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351. In service or one of the family? Kin-servants in Swavesey 1851-81, Ryde 1881, and Stourbridge 1881.

352. Defining womanhood: Irish women and the Catholic Church in Victorian Liverpool.

353. English emigration, kinship and the recruitment process: migration from Melbourn in Cambridgeshire to Melbourne in Victoria in the mid-nineteenth century.

354. [A paradox of wealth and poverty: the failure of the English Industrial Revolution and its causes].

355. Malnutrition, pregnancy, and infant mortality: a biometric model.

356. The coming of the French Revolution and the English textile trade, 1783-1792.

357. Witchcraft: the spell that didn't break.

358. The road to the asylum: institutions, distance and the administration of pauper lunacy in Devon, 1845-1914.

359. "A nose-length into the matter": sexology and lesbian desire in Djuna Barnes's "Ladies Almanack".

361. Cultural differentiation, shared aspiration: "The entente cordiale of international ladies' football," 1920-45.

362. [Peasants, appropriation of land, and the formation of capitalism in France and England, 16th-18th centuries: the elements of comparison].

363. John Hodgson: soldier, surgeon, agitator and Quaker?

364. Reproducing utopia: Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont's "The New Clarissa".

365. The tubs of pleasure: Tudor and Stuart spas.

366. Common meeting places and the brightening of rural life: local debates on village halls in Sussex after the First World War.

367. Information in the Lisle letters from Calais in the early sixteenth century relating to the development of the English bird trade.

368. A kind of life insurance: the coal-miners of north-east England 1860-1920.

369. [The condition of peasants and rural disputes in England in the 17th century].

370. Searchers of the dead: authority, marginality, and the interpretation of plague in England, 1574-1665.

372. Volunteering in the First World War: the Birmingham experience, August 1914 - May 1915.

373. Sheffield's eastenders: family and community in Attercliffe, c. 1841-91.

374. The development of residential urban renewal policies in England: planning for modernization in the 1960s.

375. Science in politics: a comparison of climate modelling centres.

376. Direct farming on the estates of Cheshire landowners, c. 1570-c. 1700.

377. Trouble with farms at the Census Office: an evaluation of farm statistics from the censuses of 1851-1881 in England and Wales.

378. A difficult love: mother as spiritual guide in the writing of Susanna Wesley.

379. A poisoning of no substance: the trials of medico-legal proof in mid-Victorian England.

380. Unfair and unprotected: community responses to the sudden deaths of children in Staffordshire in 1851 and 1860.

381. Groundwater development in England.

382. Of sheep and scribbling: women and writing in (mostly) early modern England.

383. Family strategies: patterns of inheritance in Odiham, Hampshire, 1525-1850.

384. Usage of the postal system in mid-eighteenth-century Berkshire: an exploration from the Foundling Hospital archives.

385. The social history of health and healing.

386. Manhood, the male body, courtship and the household in early modern England.

387. Foreign bodies: travel, empire and the early Royal Society of London. Part 2: the land of experimental knowledge.

388. Fertile visions: Jacobean revels and the erotics of occasion.

389. [Standing ovens, lying ovens: horizontality and its contributions to metallurgy].

390. The limitations of English family reconstitution: "English Population History from Family Reconstitution 1580-1837".

391. Animal husbandry and agricultural improvement: the archaeological evidence from animal bones and teeth.

392. The matchless beauty of widowhood: Vittoria Colonna's reputation in nineteenth-century England.

393. The sad story of George Hall: adultery, murder and the politics of mercy in mid-Victorian England.

394. Age-based rationing of medical care in nineteenth-century England.

395. The philosophical innovations of Margaret Cavendish.

396. Were health resorts bad for your health? Coastal pollution control policy in England, 1945-76.

397. A hearty meal? The prison diets of Cranmer and Latimer.

399. Conservation, class and custom: lifespace and conflict in a nineteenth-century forest environment.

400. Physical purity feminism and state medicine in late nineteenth-century England.

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