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The most important items in the Library are the six original bound manuscripts of Pepys's diary but there are other remarkable holdings, including: [1]. Naval records compiled by Pepys when he was Secretary to the Admiralty, including two of the "Anthony Rolls", illustrating the Royal Navy's ships circa 1546, including the Mary Rose.
The Royal Institute of British Architects has named The New Library of Magdalene College in Cambridge the winner of its 2022 prize. ... Inside, students can enjoy wide reading rooms, private desks ...
Jointly with Andrew Watson in the early 1970s, Roberts edited John Dee's Library Catalogue. John Dee (1527–1608/9) was a consultant to Queen Elizabeth I who devoted much of his life to the study of alchemy and divination. [3] [4] They published a new edition in 1990 [5] and continued to provide amendments and corrections. [6]
After graduating B.A. from Magdalene College, Cambridge, in 1771, [1] he went on the Grand Tour where he encountered Thomas Coke. Kerrich was a Fellow of Magdalene, and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries from 1797. [1] He collected ancient Roman coins and published papers on architecture, sepulchres and coffins.
Lady Isabel's Tragedy, or "The Lady Isabella's Tragedy; or, The Step-Mother's Cruelty" is a broadside ballad, which dates from, by estimation of the English Short Title Catalogue, as early as 1672 and as late as 1779—suggesting its popularity and positive reception. The ballad begins, "There was a Lord of worthy Fame."
Extant copies of the ballad are available at Magdalene College, Cambridge in the Pepys Library. Alternatively, online facsimiles of the ballad are available online for public consumption. Alternatively, online facsimiles of the ballad are available online for public consumption.
As of August 2015, EBBA has archived 7,124 broadside ballads, from 20 different collections held at six different libraries worldwide. The collections range from the very well-known and recognized by name - such as those housed at the Pepys Library of Magdalene College, Cambridge - to the relatively unknown.
Magdalen College of the Liberal Arts (formerly Northeast Catholic College, [1] The College of Saint Mary Magdalen, [3] and simply Magdalen College [2]) was a private Catholic liberal arts college in Warner, New Hampshire, United States. The college opened in 1973. Enrollment never exceeded 90 students and it closed in May 2024. [5] [6]