The Tavern Clock


Book Description




Rags to Bones


Book Description

A child is lost, a village searching through the night, a body found, an itinerant hawker seen in the vicinity but is he all that he appears to be? These are the ingredients of a murder story that really took place in the Derbyshire village of Brimington in August of 1881. The newspaper reporters of the day covered the story in the greatest detail- the arrest, the inquest, the funeral, the magistrates' hearings, the frenzy of the locals who wanted to take the law into their own hands, the incarceration of the alleged murderer, the trial before a High Court judge and the verdict. Follow the events and the characters involved day by day until the eventual outcome unfolds in November of 1881.




The Tavernicus Tavern Clock Archive


Book Description

This book is a companion to The Tavern Clock which was published in 2010. It updates the reference section of the original book with detailed descriptions of over 500 tavern clocks and is the sole research source for this branch of horology.













Tansu


Book Description

Tansu, the unique cabinetry of Japan, springs from a rich folk-art tradition. This book is lavishly illustrated with 27 full-color plates and over 260 monochrome photographs of spectacular chests and elegant details. It is divided into two parts, the first on history and the second on techniques. It also includes an invaluable guide to purchasing and conserving tansu.




和家具


Book Description

Focusing on the furniture of the Edo and early Meiji periods, this text lookst the history, aesthetics and techniques of hand-worked traditional Japaneseurniture.




Medieval Buda


Book Description




Between the Living and the Dead


Book Description

Éva Pócs, one of the most highly respected scholars of historical anthropology, has undertaken extensive research on the history of folk beliefs connected with communication and the supernatural sphere. In this book, she examines the relics of European shamanism in early modern sources, and the techniques and belief-systems of mediators found in the records of witchcraft trials from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. The book explores the various communication systems known to early modern Hungarians, describes the role of these systems in everyday village life, and shows how they were connected to contemporary European systems, as well as new types of mediators and systems which function right up to the twentieth century. Representing a major contribution to the most up-to-date international research, Eva Pócs draws on significant East European material and literature not previously co-ordinated with that from the West.