| Peter Clemoes Peter Alan Martin Clemoes (20 January 1920 – 16 March 1996) was a British historian.Born in Southend-on-Sea and educated at Brentwood School, he originally wished to become an actor and won a scholarship to RADA but the Second World War intervened and he served with the Royal Corps of Signals. Peter_Clemoes
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| Articles for creation/2008-03-31 Wikipedia:Articles_for_creation/2008-03-31
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| Martin Postle Dr. Martin Postle serves as the assistant director of the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, London, United Kingdom, and is an expert on Sir Joshua Reynolds. Martin_Postle
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| William Cole (musician) William Charles Cole (9 October 1909 - 9 May 1997) was a conductor, composer and organist. He studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London, where he won the Stewart Macpherson Prize in 1933. In 1945 he became Professor of Harmony and Composition at the RAM, in which post he remained until 1962. He succeeded Ralph Vaughan Williams as conductor of the Leith Hill Music Festival in 1954. William_Cole_(musician)
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| Mark Girouard Mark Girouard (born 1931) is a British architectural writer, an authority on the country house, leading architectural historian, and biographer of James Stirling. He worked for many years for Country Life magazine. He was Slade Professor of Fine Art from 1975 to 1976. He became a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1987.His Life in the English Country House won the Duff Cooper Memorial Prize for 1978, and the WH Smith Literary Award in 1979. Mark_Girouard
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| Christian Maclagan Christian Maclagan (181110 May 1901) was a Scottish antiquary and probably the first female archaeologist in Great Britain. Christian_Maclagan
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| Harold McCarter Taylor Harold McCarter Taylor CBE TD (13 May 1907 - 23 October 1995) was a New Zealand-born British mathematician, theoretical physicist and academic administrator, but is best known as a historian of architecture and the author, with his first wife Joan Taylor, née Sills, of the three volumes of Anglo-Saxon Architecture, published between 1965 and 1978. Harold_McCarter_Taylor
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| Harold Plenderleith Harold Plenderleith (19 September 1898 - 2 November 1997) was a Scottish art conservator and archaeologist. Harold_Plenderleith
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| Richard J. Harrison Richard J. Harrison (b. August 1949) is an archaeologist and Professor in the University of Bristol, England. Harrison studied at Selwyn College, Cambridge, and gained his Bachelor’s degree in Archaeology and Anthropology from the University of Cambridge in 1970. Richard_J._Harrison
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| Articles for deletion/Log/2008 November 24 Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Log/2008_November_24
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| Articles for deletion/Burgon Society Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Burgon_Society
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| Sabatino Moscati Sabatino Moscati (November 24 1922 CE Sabatino directed a number of excavations in the process of which he established himself internationally, winning the Lamarmora Prize for his studies of Sardinia, the Selinon Prize for Sicily, the Sybaris Magna Grecia Prize for his research in ancient Italy and the I cavalli d'oro di San Marco for his oriental work. Sabatino_Moscati
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| Normanton Down Barrows Normanton Down is a Neolithic and Bronze Age barrow cemetery located south of Stonehenge in the county of Wiltshire, England. It dates from between 2600 and 1600 B.C. and consists of a Neolithic long barrow and Bronze Age round barrows. Normanton_Down_Barrows
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| Robert Leslie Pollington Milburn Very Rev Robert Leslie Pollington Milburn, FSA (28 July 1907 Anglican clergyman in the Twentieth Century. He was educated at Oundle and Sidney Sussex and ordained in 1935. Between then and 1957 he was Fellow, Tutor and Chaplain at Worcester College, Oxford . He was then elevated to the Deanery of Worcester Cathedral where he served until 1968. Robert_Leslie_Pollington_Milburn
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