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Fallar verdade a mentir

Monographic bibliographic item
Monografia

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CREATOR

Garrett | | Almeida | | 1799-1854

DATE

1801-01-01 - Tue Dec 31 00:19:32 CET 1901

LANGUAGE

por

ITEMS

62

INSTITUTION

Teatro Nacional D. Maria II - Biblioteca|Arquivo

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

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METADATA

Creator

Garrett | | Almeida | | 1799-1854

Type

language materials, manuscript

Language

por

Country

Portugal

DataProvider

Teatro Nacional D. Maria II - Biblioteca|Arquivo

Provider

RNOD-Portugal

Year

1855

DatasetName

10501_Ag_PT_RNOD

Begin

1801-01-01
Mon Jan 01 01:00:00 CET 1855
Thu Jan 01 01:00:00 CET 1801
Wed Jan 01 01:00:00 CET 1851

End

1900-12-31
Mon Dec 31 01:00:00 CET 1855
Mon Dec 31 00:19:32 CET 1900
Tue Dec 31 00:19:32 CET 1901
Fri Dec 31 01:00:00 CET 1875

Language

pt

Created

2019-06-07T06:09:50.093Z
2020-10-30T15:11:55.280876Z
2020-10-30T15:11:55.281298Z

Record ID

/10501/bib_rnod_211074

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A szociáldemokrácia és a katolikus egyház

20 Items

Family papers of teacher Sándor Frits (27 June 1907 - ?), Putnok. School paper from the Teacher Training College. || Frits Sándor (1907. június 27. - ?) putnoki tanító családi iratanyaga. Tanítóképző - intézeti dolgozat. || || Frits Sándor (1907. június 27. - ?) putnoki tanító családi iratanyaga. Tanítóképző - intézeti dolgozat. || Family papers of teacher Sándor Frits (27 June 1907 - ?), Putnok. School paper from the Teacher Training College.

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'What a Life!' A British humorous postcard.

1 Item

The printed details on the back of this postcard include the following pieces of information: ‘H. B. Series. Entire British Production. London, E.C. / No. 758’. The illustration on the front, signed ‘A. E.’ by the artist, conveys many visual and written messages. The central figures are a father pushing his baby son in a pram. He is looking at a newspaper billboard that exclaims: ‘WAR NEWS / ANOTHER GREAT BATTLE – ENORMOUS CASUALTIES!’. The Post Office in the background has two posters in the window; the larger one states: ‘MATERNITY BENEFIT 30/ / INSURANCE ACT.’. The comment positioned at the bottom of the scene reads, ‘WHAT A LIFE ! LLOYD GEORGE GIVES THE KID THIRTY BOB TO COME INTO THE WORLD, AND LORD DERBY GIVES THE FATHER TWO AND NINE TO GET OUT OF IT!’ The mentions of Lloyd George, ‘THIRTY BOB’ and ‘MATERNITY BENEFIT 30/’ refer to the National Insurance Act of 1911, according to which workers who contributed to this compulsory health-insurance scheme were entitled to, amongst other benefits, maternity benefit of 30 shillings. David Lloyd George (1863–1945), who proposed the act, was Chancellor of the Exchequer at the time. Lord Edward Derby (1865–1948) had also made a proposal (in August 1914): the raising of battalions of what later became known as ‘Pals’. His name is additionally associated with a scheme: on becoming Director–General of Recruiting, in 1915 he established the Group Scheme, or Derby Scheme, by which men between the ages of 18 and 40 were encouraged voluntarily to attest that they would serve in the military when needed, until that time being entitled to wear an armband, or brassard, to signal that they were not cowardly shirkers. Those who attested that they would join the British Army wore a khaki armband emblazoned with a red king’s crown; those who opted for the Royal Navy wore a blue armband with a red fouled anchor. They also received 2 shillings 9 pence for the day of attestation, this being a day’s pay for an infantryman. His armband identifies the father in this scene as a ‘Derby man’ who has attested for the army. It additionally dates the postcard to the end of 1915, for the Derby Scheme only operated from October to December of that year. || A British postcard. || || Postcard || A British comic postcard: 'What a life!'

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A girl wearing a British soldier's cap.

1 Item

The small girl who was placed on a wooden chair in order for her photograph to be taken in a garden clearly moved as the shutter clicked: her left hand and leg are notably blurred. It is difficult to make out the details of the badge on the soldier’s cap that she is sporting, but it may be that of the Northamptonshire Regiment. || A real photographic postcard || || Photograph || A real photographic postcard of a small girl

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