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Showing items 1 - 9 of 9

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  • Collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) / Federation University Australia
Full Text
5No 4Yes
Creator
3Coventry, C. J. 1Bullen, Heatheranne 1Butler, Nicholas 1Coleridge, Edward 1Edmonds, Leigh 1Taffe, Michael
Subject
32102 Curatorial and Related Studies 32103 Historical Studies 2Prisons -History - Victoria 1Architecture 1Australian History 1Australian history 1Ballarat 1Ballarat Gaol 1Bendigo 1Bendigo Gaol 1British West Indies 1Chinese 1Collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) / Federation University. 1Colony of Victoria 1Compensation 1Gaol construction 1Goldfields 1Legacies of British slave ownership 1Panopticon 1Piranesi
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Format Type
4Adobe Acrobat PDF
Resource Type
8Journal article 4Book review 1Forum article
Facets
Full Text
5No 4Yes
Creator
3Coventry, C. J. 1Bullen, Heatheranne 1Butler, Nicholas 1Coleridge, Edward 1Edmonds, Leigh 1Taffe, Michael
Subject
32102 Curatorial and Related Studies 32103 Historical Studies 2Prisons -History - Victoria 1Architecture 1Australian History 1Australian history 1Ballarat 1Ballarat Gaol 1Bendigo 1Bendigo Gaol 1British West Indies 1Chinese 1Collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) / Federation University. 1Colony of Victoria 1Compensation 1Gaol construction 1Goldfields 1Legacies of British slave ownership 1Panopticon 1Piranesi
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Format Type
4Adobe Acrobat PDF
Resource Type
8Journal article 4Book review 1Forum article
  • Title
  • Creator
  • Date

Book review. Fred Cahir, Ian D Clark and Philip A Clarke .Aboriginal Biocultural Knowledge in South Eastern Australia: perspectives of Early Colonists.

- Bullen, Heatheranne

  • Authors: Bullen, Heatheranne
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article , Book review
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 1
  • Full Text: false
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Book review - Aboriginal Biocultural Knowledge in South Eastern Australia: perspectives of Early Colonists, Fred Cahir, Ian D Clark and Philip A Clarke, Carlton South, Victoria: CSIRO Publishing, 2018, 360pp, RRP:$69.95. ISBN: 9781486306114.

Book review. Miss Ex-Yugoslavia Sofja Stefanovic, Viking, Melbourne, Victoria, 2018,

- Butler, Nicholas

  • Authors: Butler, Nicholas
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article , Book review
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 1
  • Full Text: false
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Book review of Miss Ex-Yugoslavia. Sofja Stefanovic, Viking, Melbourne, Victoria, 2018, 288pp. RRP: $34.99, ISBN: 9780143785453.
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How to make an entrance: Piranesi comes to Ballarat

- Coleridge, Edward


  • Authors: Coleridge, Edward
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Forum article
  • Relation: Before/Now : journal of the Collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 5-10
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: "The inside front cover of this publication carries an image of CRCAH's front door, the main gateway to the former Ballarat Gaol. It is a magnificent example of nineteenth century masonry work. The massive bluestone blocks were carved and chiselled into a grand classical edifice, making a fitting southern finale in scale and significance to the great range of buildings on either side of Lydiard Street. The remarkable architectural statement of a confident gold rich city runs from the os­tentatious neo-classical railway station at the northern end past the Art Gallery, the Mining Exchange, the palatial former Post Office (now housing the studios of the university Arts Academy) and on along the facades of banks, hotels, theatres and churches, in a melody of styles from palladian to gothic (with some 20th century intrusions) down to the suitably 'redbrick' buildings of the Ballarat School of Mines. Here the road swings round to the west so the range of prison buildings bookend the whole composition with a dramatic solemn coda " -From forum article

How to make an entrance: Piranesi comes to Ballarat

  • Authors: Coleridge, Edward
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Forum article
  • Relation: Before/Now : journal of the Collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 5-10
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: "The inside front cover of this publication carries an image of CRCAH's front door, the main gateway to the former Ballarat Gaol. It is a magnificent example of nineteenth century masonry work. The massive bluestone blocks were carved and chiselled into a grand classical edifice, making a fitting southern finale in scale and significance to the great range of buildings on either side of Lydiard Street. The remarkable architectural statement of a confident gold rich city runs from the os­tentatious neo-classical railway station at the northern end past the Art Gallery, the Mining Exchange, the palatial former Post Office (now housing the studios of the university Arts Academy) and on along the facades of banks, hotels, theatres and churches, in a melody of styles from palladian to gothic (with some 20th century intrusions) down to the suitably 'redbrick' buildings of the Ballarat School of Mines. Here the road swings round to the west so the range of prison buildings bookend the whole composition with a dramatic solemn coda " -From forum article

Book review : Clive Ponting, Churchill

- Coventry, C. J.

  • Authors: Coventry, C. J.
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article , Book review
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 1
  • Full Text: false
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Book review : Clive Ponting, Sinclair-Stevenson, London, 1994, 960pp. ISBN: 978-1856195737

Book review. The Menzies Era: The years that shaped modern Australia

- Coventry, C. J.

  • Authors: Coventry, C. J.
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Before/Now : journal of the Collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 1
  • Full Text: false
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Book review of The Menzies Era: The years that shaped modern Australia John Howard, Harper Collins, Sydney, 2014, 720pp. RRP:$59.99, ISBN: 9781743097977
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Links in the chain: British slavery, Victoria and South Australia

- Coventry, C. J.


  • Authors: Coventry, C. J.
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 27-56
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Beneficiaries of British slavery were present in colonial Victoria and provincial South Australia, a link overlooked by successive generations of historians. The Legacies of British Slave-ownership database, hosted by University College, London, reveals many people in these colonies as having been connected to slave money awarded as compensation by the Imperial Parliament in the 1830s. This article sets out the beneficiaries to demonstrate the scope of exposure of the colonies to slavery. The list includes governors, jurists, politicians, clergy, writers, graziers and financiers, as well as various instrumental founders of South Australia. While Victoria is likely to have received more of this capital than South Australia, the historical significance of compensation is greater for the latter because capital from beneficiaries of slavery, particularly George Fife Angas and Raikes Currie, ensured its creation. Evidence of beneficiaries of slavery surrounds us in the present in various public honours and notable buildings.

Links in the chain: British slavery, Victoria and South Australia

  • Authors: Coventry, C. J.
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 27-56
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Beneficiaries of British slavery were present in colonial Victoria and provincial South Australia, a link overlooked by successive generations of historians. The Legacies of British Slave-ownership database, hosted by University College, London, reveals many people in these colonies as having been connected to slave money awarded as compensation by the Imperial Parliament in the 1830s. This article sets out the beneficiaries to demonstrate the scope of exposure of the colonies to slavery. The list includes governors, jurists, politicians, clergy, writers, graziers and financiers, as well as various instrumental founders of South Australia. While Victoria is likely to have received more of this capital than South Australia, the historical significance of compensation is greater for the latter because capital from beneficiaries of slavery, particularly George Fife Angas and Raikes Currie, ensured its creation. Evidence of beneficiaries of slavery surrounds us in the present in various public honours and notable buildings.
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The Gaol on the hill: The prelude to and construction of Bendigo's sandstone gaol

- Edmonds, Leigh


  • Authors: Edmonds, Leigh
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 47-58
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: The gold rushes on the Victorian goldfields of the 1850s increased the population of the new colony seven times over. This created many problems for the new government, not the least of which was an increase in lawlessness which put authorities under severe pressure to house the rapidly growing convict population. Other issues confronting colonial prison administrators were the mobility of the population as gold seekers moved to the latest finds, the presence of a large Chinese population on the goldfields and the housing of the mentally disturbed. At the same time, new philosophies in prison design gave the Victorian government the potential to replace its first, hastily constructed, goals with the latest ‘state of the art’ prisons at strategic locations across the goldfields.

The Gaol on the hill: The prelude to and construction of Bendigo's sandstone gaol

  • Authors: Edmonds, Leigh
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 47-58
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: The gold rushes on the Victorian goldfields of the 1850s increased the population of the new colony seven times over. This created many problems for the new government, not the least of which was an increase in lawlessness which put authorities under severe pressure to house the rapidly growing convict population. Other issues confronting colonial prison administrators were the mobility of the population as gold seekers moved to the latest finds, the presence of a large Chinese population on the goldfields and the housing of the mentally disturbed. At the same time, new philosophies in prison design gave the Victorian government the potential to replace its first, hastily constructed, goals with the latest ‘state of the art’ prisons at strategic locations across the goldfields.

Book review - Avenue of Memories Phil Roberts, Arch of Victory – Avenue of Honour Committee, Ballarat, 2018

- Taffe, Michael

  • Authors: Taffe, Michael
  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article , Book review
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 1
  • Full Text: false
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Book review of - Avenue of Memories Phil Roberts, Arch of Victory – Avenue of Honour Committee, Ballarat, 2018, 25299. RRP: $50.00, ISBN: 098028449X, 9780980284492.
Quick View

Events


  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 70-71
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Events

Events

  • Date: 2019
  • Type: Text , Journal article
  • Relation: Before/Now : Journal of the collaborative Research Centre in Australian History (CRCAH) Vol. 1, no. 1 (2019), p. 70-71
  • Full Text:
  • Reviewed:
  • Description: Events

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