Manchester, Keith.
Keith Manchester
VIAF ID: 29702126 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/29702126
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Keith Manchester
- 200 _ | ‡a Manchester ‡b Keith
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Manchester, Keith
- 100 1 _ ‡a Manchester, Keith (sparse)
- 100 1 _ ‡a Manchester, Keith
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- 100 1 0 ‡a Manchester, Keith
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (1)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Ancient diseases | |
Archaeology of disease | |
The Cemetery of the Leper Hospital of St Margaret, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire | |
Chichester excavations. excavations at the cemetery of the Hospital of St James and St Mary Magdalene, Chichester, 1986-87 and 1993 | |
Cirencester excavations II: Romano-British cemeteries at cirencester | |
Comparative study of the prevalence of maxillary sinusitis in later Medieval urban and rural populations in northern England | |
Doctors and diseases in the Roman empire | |
Donald J. Ortner & Arthur C. Aufderkheide (ed.(. Human paleopathology: current syntheses and future options, a symposium held at the International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Zagreb, Yugoslavia, 24–31 July 1988. viii + 31 | |
Dorsal tarsal exostoses in leprosy : a paleopathological and radiological study . | |
Exploding the Pasteurian legend | |
Identification of pathological conditions in human skeletal remains | |
A leprous skeleton of the 7th century from Eccles, Kent, and the present evidence of leprosy in early Britain | |
Maladie et maladies : histoire et conceptualisation : melanges en l'honneur de Mirko Grmek | |
Margaret Clitherow: skeletal identification of an historical figure? | |
A medieval sculpture of leprosy in the Cistercian Abbaye de Cadouin | |
Resurrecting the dead: the potential of palaeopathology | |
Sancton I Anglo-Saxon Cemetery Excavations Carried Out Between 1976 and 1980 | |
Scanning electron microscope study of normal vertebrae and ribs from early medieval human skeletons | |
Secondary cancer in an Anglo-Saxon female | |
Spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis in two Anglo-Saxon skeletons. | |
Tuberculosis and leprosy in antiquity: an interpretation |