Q329 (Q329): Difference between revisions

From Beyond Notability
Property / was member of: Hampshire Field Club & Archaeological Society / qualifier
 
point in time: 1920
Timestamp+1920-00-00T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 year
Before0
After0
Property / was member of: Hampshire Field Club & Archaeological Society / qualifier
point in time: 1930
Timestamp+1930-00-00T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 year
Before0
After0
 

Revision as of 13:09, 15 July 2022

No description defined
Language Label Description Also known as
English
No label defined
No description defined

    Statements

    0 references
    Addition, Profession or Occupation: wife of John Hautenville Cope Esq. (English)
    Qualification: Expert decipherer of old documents in English, French, Latin + Welsh. Lecturer on History of Heraldry, Parish Registers + Precious Stones. (English)
    Publications. History of Royal Berks Militia; Annals of a Country Churchyard, How to Decipher Old Documents (3 editions), Register of Heraldry Yorks, Ready to ????? "A New Method for Heraldry identification", Donor of Documents + MSS to the B. M., The Bodleian Library + Reading University + Library. (English)
    1 March 1934
    June 1921Gregorian
    An index of postal payments for Congress of Archaeological Societies correspondence indicates that the Earthworks Committee wrote two letters to Cope relating to a refulsal to provide information for the Earthworks Report. It is unclear whether the refusal relates to Cope or someone else. (British English)
    1 reference
    CAS 004/01 (formerly MS 990/4/1) Congress of Archaeological Societies Accounts for Correspondence book (English)
    Expert decipherer of old documents in English, French, Latin + Welsh. (English)
    unknown value
    0 references
    https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q5372794
    0 references
    https://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50082086/
    0 references
    1004284
    https://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/library/browse/personDetails.xhtml?personId=1004284
    0 references
    unknown value
    1 reference
    Given that users may assume our subjects are white and British, this is part of an attempt to make explicit unknowns, or at least things that are unrecorded in our sources. This seems central to the project goals, and has been the subject of much discussino with Amara. (English)
    22 December 2021