Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Catalogue of the Books and Papers for the Most Part Relating to Cambridge
View through CrossRef
John Willis Clark, the Cambridge academic and antiquarian, began collecting literature connected with Cambridge in the 1860s. In 1910 he bequeathed to Cambridge University Library his collection of over ten thousand books, pamphlets and pieces of print relating, directly or indirectly, to Cambridge University, including some whose primary reference is to the town or county of Cambridge. Published in 1912, this catalogue documents Clark's extensive collection, listing the literature he amassed from all periods and upon every subject. Clark had a particular interest in college architecture and tracing the growth of the collegiate system, which explains the inclusion of works relating to Oxford and Eton in the collection. Arranged as a dictionary catalogue, with authors and subjects listed alphabetically, the work reflects Clark's aim to illustrate the history and development of Cambridge through its literature, from an historical and biographical point of view.
Cambridge University Press
Title: Catalogue of the Books and Papers for the Most Part Relating to Cambridge
Description:
John Willis Clark, the Cambridge academic and antiquarian, began collecting literature connected with Cambridge in the 1860s.
In 1910 he bequeathed to Cambridge University Library his collection of over ten thousand books, pamphlets and pieces of print relating, directly or indirectly, to Cambridge University, including some whose primary reference is to the town or county of Cambridge.
Published in 1912, this catalogue documents Clark's extensive collection, listing the literature he amassed from all periods and upon every subject.
Clark had a particular interest in college architecture and tracing the growth of the collegiate system, which explains the inclusion of works relating to Oxford and Eton in the collection.
Arranged as a dictionary catalogue, with authors and subjects listed alphabetically, the work reflects Clark's aim to illustrate the history and development of Cambridge through its literature, from an historical and biographical point of view.
Related Results
Structural Integrity of Fasteners: Second Volume
Structural Integrity of Fasteners: Second Volume
Description
The latest in structural integrity of fasteners, including manufacturing processes, methods and models for predicting crack initiation and propagation, f...
Catalogue and Catalogic
Catalogue and Catalogic
This chapter argues for the prevalence and importance of catalogues in the poems of the Cycle, discussed in light of several new studies of the epic catalogue. Some inset narrative...
The ‘Catalogue of Heroines’
The ‘Catalogue of Heroines’
The chapter contains the analysis of the so-called ‘Catalogue of Heroines’ in which the idea of the ‘poetics of Hades’ is fully explained through the discussion of the narratives o...
Skiing Trauma and Safety: Thirteenth Volume
Skiing Trauma and Safety: Thirteenth Volume
Description
The newest volume in this series examines 16 peer-reviewed papers that reflect the latest worldwide research in the effort to reduce the risk of injury i...
Lead in Paint, Soil and Dust: Health Risks, Exposure Studies, Control Measures, Measurement Methods, and Quality Assurance
Lead in Paint, Soil and Dust: Health Risks, Exposure Studies, Control Measures, Measurement Methods, and Quality Assurance
Description
First publication of its kind to present current, wide-ranging data on the effects of exposure to lead from paint, soil and dust. Features the latest res...
Catalogue of the Valuable Library of the Late Rev. Henry Richards Luard
Catalogue of the Valuable Library of the Late Rev. Henry Richards Luard
The academic, university administrator and clergyman Henry Richards Luard (1825–91) graduated from Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1847. He became a fellow and lecturer for several ...
Year Books of the Reign of King Edward the Third
Year Books of the Reign of King Edward the Third
The records of the medieval English courts were compiled into manuscript 'year books', organised by regnal year of the monarch, and further subdivided into the four law terms. The ...
The Scientific Papers of Sir William Herschel
The Scientific Papers of Sir William Herschel
By the time of his death, William Herschel (1738–1822) had built revolutionary telescopes, identified hundreds of binary stars, and published astronomical papers in over forty volu...

