 bytes (17 words) - 03:18, 20 May 2008
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Duke of Edinburgh]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • Dukedom associated with Edinburgh, Scotland, whose title is currently held by Prince Philip, the husband of a
    182 bytes (25 words) - 19:53, 14 September 2009
  • ...tp://www.visitscotland.com/guide/scotland-factfile/arts-culture/literature/edinburgh-stories/canongate Canongate] VisitScotland.com * [http://www.edinburgh-royalmile.com/onroyalmile.html Edinburgh RoyalMile.com]
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  • ...eared as a liberal weekly in 1817; published daily since 1855 and based in Edinburgh.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh University}} {{r|Edinburgh}}
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  • ...1950; sister of Charles III; daughter of Elizabeth II and Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
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  • ...central Scotland, flowing into the Firth of Forth and then the North Sea; Edinburgh is located along its course.
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  • (1741 - 1788) Respectable Edinburgh citizen who led a gang of burglars and died on a gallows that he himself ha
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  • One of several clubs in Edinburgh that were the focus of intellectual exchange during the Scottish Enlightenm
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}}
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  • ...tory, Significance, Setting.'' Edited by Geoffrey Barrow. ISBN 090390327X. Edinburgh: [[Society of Antiquaries of Scotland]]. 2003.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} (1986) {{r|Edinburgh}} (1970)
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}}
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  • (1833 – 1885) Professor of Engineering at the University of Edinburgh, known as the inventor of telpherage.
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  • ...dom since September 2022; eldest child of Elizabeth II and Philip, Duke of Edinburgh; formerly Prince of Wales.
    181 bytes (25 words) - 08:48, 29 July 2023
  • ...son of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
    147 bytes (22 words) - 22:24, 22 May 2008
  • {{rpl|Edinburgh University|University of Edinburgh}} {{rpl|The Edinburgh Phrenological Society}}
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  • ...my.mvm.ed.ac.uk/museum/index.php Anatomical Museum] at the [[University of Edinburgh]] - host's Burke's skeleton
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  • ...istory/archnote2.htm History Notes - The Anatomy Museum] The University of Edinburgh College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine
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  • (1733 - 1817) Professor of Anatomy at the University of Edinburgh, known as the discoverer of the lymphatic system.
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  • ...e army, he was employed in 1715 to drill the city guard for the defence of Edinburgh in anticipation of a [[Jacobite]] rising, and was promoted later to the com ...prieved on 2nd September. The reprieve was hotly resented by the people of Edinburgh, and on the night of 7th September 1736 an armed body of men in disguise br
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  • ...y of Schehallion," 1811) and in the ''Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh'' ("On the Causes which affect the Accuracy of Barometrical Measurements,"
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  • Nineteenth-century [[Syke Terrier]] in [[Edinburgh]], Scotland who became famous for keeping vigil by his master's grave ever
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  • :''Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine'' (monthly) :''Edinburgh Review'' (quarterly)
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  • ...s in ''Dissertationes medicae'' (1701) and founding the medical faculty at Edinburgh.
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  • {{rpl|Edward, Duke of Edinburgh}} {{rpl|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • ...onservation Trust] ("a silver thread in a ribbon of green' flowing through Edinburgh")
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}} {{r|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • ...inally edited by Robert Chambers, published by Blackie and Son of Glasgow, Edinburgh, and London in 1856.
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  • ...2006); her best-known novel ''The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie'' is set in an Edinburgh girls' school - the central character is a progressive feminist who admires
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  • (1745 – 1815) Publisher of the first Edinburgh edition of Robert Burns' poems; member of the jury in Deacon Brodie's trial
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  • * [http://www.music.ed.ac.uk/euchmi/ Edinburgh University Collection of Historical Musical Instruments]
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  • (1718 – 1800) Professor of Rhetoric and Belles Lettres at the [[University of Edinburgh]], and [[Presbyterian]] preacher whose sermons and writings made a major co
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  • ...20, became the leading phrenological society of the U.K. and established [[Edinburgh]] as a major centre of [[phrenology]] in the 19th century.
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  • | location = Edinburgh ;;New York ;[Berkeley Calif.?]
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  • ...al, third edition, corrected, with additions, 1 volume (London, A. Millar, Edinburgh, A. Kincaid, 1748). ...d in a Book Lately Publish's Intitled, A Treatise of Human Nature, etc.'' (Edinburgh, 1745).
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  • ...uate/field/holyrood/history.html Formation of Arthur's Seat] University of Edinburgh Undergraduate Geology Notes
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  • ...1817 by [[William Blackwood]] as a [[Tory]] rival to the [[Whig]]gish ''[[Edinburgh Review]]''. It is now chiefly remembered for the [[Noctes Ambrosianae]].
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  • {{r|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}} {{r|Edward, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • ...ibed [[leukaemia]]<ref>John Hughes Bennett (1812-1875) Clinical Teacher of Edinburgh. ''JAMA'' 1969;208:857-8</ref> ...nt of the ''Royal Medical Society'' and of the ''Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh'' and Vice-President of the ''Anatomical and Physiological Society''. The s
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  • ...name. He studied to be a veterinary surgeon at the Dick Vet, University of Edinburgh, and pursued this profession for nearly ten years.
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  • ..._texts/owen_review_of_origin.html Review of Darwin's Origin of Species], ''Edinburgh Review'', 3, April 1860, pp. 487-532.] ...'s theory of the origin of species]. ''Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh'' 4: 1860 274-291.
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  • ...ch) of the Church of Scotland and one of the oldest surviving buildings in Edinburgh outside the Old Town, built between 1602 and c.1620.
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  • ...my.mvm.ed.ac.uk/museum/index.php Anatomical Museum] of The [[University of Edinburgh]]
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  • * Edinburgh, Scotland
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  • ...at, Edinburgh.JPG/credit}}<br/>|}}Arthur's Seat, the hill in the centre of Edinburgh that overlooks the new [[Scottish Parliament]] (bottom left) and "Dynamic E ...s period. The hill rises to 251&nbsp;m&nbsp;(823&nbsp;feet), and overlooks Edinburgh's Old Town to the West. The most famous of its rock faces is off the [[Radi
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  • :Edinburgh ...tory, Significance, Setting.'' Edited by Geoffrey Barrow. ISBN 090390327X. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. 2003.
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  • {{rpl|Edinburgh}}
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  • * ''Auld Reekie: An Edinburgh Anthology collected by Ralph Lownie; Timewell ISBN 9781857252040 ("...histo
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  • ...iest publications with the term <i>Review</i> in its title was the first [[Edinburgh Review]], (1755-1756) published by the [[Select Society]], at the time of t ...ion in 1969 and in 1984 adopted the more historically significant title <i>Edinburgh Review</i> along with the motto "To gather all the rays of culture into one
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  • ...20, became the leading phrenological society of the U.K. and established [[Edinburgh]] as a major centre of [[phrenology]] in the 19th century. ...jpg|right|350px|Life mask of George Combe (1788- 1858). Combe founded the 'Edinburgh Phrenological Society' in 1820 and the 'Phrenological journal' in 1823.}}
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  • ...and educating the male children and grandchildren of decayed merchants in Edinburgh" - the first school became what is now George Watson's College.
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  • ...probe. It is named after Edward M. Southern who developed the technique at Edinburgh University in the 1970.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh University}} {{r|Edinburgh}}
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  • ...k/public/professors/cullen.html Biography by W. P. Doyle] at University of Edinburgh, School of Chemistry
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  • ...'' (1902-2002) was the first woman to be appointed to a medical Chair at [[Edinburgh University]] when she became its Professor of [[Physiology]] in 1966. ...culty. In 1977 she became a [[Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh]].
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  • (d. 1736) Captain of the city guard of Edinburgh during the riots of 1736 when the city guard fired on the people; Porteous
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  • *I. Tolstoy, ''James Clerk Maxwell, a biography''. Edinburgh: Canongate; 1981.
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  • {{rpl|Edinburgh}}
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  • {{rpl|Edinburgh}} {{rpl|Edinburgh University}}
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  • ...s parts of some others. The scene is usually set in Ambrose's Tavern in [[Edinburgh]], and the central characters are "Christopher North" (Wilson himself), "Ti *Wilson, John (1855) ''Noctes Ambrosianae'', edited by J F Ferrier. Edinburgh: William Blackwood & Sons.
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  • ...received in lieu of a pension the nominal office of the writership of the Edinburgh Gazette, with a salary of £300.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}}
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  • ...ain - Research on Language Policy and Language Planning] - [[University of Edinburgh]]-based research on language planning in [[Scotland]]; articles in [[Scotti
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  • * John Prebble, ''The King's Jaunt'' (Edinburgh: Birlinn Ltd,1988., 2000), ISBN 1-84158-068-6 * David Webster, ''Scottish Highland Games'' (Edinburgh, Scotland 1973)
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}}
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  • ...tions of the Heart, and a Description of the Human Lacteal Sac and Duct.'' Edinburgh 1726, 1732, 8vo. 6th edit. Corrected and enlarged. 1758. To the latter edi ...with considerable improvements and additions, by his son, and other hands. Edinburgh 1783.
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  • {{rpl|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}}
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  • ...East Lothian) and later at Lady Yester's Kirk and [[Greyfriars Kirk]] in [[Edinburgh]]. A staunch [[Presbyterian]] and [[British Whig Party|Whig]], in 1745 he v ...history".<ref>Horn DB(1967, p.76) "''A Short History of the University of Edinburgh: 1556-1889''"</ref> In 1763, he became also [[Moderator of the General Ass
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  • ...929: the politics of five elections. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Edinburgh.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • *Overbury, Steve (2008) ''Guns, Cash and Rock 'n' Roll: The Managers''. Edinburgh: Mainstream. ISBN 978-1-84596-234-0 (OCLC 77013108)
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  • {{rpl|Edinburgh}}
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  • *Overbury, Steve (2008) ''Guns, Cash and Rock 'n' Roll: The Managers''. Edinburgh: Mainstream. ISBN 978-1-84596-234-0 (OCLC 77013108)
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  • ...iversity. He graduated from there in 1825 and moved to the [[University of Edinburgh ]] where he taught mathematics. When Sir John Leslie, Professor of Natural Philosophy at Edinburgh University died in 1832, Russell was chosen to fill the vacancy pending the
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  • {{r|Edward, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • ...ay he may be said to have the credit of laying the foundation of the great Edinburgh school of medicine. ...ng to the instruction he had received from Dr Pitcairne. Pitcairne died in Edinburgh on the 20th of October 1713. He had been a great collector of books, and hi
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  • | publisher=Institute of Cell and Molecular Biology, [[University of Edinburgh]]
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  • ...82 <ref>[http://www.ed.ac.uk/explore/history/ History of The University of Edinburgh]</ref>, the sixth university to be established in the British Isles, with a ...nis College") making it the first civic university. In the 18th century, [[Edinburgh]] was a leading centre of the European [[Enlightenment]] and the University
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  • {{r|Treaty of Edinburgh (1560)}}
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  • ...past, present, and future]'' &mdash; Public lecture at the [[University of Edinburgh]]
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  • ...tween 1602 and about 1620 on land given by [[Mary, Queen of Scots]] to the Edinburgh town council in 1562 for use as a burial ground. It is adjacent to the back ...ce in Scottish history. Opened in 1620, it was the first church built in [[Edinburgh]] after the Reformation;. In 1638 the [[National Covenant]], a protest agai
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  • |title = Teachings of the physician William Cullen of Edinburgh (1712-1790) transcribed by his student physician Louis Odier of Geneva (174 |title = Doctor William Cullen, physician, Edinburgh": a consultation practice in the eighteenth century
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  • ...exander Monro secundus, 1786, original in the library of the University of Edinburgh]] ...[[Alexander Monro primus]] as Professor of Anatomy at the [[University of Edinburgh]], and was in turn succeeded by his son, [[Alexander Monro tertius]]. He is
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  • {{rpl|Edinburgh}}
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  • ...ssors Sidarthan Chandran and Charles ffrench-constant of the University of Edinburgh on prospects for stem cell therapy to treat multiple sclerosis
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  • {{r|Treaty of Edinburgh (1328)}}
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  • ...ternet/leisure/museums_and_galleries/CEC_museum_of_edinburgh The Museum of Edinburgh], formerly known as Huntly House, occupies 16th and 17th century buildings
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  • | publication-place = Edinburgh | publication-place = Edinburgh
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  • ...otland|Scottish]] portrait-painter of the [[Rococo]] Era. He was born in [[Edinburgh]], the eldest son of [[Allan Ramsay (1686&ndash;1758)|Allan Ramsay]], poet ...1739 he married Anne Bayne, the daughter of a professor of Scots law at [[Edinburgh University]], Alexander Bayne of Rires (c. 1684&ndash;1737). None of their
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  • ...llows the lives of a group of [[heroin]] addicts and their associates in [[Edinburgh]], [[Scotland]], centring on the trials of Mark Renton as he tries to move ...Most of the film was actually shot in neighbouring [[Glasgow]] rather than Edinburgh, but did feature a mostly-Scottish cast (the exception being [[Jonny Lee Mi
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  • {{r|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • :(Inscription on statue, Edinburgh) ...Greyfriars Kirkyard - the grounds of a notable [[Presbyterian]] church in Edinburgh's Old Town.
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  • {{r|Edinburgh University}}
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  • * Donald R. Hill, ''Islamic Science and Engineering'' (Edinburgh University Press, 1994).
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  • {{r|HMS Edinburgh (D97)}}
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  • '''Auld Reekie''' is a traditional nickname for [[Edinburgh]], the capital city of [[Scotland]]. ...of one of the [[Scots]] poems of [[Robert Fergusson]], who died insane in Edinburgh's Bedlam asylum, aged 24, but whose poems were an inspiration for Scotland'
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  • ...beth II of the United Kingdom|Elizabeth II ]] and [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]], and held the heir apparent's title [[Prince of Wales]] from 1958 until 2 ...s Royal|Princess Anne]] had followed her younger brother [[Edward, Duke of Edinburgh|Edward]].<ref name=Cnn2018-04-23/>
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  • ...| Skeleton of William Burke, in the Anatomical Museum of the University of Edinburgh. Photo by Hugh Pastoll.}} ...| Life mask of William Hare, in the Anatomical Museum of the University of Edinburgh. Photo by Hugh Pastoll.}}
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  • ...ity]], Ruddiman was appointed as an assistant in the Advocates' Library, [[Edinburgh]]. During his time there, he published editions of Florence Wilson's ''De A ...him to call for frequent censure, and a society of scholars was formed in Edinburgh to "vindicate that incomparably learned and pious author from the calumnies
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  • ...219&dq=james+hutton&output=text#c_top Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Volume 1]</ref> ...68, with the farm established and successful, he let it and moved back to Edinburgh, where he lived for the rest of his life, unmarried, with his three sisters
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  • ...ting the first practical telephone. Bell was educated at the University of Edinburgh and at University College, London. In 1870, he emigrated to Canada with his
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  • ...[[John Knox]], a Protestant leader born between 1505 and 1515, who died at Edinburgh on 24 November, 1572. {{Image|John Knox's House Edinburgh.JPG|right|300px|John Knox House consists of two town houses (or "lands") w
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  • .... Charles Thompson, ''Scotland's Forged Tartans'', Paul Harris Publishing, Edinburgh, 1980. ISBN 0-904505-67-7.
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  • ...}}|Asian elephant skeleton in the Anatomical Museum of the [[University of Edinburgh]]. This elephant was most likely a female as suggested by the lack of tusks
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  • ...uctions, and a Critical Dissertation Upon the Eloquence of the Ancients'', Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black, 4 vol. (online: [http://books.google.ca/books?id=F
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  • ...n the Jacobite rebels defeated the English army. Carlyle was a part of the Edinburgh militia - on the side of the Union and the Government forces and fearful of ...y associated with [[William Robertson]], Principal of the [[University of Edinburgh]].
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  • ...between 1747 and 1772, and Marjorie Stuart. Dugald Stewart was educated in Edinburgh at the high school and the university, where he read mathematics and moral ...health failing, to take over his mathematical classes in the University of Edinburgh. In 1775, he was elected Professor of Mathematics jointly with him. Three y
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  • ...al political publications of the 19th century. His anonymous essays in the Edinburgh Review included two vituperative attacks on [[Thomas Young]] for his wave t
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  • ...’s medical ethics and the reform of medical practice in eighteenth-century Edinburgh] ''J R Coll Physicians Edinb'' 36:86–92</ref> ...qSearch=((text)='2206')&dsqPos=0 Papers of the Gregory family of Aberdeen, Edinburgh, St Andrews and Oxford] GB 0231 Aberdeen University, Special Libraries and
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  • ...; home ground [http://www.stadiumguide.com/murrayfield.htm Murrayfield], [[Edinburgh]]
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  • ...opsis of the Decisions of the [[Court of Session]], 5 vols. (William Tait, Edinburgh. 1829 'Decisions Collected by Lord Monboddo' V, 651-941 *James Grant ''Cassell's Old and New Edinburgh'', Edinburgh, Scotland (1880-1887)
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  • ...homson (1859) ''An account of the life, lectures, and writings of Cullen'' Edinburgh, v. 1, p. 259, 432-433.)</ref> ...forty American students, many of whom in turn sent their best students to Edinburgh. One was so inspired by Cullen that he named his son after him; [[William C
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  • ...noted for his role in advancing the Medical School of the [[University of Edinburgh]] to international prominence in the 18th and 19th centuries. He showed tha ...e army of King William, and, after retiring from the army, he settled in [[Edinburgh]] and entered the College of Surgeons. However, he sent his son elsewhere t
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  • ...ette undervest. Duncan was found guilty of "affray" and fake mediumship at Edinburgh Sheriff Court, and was sentenced to a £10 fine or one month in prison. ...illusionist who had died during a performance at the [[Empire Theatre]] in Edinburgh, when the set for one of his illusions, ‘the Lion's Bride’, developed a
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  • *Deterding, D. (2007). ''Singapore English''. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-2545-1.
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  • ...t James Aikenhead, chirurgeon in Edinburgh," was hanged for blasphemy in [[Edinburgh]].<ref>"Thomas Aikenhead for denying the Trinity, and the authority of the ...ooks deemed "atheistical, erroneous or profane or vicious" in the stock of Edinburgh booksellers.
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  • Born in [[Edinburgh]], he studied at the [[University of Glasgow]] from 1787 to 1789, and at [[ == Edinburgh Review ==
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  • ...ected professor of mathematics at the [[Edinburgh University|University of Edinburgh]]. ...ces for an essay on tides. His ‘’Treatise on Fluxions’’ was published at [[Edinburgh]] in 1742. In the preface, he states that the work was undertaken in respon
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  • ...ain - Research on Language Policy and Language Planning] - [[University of Edinburgh]]-based research on language planning in [[Scotland]]; articles in [[Scotti
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  • ...mond Charles Robertson-Glasgow''' (born 15 July 1901 at [[Murrayfield]], [[Edinburgh]]; died 4 March 1965 at [[Buckhold]], [[Berkshire]]) was a Scottish [[crick
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  • The '''Poker Club''', founded in 1762, was one of several clubs in [[Edinburgh]] that were the focus of intellectual exchange during the [[Scottish Enligh The club was said to consist of all the literati of Edinburgh and its surroundings. The establishment was frugal and moderate, "as that f
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  • ...He was also the grandson of [[Elizabeth II]] and [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]]. William married [[Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge|Catherine Middleton]]
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  • | publisher = Edinburgh Univ Pr
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  • * Kamm, Antony, and Baird, Malcolm, ''John Logie Baird: A Life''. Edinburgh: NMS Publishing, 2002. ISBN 1901663760
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  • ...tober, 1744- 5th July 1877) was a Professor of the Theory of Medicine at [[Edinburgh University]], and a President of the Royal College of Physicians. He is not ...rict of [[Edinburgh]] by the architect Robert Reid and grew into the Royal Edinburgh Hospital.
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  • ...nd went to London for three years to study exchequer law. On his return to Edinburgh he became partner with Inglis, whom he later succeeded as attorney for the ...f his dramatic pieces, a tragedy, ''The Prince of Tunis'', was produced in Edinburgh in 1773 with some success. The others were failures; a comedy, ''The White
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  • ...edition of Adam Smith's <i>Theory of Moral Sentiments</i> is published in Edinburgh, Scotland. *Adam Ferguson's ''Essay on the History of Civil Society'' is published in Edinburgh, Scotland.
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  • ...udy of religion] in DISKUS Vol. 7 (2006) by Frank Whaling, [[University of Edinburgh]]
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  • When [[Robert Burns]] arrived in [[Edinburgh]] in 1786, he made a pilgrimage to the Canongate kirkyard to pay his respec .../credit}}<br/>|}} Bronze statue of Robert Fergusson on the [[Royal Mile]], Edinburgh. (sculptor: David Annand). The statue was dedicated on 17th October 2004 <r
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  • ...the tutor of [[Ferguson of Raith]]. This enabled him to be frequently in [[Edinburgh]], and to join the literary and scientific circles of the [[Scottish Enligh ...Dr Matthew Stewart, the late professor of mathematics in the University of Edinburgh. A second was on the causes which affect the accuracy of Barometrical Measu
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  • *Horn DB (1967)''A Short History of the University of Edinburgh: 1556-1889'' ...dXcCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CC8Q6AEwAjgK#v=onepage&q=edinburgh%20was%20at%20the%20heart%20of%20the%20scottish%20enlightenment&f=false ''Wi
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  • ...ship with George Langlands, a Fellow of the [[Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh]]. In .... In 1750 he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, and in 1753
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  • ...The Chambers Dictionary, 10th Edition |publisher=Chambers Harrap |location=Edinburgh |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-550101-85-3}}
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  • ...d]]. He was educated at [[Edinburgh University]], and during his time in [[Edinburgh]] he forged lasting friendships with, amongst others, [[David Hume]], [[Ada (extract from ''Epigoniad: a Poem in Nine Parts'' by William Wilkie, Edinburgh, Hamilton, Balfour & Neill. 1757)
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  • ...erbyshire, Ian (1988) ''Politics in Britain: from Callaghan to Thatcher''. Edinburgh: Chambers. ISBN 0-550-20742-2
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  • ..., putting them into agricultural ventures that failed. In 1810 he went to Edinburgh and started a weekly magazine ''The Spy'', which ran for a year.<ref>Miller ...ng poets of the day.<ref>Mack, D S (ed). The Queen's Wake, by James Hogg. Edinburgh University Press. 2005. Introduction xlviii-lxxv</ref>
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  • ...val clubs. The international governing body is [[World Bowls]], based in [[Edinburgh]], with 54 affiliated national authorities.
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  • *[http://www.law.ed.ac.uk/ Edinburgh Law School] Official Site
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  • * [[Scottish Enlightenment|University of Edinburgh]]
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  • ...Stevenson]]<ref>[http://www.online-literature.com/stevenson/edinburgh/5/ Edinburgh Picturesque Notes]</ref> ...eyfriars Kirkyard''' is the graveyard surrounding [[Greyfriars Kirk]] in [[Edinburgh]], [[Scotland]]. For many people, the graveyard is associated primarily wit
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  • ...in/view_isad.pl?id=GB-0237-Joseph-Black&view=basic Papers of Joseph Black] Edinburgh University Library Special *[http://rylibweb.man.ac.uk/specialcollections/c |title=A reluctant catalyst: Joseph Black and the Edinburgh reception of Lavoisier's chemistry.
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  • ...was related. In 1756, while employed as a minister at Athelstaneford, near Edinburgh, his tragedy ''Douglas'' took to the stage, attracting public acclaim - bu ...n M.A. in 1742; he studied divinity, and was licensed by the presbytery of Edinburgh in 1745. In the same year, he joined as a volunteer against the Pretender.
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  • {{r|Thomas Young}} Young entered the University of Edinburgh in 1794 (as a Quaker he could not study at Oxford or Cambridge). After a ye ...ine Nobel Prize winners (Source: http://www.ed.ac.uk/studying/postgraduate/edinburgh/alumni.html)
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  • ...critical acclaim and recognition including the [[Perrier Award]] at the [[Edinburgh Fringe]] festival. They secured a television series in 1999, which ran for
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  • ...of the 'Incorporation of Wrights and Masons'. He mixed with the gentry of Edinburgh, was a member of the Cape Club, and is known to have met [[Robert Burns]] a ...n grocer), and between them set about plundering the city, even stealing [[Edinburgh University]]'s silver mace. By 1786 Brodie had recruited two more members t
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  • *[http://www.davidhumeinstitute.com/ The David Hume Institute], based in [[Edinburgh]] promotes research, analysis and debate on public policy issues. Its work
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  • *C. Stephen Evans ''Faith beyond Reason''. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1998. ISBN 978-0-748-60794-5
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  • ...s of the Old North (''Hen Ogledd'' in Welsh), probably that of Gododdin at Edinburgh. The works attributed to him are contained in a late-13th century manuscri ...bes warriors feasting in a great hall in or near what is now the city of [[Edinburgh]], before setting out to die in a heroic battle against the the Angles of D
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  • ==The Edinburgh Phrenological Society== ...ombe and his brother [[Andrew Combe|Andrew]], a physician, founded ''[[The Edinburgh Phrenological Society]]''. It was the first of more than forty phrenologica
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  • ...Chair of the council meetings. In the four city areas of Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh and Glasgow, the convener is given the title "Lord Provost". In other areas <TD >[[City of Edinburgh Council|Edinburgh, City of]]</TD>
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  • ...he Scottish painter [[Robert Barker]] in 1791 to describe his paintings of Edinburgh shown on a cylindrical surface, which he soon was exhibiting in London, as *[http://www.edvec.ed.ac.uk/html/projects/panorama/ "The 'Panorama'"]: Edinburgh's panorama
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  • ...thwick Castle]] at Carberry Hill on 15 June 1567; bringing them back to [[Edinburgh]] in custody. Nine days later, on 24 June 1567, he was among those who met ...Huntly, the Hamiltons, and the Catholic nobles who supported Mary. Only [[Edinburgh Castle]] held out, and this, with the aid of English artillery, he took, af
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  • * Schoene, Berthold. ''The Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Literature'' (2007), 560pp ...r G.B. and Hector L. MacQueen, eds. ''Atlas of Scottish History to 1707.'' Edinburgh: The Scottish Medievalists and Department of Geography, 1996.
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  • ...emorial added after the First World War. The [http://www.edintattoo.co.uk/ Edinburgh Military Tattoo] is held each August in the esplanade outside the Castle. * [http://www.cac.org.uk/ The City of Edinburgh Museums and Galleries] Includes information on The Museum of Childhood and
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  • James Connolly was born in 107, Cowgate - then a slum area of Edinburgh's Old Town, nicknamed "Little Ireland"; his birthlace is marked by a plaque
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  • ...les throughout the body. From the Anatomical Museum of the [[University of Edinburgh]]. photo by Hugh Pastoll ]]
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  • ...merchant and manager of a coal mine, and bought the property of Eldin near Edinburgh. There, he devoted himself to science and art, and became a close friend of
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  • ...for three years, after which he established himself as a piano teacher in Edinburgh. He appeared in public as a violinist, taking part in Chappell's quartette
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  • ...Adam Ferguson's ''Essay on the History of Civil Society'' is published in Edinburgh, Scotland. *Adam Smith's ''Wealth of Nations'' is published in Edinburgh.
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  • ...n Storage] Current Carbon Capture and Storage Research being undertaken in Edinburgh, Scotland.
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  • {{CZ:(U00984) Appetite and Obesity, University of Edinburgh 2009/EZnotice}}
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  • Hume was born in [[Edinburgh]], on the 26th April 1711, the second son of a middle-class country family ...ism of religion prevented him from becoming a professor of philosophy in [[Edinburgh]] in 1744. His convictions also prevented him from advancement in [[Glasgow
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  • ...id Denby "Northern Lights: How modern life emerged from eighteenth-century Edinburgh" ''The New Yorker'' (11 October 2004).</ref> ...ng awareness of the determining forces of modernity. Gathering places in [[Edinburgh]] such as [[The Select Society]] and, later, [[The Poker Club]], were among
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  • ...ilip Mountbatten]], whom the King had immediately before created [[Duke of Edinburgh]], in 1947. Elizabeth ascended to the throne in 1952 while she was in [[Ken *[[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]]
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  • ...'A Winter with Robert Burns: Being Annals of His Patrons and Associates in Edinburgh during the year 1786-7'' by John Marshall, William Stewart Watson, Robert L
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  • ...s.google.co.uk/books?id=RGi9g_FsZggC&pg=PA61&lpg=PA61&dq=Daniel+Rutherford+Edinburgh&source=web&ots=-YqGI0WjOJ&sig=XsyH1aZpiLUzZb6oNGjrJr1FZgs&hl=en&sa=X&oi=boo ...''Lectures on the Elements of Chemistry'' delivered in the [[University of Edinburgh]] by Joseph Black, published by John Robison (1803), excerpted by William F
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  • ...from his having projected a balloon—a mortal who, though he drudges about Edinburgh as a common printer, with leaky shoes, a skylighted hat, and knee-buckles a ...far, Tytler went to [[Edinburgh]] to study medicine at the [[University of Edinburgh|University]]. The following summer, he worked as ship’s surgeon on the ''
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  • ...Patrick Scott. Robert Burns: The Patriot Bard. Mainstream Publishing Co (Edinburgh) Ltd. 2008
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  • ...althcare'. The editor is Professor John A. Russell of the ([[University of Edinburgh]] UK, and he is supported by a large international editorial advisory board
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  • ...of which he expressed in a series of lectures given at the [[University of Edinburgh]] as his contribution to the [[Gifford Lecture Series]] known as ''[[The Va
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  • ...Stevenson]]<ref>[http://www.online-literature.com/stevenson/edinburgh/5/ Edinburgh Picturesque Notes, Chapter 8]</ref> ...ave control of the port to Edinburgh. Leith is connected to the centre of Edinburgh by Leith Walk, now a continuous street. Lying at the mouth of the [[Water
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  • * Crawford, E.M. (ed.), ''Famine: The Irish Experience, 900-1900'' (Edinburgh, 1989),
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  • [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]] had several controversial quotations attributed to him or directly record | [[Duke of Edinburgh Award]] ceremony, 2006
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  • ...venson, was a novelist, essayist, travel writer and poet. He was born in [[Edinburgh]]'s New Town on November 13th 1850, and died 44 years later of a brain hae ...ern Lighthouse Board. His birthplace, 8, Howard's Place, is on the edge of Edinburgh's New Town. In 1953 the family moved to 1, Inverleith Terrace, and in 1856
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  • # Advocates' Library, Edinburgh, Scotland
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  • ...uence. It is named after Edward M. Southern who developed the technique at Edinburgh University in the 1970 <ref>http://lifesciences.asu.edu/resources/mamajis/s
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  • ...e time. Eric's Chinese name was '''Li Airui (李愛銳)'''. He was educated at [[Edinburgh University]], graduating in 1924. The following year, 1925, he returned to
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  • ...r of the Castle approached, the English, under the command of Edward II in Edinburgh, then controlled by the English, assembled a massive, well-equipped force a
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  • {{r|University of Edinburgh}}
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  • | HMS Edinburgh (D97)
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  • * Brown, Michael. ''The Wars of Scotland, 1214-1371'' (2004), New Edinburgh History of Scotland, vol 4 * Duncan, A.A.M. ''Scotland: the Making of the Kingdom'' (1975), Edinburgh History of Scotland
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  • ...s only other revival was in 2005 at the [[Edinburgh International Festival|Edinburgh Festival]], when a completely new dramatic version, adapted in turn from Co ...w.edinburghguide.com/festival/2005/fringe/fringe_theatre_preview.shtml The Edinburgh Festival's listing of the revival of "The Frozen Deep."]
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  • ...r G.B. and Hector L. MacQueen, eds. ''Atlas of Scottish History to 1707.'' Edinburgh: The Scottish Medievalists and Department of Geography, 1996. * Ferguson, Willian. ''Scotland: 1689 to the Present Day'' (1968), Edinburgh History of Scotland
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  • | location = Edinburgh
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  • At the foot of the [[Royal Mile]] in [[Edinburgh]], [[Scotland]], and in the shadow of [[Arthur's Seat]], the '''Royal Palac
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  • *Thompson, Graham (2007). ''American Culture in the 1980s''. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-1910-0
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  • {{r|Edinburgh}}
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  • {{Image|Royal Mile.JPG|right|350px|View down the Royal Mile, Edinburgh}} ...main street in [[Edinburgh]]'s Old Town. It runs steadily downhill from [[Edinburgh Castle]] to the Royal Palace of [[Holyroodhouse]] at the foot of [[Arthur's
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  • ...ocates in [[Edinburgh]]. He held successive chairs at the [[University of Edinburgh]], first in Natural Philosophy, then in Moral Philosophy and Pneumatics. In ...e was appointed professor of [[natural philosophy]] in the [[University of Edinburgh]], and in 1764 transferred to the chair of "pneumatics" (mental philosophy)
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  • ...ns in the Scottish church. He helped organise the [[prayer book riots]] in Edinburgh when the new liturgy was introduced, and was among the Supplicants who peti ...signing of the " [[National Covenant]]" began in [[Greyfriars Kirk]], in [[Edinburgh]]. Henderson was mainly responsible for the final form of this document, wh
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  • ...Stamp Act of 1765]] towards the monarch instead. Rush would graduate from Edinburgh in 1768 and time in London and [[Paris]] cultivating his professional and p
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  • ...s seat, Edinburgh.JPG|right|350px|Arthur's Seat, the hill in the centre of Edinburgh overlooks the new Scottish Parliament (bottom left) and "Dynamic Earth" (bo ...ament met at the Assembly Hall at the top of The Mound, in the centre of [[Edinburgh]]. However, a new building was deemed necessary, and the chosen site was in
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  • *[[Edinburgh]]
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  • ...oad, and work with George Barger, a pioneer in the [[peptide]] field, at [[Edinburgh University]] and with Charles R. Harington at London University College Hos
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  • The '''Edinburgh Free Thinkers' Zetetic Society''' was formed in [[Edinburgh]] in 1820 to provide support for the jailed republican and freethinking pub ...aughed at." The Lord Advocate "could not bring himself to believe, that in Edinburgh men could be found so full of wickedness and folly."
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  • * Buchan, James. ''Crowded with Genius: The Scottish Enlightenment: Edinburgh's Moment of the Mind.'' 2003. 436 pp.
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  • ...d verses: social and scientific] By Lord Neaves, William Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh (1868)</ref> ...t Marischal College [[Aberdeen]], and, after passing law examinations in [[Edinburgh]], he was admitted to the Faculty of Advocates in 1737, and was made a Lord
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  • ...tion" of the modern form of the kilt is mired in controversy. In 1785, the Edinburgh Review published a letter, written some years earlier (in 1768) from a gent ...zed to philabeg, again with various spellings). In a letter published in ''Edinburgh Magazine'' for March of 1785, but written some years earlier, in 1768, Ivan
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  • * Prince Phillip, Duke of Edinburgh.
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  • ...parish school of Crawford, and in 1701 was apprenticed to a wig-maker in [[Edinburgh]]. He married Christian Ross in 1712; a few years later he had established ...ngland, including [[John Gay]] and [[Alexander Pope]]. Gay visited him in Edinburgh, and Pope praised his pastoral - compliments which were undoubtedly respons
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  • ...exts/cuvier/cuvier_ed.rev.htm Review of Essay on the Theory of the Earth], Edinburgh Review, January 1814
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  • ...1806 he was also appointed Clerk of Session, which involved attendance in Edinburgh. (This did not add to his income until 1812, when his predecessor accepted ...terary prominence brought him into contact with other writers, not only in Edinburgh, but throughout the United Kingdom. He had strong links with the group ass
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  • ...t project of the UK Cochrane Centre and the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
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  • {{r|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • ...o Stonyhurst College, and further pursued his education in Germany, and at Edinburgh University where he graduated M.B. in 1881 and M.D. in 1885. He had begun t
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  • ...in-chief. He was succeeded by Professor Gareth Leng of the [[University of Edinburgh]] (from 1997 to 2004) by Professor Julia Buckingham of [[Imperial College]]
    3 KB (423 words) - 09:30, 8 August 2011
  • ...ations he made while in a boat on the Union Canal at Hermiston, close to [[Edinburgh]]. He wrote <ref>Report of the fourteenth meeting of the British Associatio
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  • *20 May - Edinburgh, England
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  • ...s first proposed by Professor [[Peter Higgs]] of [[University of Edinburgh|Edinburgh University]] in 1964 as a means to explain the origin of the masses of the
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  • {{r|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}}
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  • ...''. Byron, responding to the attack on his first volume of verse in the ''Edinburgh Quarterly'', also took the opportunity to lambast contemporary poets whom h
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  • ...article on "anatomy". A long article on blindness was written by the blind Edinburgh poet [[Thomas Blacklock]]. ...from his having projected a balloon—a mortal who, though he drudges about Edinburgh as a common printer, with leaky shoes, a skylighted hat, and knee-buckles a
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  • ...self-educated hand loom weaver from [[Dundee]] (although he was born in [[Edinburgh]]) he discovered in 1871 an ability to write poetry of striking banality, i McGonagall is buried in Greyfriars Kirkyard in [[Edinburgh]], where a memorial stone, installed in 1999, is inscribed:
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  • ...ded the Arts course of Marischal College, [[Aberdeen]], and then went to [[Edinburgh]] to obtain the diploma of the [[Royal College of Surgeons]], passing the e ...t Jamieson]]. When, fortuitously, Professor Jamieson asked to recommend an Edinburgh physician with an interest in geology for a medical practice in [[Penzance]
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  • ...nker, [[John Millar]] (1735-1801). He went on to train as an advocate in [[Edinburgh]], adopting "of Huntershill" from the name of the small estate that his fat ...uirmonument.JPG|right|350px|Monument to Thomas Muir, Calton burial ground, Edinburgh}}
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  • ...port for a second edition from Dr Thomas Blacklock, a well-known figure in Edinburgh.<ref>Hecht, H. chs 3 - 5</ref> After his rejection by the Armour family, a Burns now paid a triumphal visit to Edinburgh. [[Walter Scott]], then aged 15, saw him there and described him thus: "Hi
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  • ...om a positive print of lower quality.<ref>Curtis, David. Norman McLaren. Edinburgh: Scottish Arts Council Catalogue, 1977.</ref>
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  • ...r of stories, reviews, and essays for ''[[London Magazine]], [[Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine]], [[Examiner]]'', and ''[[Westminster Review]]''
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  • '''Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh''' (10th June 1921 — 9th April 2021) was the husband of [[Elizabeth II of ..., [[King George VI|George VI of the United Kingdom]] created him [[Duke of Edinburgh]], Earl of Merioneth, and Baron Greenwich with the style of ''[[Royal Highn
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  • ...es]], as well as grandson of [[Elizabeth II]] and [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]].
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  • *1967 Starts at Edinburgh University *1973 Elected Student Rector, Edinburgh University
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  • ...he earliest moving panoramas were shown in the [[United Kingdom]] by the [[Edinburgh]] firm of "Messrs. Marshall" in the 1820s; by mid-century, dozens of showme ...ibitions the Marshalls erected purpose-built rotundas in [[Glasgow]] and [[Edinburgh]]. The exact mechanism used is still imperfectly understood.
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  • ...mason at Lochmaben. Leaving within a year, Telford made his way first to [[Edinburgh]], and thence to [[London, United Kingdom]].
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  • *''The Best Thing in Edinburgh: An Address to the Speculative Society of Edinburgh in March 1873'', edited by K. D. Osbourne (San Francisco: Howell, 1923). ....it/rls/essays/laymor/lm-3.htm ''The Pentland Rising: a page of history''](Edinburgh: Privately printed, Andrew Elliot, 1866). Stevenson's first pamphlet, priva
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  • This represents a timeline of the history of [[Edinburgh]], up to the present day. :'''731''': Edinburgh is possibly the town of ''Guidi'' mentioned by [[Bede]]
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  • ...st at the grammar-school in [[Edinburgh]], and then at the [[University of Edinburgh]], where he studied [[divinity]]. His first volume of Poems was published i ...had not dared to hope. His opinion that I would meet with encouragement in Edinburgh for a second edition, fired me so much, that away I posted for that city, w
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  • ...apier. After dying of [[gout]], Napier was buried in St Cuthbert's Church, Edinburgh.
    12 KB (1,843 words) - 13:57, 29 March 2009
  • *[[Royal Highland Show]] - Ingliston, [[Edinburgh]]
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  • ...ally have a theme; for example, the 40th conference at the [[University of Edinburgh]] focused on 'Technology, Ideology and Practice in Applied Linguistics'.<re
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  • In the United Kingdom, and especially in [[London, United Kingdom]] and [[Edinburgh]] "square" has a wider meaning. There are public squares of the type descri
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  • ...Notes, &c. From 1730&ndash;1773 |year=1899 |publisher=Blackwood |location=Edinburgh |isbn=978-09-47821-17-3}}
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  • ...a]]. Eventually he arrived at Deptford, on May 2nd 1777, and enrolled at [[Edinburgh University]]. He graduated in 1780 and settled in Liverpool.
    8 KB (1,259 words) - 09:03, 9 August 2023
  • ==Career in Edinburgh and Glasgow== ...of the [[Scottish Enlightenment]]. Smith frequented the [[Poker Club]] of Edinburgh.
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  • ..." In 1579 he was appointed chaplain to the young James VI, and returned to Edinburgh. In 1581 episcopacy was abolished as a result of the report of a commission
    4 KB (588 words) - 02:21, 16 May 2009
  • ...nel-in-Chief of the Norwegian Army, Sir Nils Olav, who is a penguin in the Edinburgh, Scotland zoo. <ref name=Penguin>{{citation
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  • ...y history of placebos ] Commentary on: Cullen W (1772). Clinical lectures. Edinburgh, Feb-April, 218-9.In: [http://www.jameslindlibrary.org The James Lind Libra ...vous system and in medicinal chemistry. Along with his contemporaries in [[Edinburgh]], including the economist [[Adam Smith]] and the philosopher [[David Hume]
    9 KB (1,332 words) - 20:35, 8 November 2012
  • ...ng a novice he managed to qualify for the 1970 [[Commonwealth Games]] in [[Edinburgh]] and finished fourth in the final.<ref name="SI">Kenny Moore (1972) [http:
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  • ...n a month of the landing, the charismatic Prince marched unopposed into [[Edinburgh]] and occupied the town. Meanwhile, a motley force under Sir John Cope had
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  • *Anon (1825) ''Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Review'' 23:416
    3 KB (504 words) - 09:48, 18 January 2009
  • ...Nottingham]] on December 12, 1731, and was educated at [[Cambridge]] and [[Edinburgh]]. He formulated one of the first formal theories on [[evolution]] in ''Zoo
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  • Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, Hancock studied sociology at Durham University before working as Graham Bruce Hancock was born in Edinburgh, Scotland. He moved with his parents to India at the age of three, where hi
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  • In June 2010 she will be chartered by [[Edinburgh]]-based oil company [[Cairn Energy UK PLC]] for four months, starting in Ju
    7 KB (859 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...=Cricket Scores, 1730&ndash;1773 |year=1899 |publisher=Blackwood |location=Edinburgh |isbn=978-09-47821-17-3}}
    5 KB (659 words) - 10:26, 2 May 2023
  • ...ample time for reading. He was later appointed resident geologist in the [[Edinburgh]] office of the Geological Survey, where he remained until he retired in 18
    5 KB (823 words) - 07:21, 24 May 2011
  • ...al studies of the pituitary gland that he conducted at The [[University of Edinburgh]]. Herring published his findings in the first volume of the ‘’Quarter
    5 KB (759 words) - 17:09, 21 March 2024
  • ...theme of appetite and obesity were originally written by '''University of Edinburgh''' undergraduate students working in groups of about 4 students:
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  • ...ents".<ref>Fisher RA (1935) ''The Design of Experiments'' Oliver and Boyd, Edinburgh</ref> Fisher was one of the leading scientists of the 20th century, and mad
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  • ...ation as a means of evolving complex solutions,'' MA Thesis, University of Edinburgh. ([http://www.inf.ed.ac.uk/publications/thesis/online/IM050329.pdf pdf])
    4 KB (585 words) - 13:56, 26 September 2007
  • ...sults Deduced from Regnault's Experiments on Steam." ''Transactions of the Edinburgh Royal Society, XVI. January 2.'' [http://visualiseur.bnf.fr/Visualiseur?Des
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  • ...://www.scotsman.com/news/edinburgh-uks-second-most-prosperous-city-2466419 Edinburgh UK's second most prosperous city]'. ''[[The Scotsman]]'', 3rd March 2005.</ ...ay (30th November), and the [[Beltane Fire Festival]] (30th April).<ref>'''Edinburgh Festivals
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  • ...kenzie, A. Fiona D. ''Land, Ecology and Resistance in Kenya, 1880-1952.'' Edinburgh U. Pr., 1998. 286 pp.
    6 KB (781 words) - 02:18, 7 December 2009
  • ...s/Tut6.pdf Tutorial 6: Separation Processes] (J. Skilling, [[University of Edinburgh]], Scotland)</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Maxwell, J.B.|title=Data Book on
    7 KB (1,013 words) - 13:29, 24 October 2012
  • ...An Outrageous New Perspective and Its Implications for Particle Physics]. Edinburgh, Scotland: European Particle Accelerator Conference, 2759-2762.
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  • * HRH The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh
    5 KB (699 words) - 04:28, 1 October 2013
  • ...f>R. Clausius, ''On a Mechanical Theorem applicable to Heat'', The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, vol. '''40''', 4
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  • ...n. The earliest Scottish human settlement, dated to around 8500 BCE.<ref>''Edinburgh.'' By Neil Wilson, Tom Smallman: Page 76 ...between 8500 and 8250 BC (calibrated)."</ref> was found at Cramond, near [[Edinburgh]].
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  • ...ne'' (Edinburgh-based), both Tory, were set up in opposition to the Whig ''Edinburgh Review'', and the ''New Monthly Magazine'' had been a reaction to the ''Mon :• Edinburgh Review, 1802—1929. Highly influential.
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  • ...ly, the Service of Thanksgiving for her late great-grandfather The Duke of Edinburgh earlier this year. ...sister, Zara Tindall, both followed in their late grandfather the Duke of Edinburgh's footsteps and attended Gordonstoun boarding school in Scotland.
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  • ...joined in 2009) and has made many repeat visits. Her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, her son the Prince of Wales and other members of the Royal Family are also #Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh, the King's brother
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  • ...ascot]]s for various organisations.<ref>For example, a king penguin from [[Edinburgh Zoo]] has been made an honorary [[regimental sergeant major]] in the [[Nor
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  • ...ac.uk/home/jjc/psharp/psharp-1.1.3/dlpsharp.html P#] (Jon Cook at Univ. of Edinburgh)
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  • {{seealso|Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh}} ...be on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu believe that [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]] - husband of the UK's Queen [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Elizabet
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  • * 1987: Elected as MP for Edinburgh Central
    7 KB (1,072 words) - 06:12, 8 September 2011
  • ...l had followed his retreating enemy into Scotland, and restored order in [[Edinburgh]], but he had lingered in the north until General Fairfax recalled him to [
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  • '''James Clerk Maxwell''' (Edinburgh, June 13, 1831 &ndash; Cambridge, November 5, 1879) was a [[Scotland|Scotti ...g [[Glasgow]] (110 kilometres north, a full day's journey at the time) and Edinburgh, which was two whole days of travel away.
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  • '''James Clerk Maxwell''' (Edinburgh, June 13, 1831 &ndash; Cambridge, November 5, 1879) was a Scottish physicis ...g [[Glasgow]] (110 kilometres north, a full day's journey at the time) and Edinburgh, which was two whole days of travel away.
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  • *———. ''An Account of the State of the body and Mind in Old Age.'' Edinburgh: N.p., 1807.
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  • ..., School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT, UK. Retrieved March 3, 2008, from Journal of Cell Science 118(200
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  • <td>[[Edinburgh]]</td>
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  • ...ac.uk/~jap/slipher/ Vesto Melvin Slipher] John Peacock, Royal Observatory Edinburgh</ref><ref name=GuthBang>[http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/Guth/Guth_co
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  • :Macaulay, ''Essays contributed to the Edinburgh Review''
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  • The original declaration is on display at the [[Scottish Parliament]] in [[Edinburgh]].[http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/nmCentre/news/news-05/pa05-069.htm]
    8 KB (1,409 words) - 13:01, 12 April 2008
  • ...s, by [[John Sobieski Stuart]]'') was first published by William Tait of [[Edinburgh]] in a limited edition in 1842. John Telfer Dunbar, in his seminal work ''H .... Charles Thompson, ''Scotland's Forged Tartans'', Paul Harris Publishing, Edinburgh, 1980. ISBN 0-904505-67-7.
    15 KB (2,511 words) - 18:23, 15 November 2007
  • ...ene Young, "Enigma Variations: Love, War, and Bletchley Park", Mainstream, Edinburgh, 1990 - Covers everyday life at Bletchley in passing
    8 KB (1,107 words) - 20:30, 10 February 2010
  • ...ds for the History of Science, Technology & the Environment, University of Edinburgh</ref>
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  • ...df Thermodynamics of Pure Substances] Lecture by Mark Gibbs, University of Edinburgh, Scotland.</ref> using this relation:<ref>[http://itll.colorado.edu/HYSYSDo
    10 KB (1,457 words) - 16:09, 23 September 2013
  • ...df Thermodynamics of Pure Substances] Lecture by Mark Gibbs, University of Edinburgh, Scotland.</ref> using this relation:<ref>[http://itll.colorado.edu/HYSYSDo
    10 KB (1,459 words) - 16:10, 23 September 2013
  • ...went to Europe for medical training; 41 were trained at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland before 1775. Smallpox inoculation was introduced 1716-1766, wel
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  • ...h, he returned to Scotland. In 1665 his father was committed to prison in Edinburgh on account of his interregnum activities, and here he shared a cell with Jo
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  • ..., with Scottish Metropolitan, on the site of the former opera house facing Edinburgh Castle. 200,000 sq ft, Saltaire Court was sold to the Abu Dhabi Investment
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  • ...eated a voluntary fund of over £400,000 to build new churches; colleges in Edinburgh and Aberdeen; manses (residences for the ministers) were erected at a cost * Brown, Callum G. ''Religion and Society in Scotland since 1707.'' Edinburgh U. Press, (1997). 219 pp.
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  • ...ang, H. P. |title=Pharamacology |publisher=Churchill Livingstone |location=Edinburgh |year=2003 |pages= 139 |isbn=0-443-07145-4 |oclc= |doi=}}</ref>
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  • ...dition by Chas. H. Devriant, with notes by Sam'l Stratton. Dublin, London, Edinburgh. * 1797-8. Edinburgh Dispensatory. Leipsic. Fleischer. 2 vols.
    18 KB (2,387 words) - 04:31, 13 March 2009
  • ...ng every day (barring bad weather) by his master's grave for his return in Edinburgh, Scotland for fourteen years.<ref> "The Story of Greyfriar's Bobby, Scotlan
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  • ...roportions of Gaelic speakers also live in the cities of [[Glasgow]] and [[Edinburgh]] in Scotland. The [[2001 UK Census]] showed a total of 58,652 Gaelic speak | publisher = Bell and Bradfute, Edinburgh
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  • I hope & trust you will find Edinburgh far pleasanter than you expect, though the lecturing must be a direful brea ...llel roads of Glen Roy’.—(f4) & perhaps I might go further on & see you in Edinburgh if there.— I see I have kept to my determination, in a highly praiseworth
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  • ...ernism: An Anthology of Sources and Documents|location=Edinburgh|publisher=Edinburgh University Press|isbn=0-7486-0973-3}}
    17 KB (2,374 words) - 08:07, 26 April 2024
  • *Wallace AR. 1886. The depression of trade, its causes and its remedies, Edinburgh: Co-operative priting company, limited.
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  • {{rpr|Edinburgh}} (21 January)
    11 KB (1,622 words) - 08:06, 25 February 2012
  • ...lie's Fire Engine'' (1980), a romantic, dreamlike tale of a young boy in [[Edinburgh]]'s dream of being a firefighter.
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  • ...ion's in patients with cystic fibrosis: a pilot study. Clinical nutrition (Edinburgh, Scotland) 2007;26(3):322-8.</ref>
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  • The Balmoral (named after Balmoral Castle, near [[Edinburgh]], [[Scotland]]) is a round, brimless cap, flat on top, with trailing ribbo
    12 KB (2,026 words) - 12:04, 11 January 2011
  • ...nford University]], the [[University of Virginia]] and the [[University of Edinburgh]]).
    13 KB (1,813 words) - 09:09, 26 September 2007
  • ...nal in a bout of depression. A group of poems had just been rejected by an Edinburgh publisher. He was well know for periods of depression. He burned many of hi
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  • ...ecary, and in 1824 he enrolled as a medical student at the [[University of Edinburgh]]. He left the university the following year, completing his medical course
    12 KB (1,908 words) - 07:33, 20 April 2024
  • ...ste Not, Want Not: Food Preservation from Early Times to the Present Day'' Edinburgh University Press, 1991 [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=103265157 onlin
    14 KB (2,026 words) - 11:31, 27 January 2011
  • ...e translating into German the ''Treatise on Materia Medica'' (1789) by the Edinburgh physician [[William Cullen]]. <ref>See Peter Morrell, [http://homeoint.org/ ...thy soon became the preferred treatment of the upper classes: the Dukes of Edinburgh and Beaufort were among Quin's patients, and he became physician to the Duc
    24 KB (3,682 words) - 10:29, 7 October 2010
  • ...issipation of Mechanical Energy'', The Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh for April 19, 1852. [http://visualiseur.bnf.fr/CadresFenetre?O=NUMM-95118&I
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  • ...al centres in Europe.<ref>[http://www.edinburghbrand.com/news/information/ Edinburgh, Inspiring Capital - Information for Journalists] </ref> The largest city i ...the supreme criminal court. Both courts are housed at Parliament House in Edinburgh. <br />
    68 KB (10,286 words) - 17:33, 11 March 2024
  • ...ith some political and satirical pieces. Its sarcastic reception by the [[Edinburgh Review]] brought out Byron's satiric viciousness in ''English Bards and Sco
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  • ...On the Natural Faculties.] English translation by Arthur John Brock, M.D., Edinburgh, London: William Heineman. 1916. [http://books.google.com/books?id=fqhfAAA
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  • ...ow but most of his childhood was spent in Kirkcaldy, across the Firth from Edinburgh. He was the son of the Church of Scotland minister Rev John Brown, whom he At the age of 16, he was accepted by the University of Edinburgh from which he graduated with First Class honours in history in 1972. He wa
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  • ...pressing Trotskyite tracts on bewildered railwaymen at Waverley Station in Edinburgh. He was a supporter of the International Marxist Group, whose publication w
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  • ...wagon driver.<ref>Jim Craig: ''Scotland's Sporting Curiosities'', Birlinn, Edinburgh, 2005</ref> Growing up, Don played a variety of sports before taking up ten
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  • ...icus. The original painting is located in the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, Scotland.
    14 KB (2,057 words) - 07:47, 11 October 2013
  • ...''Poems in two volumes'' (1807) was savagely attacked in the influential ''Edinburgh Review''. [[Lord Byron]] was among those out of sympathy with his style: i
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  • ...''On the Dynamical Theory of Heat'', Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, vol. '''20''', p. 261 (1851).</ref> and [[Rudolf Clausius]]<ref>R. Clausiu
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  • The Jameson's mamba was first described by Traill in 1849.<ref>Traill 1843. Edinburgh new. phil. J., 34 (67): 54.</ref> The genus name is derived from the Ancien
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  • ...open rugby club, given that Liverpool FC is no longer a single entity. [[Edinburgh Academicals RFC]] was founded in the same year and is the oldest football c ...glish members of the RFU) by 1 goal & 1 try to 1 try at Raeburn Place in [[Edinburgh]]. The match was played by teams of 20-a-side and the game lasted for 50 m
    35 KB (5,526 words) - 17:33, 11 March 2024
  • ...J, Samuel G (1998) ''Nature Religion Today: paganism in the modern world'' Edinburgh University Press ISBN: 074861057X</ref>
    17 KB (2,609 words) - 06:14, 15 October 2011
  • ...sults Deduced from Regnault's Experiments on Steam." ''Transactions of the Edinburgh Royal Society, XVI. January 2.'' [http://visualiseur.bnf.fr/Visualiseur?Des
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  • ...British Basketball League]]. The franchise relocated to the Paisley from [[Edinburgh]] in 2002 and have built up a loyal and passionate fan base in the area sin
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  • :Legal challenge to prorogation lodged with Court of Session in Edinburgh (English High Court being on holiday)
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  • ...rdian]], ''The Indian living god, the paedophilia claims and the [[Duke of Edinburgh awards]]'', November 4 2006, page 3, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/india/story
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  • ...roughout the United Kingdom, e.g. [[Royal Victoria Hospital]], [[Netley]]; Edinburgh Royal Infirmary; Cumberland Infirmary; and Liverpool Royal Infirmary; and [
    19 KB (2,912 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • ...bVpAC&pg=PA88 |year= 2000 |publisher= Edinburgh University Pres |location= Edinburgh |isbn= 978-0-7486-1247-5 |page= 88 |pages= |chapter= |chapterurl= }}</ref>{ ...ks?id=NVPQkt0bVpAC&pg=PA142|accessdate=11 October 2012|year=2000|publisher=Edinburgh University Press|isbn=978-0-7486-1247-5|page=142}}</ref><ref name=dhillon/>
    59 KB (8,548 words) - 15:04, 15 April 2024
  • ...ell had followed his retreating enemy into Scotland, and restored order in Edinburgh, but he had lingered in the north until General Fairfax recalled him to Lon ...ish base, Cromwell won a great victory at Dunbar (30 miles [48 km] east of Edinburgh) on Sept. 3, 1650. During the winter he was taken ill and the army bogged d
    36 KB (5,768 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • ...h by Robert Kerr, ''Elements of Chemistry'', 4th edition. William Creech, Edinburgh: (1790) p. 175. [http://books.google.nl/books?id=CGwDAAAAQAAJ&pg=PR1&dq=Ro
    19 KB (3,011 words) - 06:49, 5 October 2009
  • ...rdon, Kathy Buckner and Iona Waterston. The R Package. Napier University (Edinburgh) and the National Centre for Social Research (London). http://www2.napier.a
    24 KB (3,731 words) - 08:40, 1 September 2013
  • ...rdon, Kathy Buckner and Iona Waterston. The R Package. Napier University (Edinburgh) and the National Centre for Social Research (London). http://www2.napier.a
    24 KB (3,739 words) - 08:42, 1 September 2013
  • ...ed way - since I started on Citizendium, I've found developing articles on Edinburgh a lot of fun -learning things I'm glad I've learnt. It's a good community -
    22 KB (3,725 words) - 05:48, 28 August 2020
  • | publisher= [[Edinburgh University Press]]
    35 KB (4,340 words) - 18:42, 26 April 2024
  • ...ran remaining Scottish resistance. Scots leaders were taken hostage, and [[Edinburgh Castle]], amongst others, was seized. Balliol surrendered his realm and spe
    22 KB (3,557 words) - 08:53, 2 March 2024
  • ...h by Robert Kerr, ''Elements of Chemistry'', 4th edition. William Creech, Edinburgh: (1790) p. 175</ref>]]
    22 KB (3,530 words) - 12:07, 10 November 2009
  • ...ran remaining Scottish resistance. Scots leaders were taken hostage, and [[Edinburgh Castle]], amongst others, was seized. Balliol surrendered his realm and spe
    23 KB (3,653 words) - 08:54, 2 March 2024
  • * [[Edinburgh University]]
    21 KB (2,958 words) - 05:06, 8 March 2024
  • ...Life and Work in the Sixteenth Century | publisher=Adam and Charles Black, Edinburgh | year=1890 | id=unknown ISBN }} page 210<!-- found using print.google.com
    23 KB (3,568 words) - 10:30, 2 April 2024
  • ...ing with work on the extensive collections of the [[Royal Museum|Museum of Edinburgh University]], one of the largest museums in Europe at the time.
    48 KB (7,518 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...kson</span> (1824). ''Dendrobium harrisoniae'' in Exotic Flora. 2: t. 120. Edinburgh.</ref> now ''[[Bifrenaria harrisoniae]]''. In 1827, Hooker described the fi
    31 KB (4,478 words) - 17:36, 17 March 2014
  • ...00 youths travelling to the Baba's ashram in order to gain their [[Duke of Edinburgh Award]]s.
    50 KB (7,716 words) - 19:59, 1 November 2013
  • *Kunin, Seth D. "Religion; the modern theories" University of Edinburgh 2003 ISBN 0748615229 [http://books.google.nl/books?hl=en&id=P2ZgBL37gb0C&dq
    34 KB (5,086 words) - 13:35, 15 May 2011
  • * [[The George Hotel (Edinburgh)]]
    25 KB (3,396 words) - 13:29, 2 April 2024
  • ...ides]], [[Orkney Islands]] and [[Shetland Islands]]. The capital city is [[Edinburgh]], the centre of which is a [[World Heritage site]]. The largest city is [[ ...gest. The capitals of the UK's constituent countries are London (England), Edinburgh (Scotland), Cardiff (Wales) and Belfast (Northern Ireland). London is by fa
    55 KB (8,409 words) - 06:07, 3 April 2024
  • The [[G8]] summit in Edinburgh, agrees to increase aid for developing countries by $50 billion.<br>
    33 KB (4,932 words) - 16:57, 29 March 2024
  • ...othergill]] (1712-1780) who evaded the ban on nonconformists by going to [[Edinburgh University]] and became a leading proponent of empirically-based medicine a
    29 KB (4,527 words) - 13:07, 23 June 2023
  • ...erguson, Dugald Stewart and William Robertson were at the [[University of Edinburgh]]. Some important figures outside the academy included Lord Kames, Sir Jame
    36 KB (5,507 words) - 23:15, 7 March 2024
  • ::You also visited [[Edinburgh]] and drank some [[whiskey]]. I see all.... [[User:Aleta Curry|Aleta Curry
    35 KB (5,688 words) - 13:28, 2 April 2024
  • ..., Hunter JAA, eds. Davidson's principles and practice of medicine 19th ed. Edinburgh: Elsevier Science, 2002:147-63. ISBN 0-44307-035-0.</ref>
    39 KB (5,361 words) - 17:35, 10 February 2024
  • ...century it was a prominent treatment in the Manchester Infirmary. In 1841 Edinburgh physician John Hughes Bennett (1812-75) published a treatise on cod liver o
    31 KB (4,567 words) - 15:35, 30 October 2013
  • ...le=Our health service is the envy of the world, so let's cherish it|author=Edinburgh Evening News|date=07 July 2008}}</ref> <ref name="Channel4news">{{Cite news
    57 KB (8,460 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...s M1 receptors.<ref name= 'toxin37'>Rang, H. P. (2003). ''Pharamacology.'' Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone. pp. 139. ISBN 0-443-07145-4.</ref> The [[calcisepti
    38 KB (5,884 words) - 14:21, 8 March 2024
  • ...tes College] - official website.</ref> an elite private boarding school in Edinburgh. He took an active part in school sports, played major parts in school play
    97 KB (14,706 words) - 16:57, 29 March 2024
  • ...uthrie D (1953) ''Lind's Treatise on Scurvy.'' Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh. 227-231.
    87 KB (12,868 words) - 00:29, 15 September 2013
  • ...Notes, &c. From 1730&ndash;1773 |year=1899 |publisher=Blackwood |location=Edinburgh |isbn=978-09-47821-17-3}}
    133 KB (20,397 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...rforming, and sometimes directing revues in London, Cambridge and at the [[Edinburgh Fringe]]. He has also worked as a hospital porter, barn builder, chicken sh
    49 KB (7,935 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...hes between cities; for example the London Chess Club played against the [[Edinburgh]] Chess Club in 1824.<ref>[http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessplayer?pid=8
    64 KB (10,049 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...November 1879, Grace finally received his diploma from the [[University of Edinburgh]], having qualified as a Licentiate of the [[Royal College of Physicians]]
    70 KB (11,538 words) - 11:48, 5 February 2024
  • |'''Edinburgh''' (-brə)
    61 KB (9,656 words) - 09:17, 2 March 2024
  • ...in C.|coauthors=Brendon Griffin|title=Lights, Camera, Soundtracks|location=Edinburgh|publisher=Canongate|year=2008|pages=170|isbn=978-1-84767-003-8|oclc=2636527
    67 KB (10,619 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • ...een a glimmering of ways to improve that attractiveness: the University of Edinburgh people on Eduzendium are showing a difference that seems based on having co ...nt "fringe" author and science editor, is the reason for the University of Edinburgh being here. He is training the exact type people that we want - those that
    216 KB (35,266 words) - 10:45, 7 March 2024
  • ...t include the [[A1 road|A1 Great North Road]] from London to Newcastle and Edinburgh, and the [[A580 road]] between Liverpool and Manchester. The [[Preston Bypa
    75 KB (11,181 words) - 07:31, 20 April 2024
  • ...tion; and there were other obligations. In August 1962 he travelled to the Edinburgh Festival in the U.K., which had organized an extensive retrospective of his
    79 KB (12,463 words) - 00:52, 15 September 2013
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