Marking the 105th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide: What I have learned from the Quaker Woman Edith Roberts
Whispers of truth : Greenwood, Ormerod [Free account required]
viii, 400 p., [8] leaves of plates : 21 cm
water-bottle | British Museum
Calabash water-bottle with a dark red patina, decorated with animal and geometric forms executed in white.
religious/ritual equipment (?); ornament (?) | British Museum
Formerly owned by James Backhouse.
photographic print | British Museum
Photograph (b&w) of a group of seated Quakers (Indian and European), taken at an unknown place in India, in front of a row of trees. Second row from the back, sixth person in from the left (lady with a black hat), is Mrs Wood(s) to whom, at Selly Oak near Birmingham, R Tagore gave some of his paintings in about 1930. These objects were bought by the BM in 2004 and 2005 [info. from Indar Pasricha].
cloth | British Museum
Strip of raffia cloth; woven with fringes along each short side.
cloth; shroud | British Museum
Length of woven silk with two fringed ends; striped pattern of brown, green, light brown and black striped silk.
cloth; shroud | British Museum
Silk cloth; rectangle of purple silk with fringed borders, with blue and white floating wefts on two side, and the other two sides bordered with narrow strips with geometric patterns in black and white silk. Knotted fringe along each short side.
Welcome | Historical Photographs of China
Includes a few photos of FFMA members
Collections Online | British Museum
Quaker & Special Collections · Testimonies in Art & Action: Igniting Pacifism in the Face of Total War
Includes digitised versions of FSC pamphlets and Peace Committee posters
The Antananarivo annual and Madagascar magazine 1881
The Antananarivo annual and Madagascar magazine 1882
The Antananarivo annual and Madagascar magazine 1884
The Antananarivo annual and Madagascar magazine 1883
The Antananarivo annual and Madagascar magazine 1875-1878
The children of Madagascar : Standing, Herbert, 1846-1923.
176 pages : 21 cm
Quakers in India : a forgotten century : Sykes, Marjorie
x, 178 p. ; 22 cm
The Madagascar mission; : Sibree, James, 1836-1929
History of the work of the London Missionary Society
Conferences of Christian workers among Moslems 1924 a brief account of the conferences together with their findings and lists of members
152 Seiten 8°
Notes of mission work in Madagascar (1881) : Matthews, Thomas Trotter, 1842-
vi, 164 p. : 21 cm
A Handbook of foreign missions : containing an account of the principal Protestant missionary societies in Great Britain, with notices of those on the Continent and in America; also an apendix on Roman Catholic missions
THE FRIEND OF ARMENIA / ДРУГ АРМЕНИИ / ՀԱՅԱՍՏԱՆԻ ԸՆԿԵՐ 1911-1928 :
Newsletter of the Society of the Friends of Armenia
Birmingham Quakers and the Spanish Civil War
This month is the 80th anniversary of the start of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) when the right-wing Nationalists led by General Franco attempted to overthrow the left-wing democratically elect…
From the Nameless to the Nameless by Maggie Brookes
In 1947 the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the British and American Quakers for their "compassionate effort to relieve human suffering,"...
British Quaker Aid to Spanish Republican Exiles in Concentration Camps in the South of France by Linda Palfreeman
When a failed military coup provoked civil war in Spain in July 1936, British Quakers were among the first t respond to the tremendous need for humanitarian aid among the civilian population. They distributed food and clothing, set up canteens and hospitals, provided schooling and workshops, and organized the evacuation of children from war zones. Then, in January 1939, when the Spanish Republic finally succumbed to the might of the rebel forces, the Quakers accompanied thousands of refugees in their flight towards the French border. This became known as ‘la retirada’ (the Retreat). Once in French territory, the refugees were herded into improvised internment camps. These were simply vast open spaces on the beaches encircled by barbed wire, with no shelter, no latrines and barely any food. Quakers were the first to obtain permits to access the camps in order to alleviate the suffering and deprivation found there. They distributed not only the most basic aid such as food and clothing, but also pencils and notebooks, as well as tools and materials of all kinds to work with. Thus, in characteristic fashion, they provided people with the means by which they could help themselves.
Spanish Civil War, 25 March - 18 April 1937 | ArchiveSearch [CATALOGUE RECORD ONLY]
Report by Helen Grant at Cambridge University Library
The Spanish Civil War: a war against children
Children suffered terribly during the Spanish Civil War, as author Maggie Brookes explains. Her new book, Acts of Love and War, tells the story of the dedicated individuals who stepped in to help the children
Chinese translations
Work to add all the Library’s printed materials to our online catalogue continues, reaching into some less visited corners of the collections. In the angle of the reading room gallery sits a collec…
Oxford Network for Armenian Genocide Research
Oxford Network for Armenian Genocide Research founded by Suzan Meryem Rosita Kalayci and Theo Maarten van Lint