Current Search: History. (x)
Pages
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Title
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Ferdinand de Soto: the discoverer of the Mississippi.
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Creator
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Abbott, John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot), PALMM (Project)
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Abstract / Description
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A history of the expeditions and military conquests of Hernando de Soto in South America, Florida, Georgia, and Alabama.
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Date Issued
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1873
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Identifier
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AAA3226QF00011/15/200108/04/200515837BfamI D0QF, 0392343, FHP C CF 2001-11-15, FCLA url 20020220xOCLC, 49296621, CF00001555, 2555781, ucf:6180
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Format
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E-book
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dl/CF00001555.jpg
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Title
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A Time to keep: history of the First United Methodist Church of Oviedo, Florida, 1873-1973.
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Creator
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Adicks, Richard, Neely, Donna M., Evans, Clara Lee, Jones, Ben H., Lawton, Kathryn, PALMM (Project)
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Abstract / Description
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Brief history of the church from its beginnings to 1973, including photographs of early members, changes in the church structure, the new church, and the first wedding performed in the new church. Also includes a list of pastors and other officers of the church.
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Date Issued
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1973
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Identifier
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AAB9017QF00007/26/200511/14/200620916Bfam D0QF, FIPS12117, FHP C UCF 2005-08-03, FCLA url 20060601xOCLC, 75968729, CF00001726, 2585000, ucf:19840
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Format
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E-book
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/tc/fhp/CF00001726.jpg
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Title
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Florida sea shells.
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Creator
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Aldrich, Bertha, Snyder, Ethel, PALMM (Project)
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Abstract / Description
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Focusing on Florida, the book includes a history of sea shell collecting, information on the live inhabitants of the shells, and how to care for a shell collection.
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Date Issued
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1936
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Identifier
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AAC3708QF00001/23/200704/10/200712194BnamI? D0QF, FHP C CF 2007-1-23, FCLA url 20070328xOCLC, 100000190, FCLA url 20070410, CF00001741, 2703429, ucf:21841
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Format
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E-book
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/tc/fhp/CF00001741.jpg
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Title
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DOUBLE DUTY: PROCESSING AND EXHIBITING THE CHILDREN'S HOME SOCIETY OF FLORIDA COLLECTION AS AN ARCHIVIST AND PUBLIC HISTORIAN.
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Creator
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Anderson, April, White, Vibert, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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The Children's Home Society of Florida, often referred to as "Florida's Greatest Charity", is the state's oldest non profit welfare agency. Founded in 1902, the society was instrumental in creating and reforming child welfare laws as well as helping countless children in the state of Florida find loving homes. This paper focuses on the archival processing of the Children's Home Society of Florida Collection papers and the creation of a subsequent web exhibit. The role of...
Show moreThe Children's Home Society of Florida, often referred to as "Florida's Greatest Charity", is the state's oldest non profit welfare agency. Founded in 1902, the society was instrumental in creating and reforming child welfare laws as well as helping countless children in the state of Florida find loving homes. This paper focuses on the archival processing of the Children's Home Society of Florida Collection papers and the creation of a subsequent web exhibit. The role of archivist and public historian is examined to see how each profession works toward a common goal.
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Date Issued
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2007
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Identifier
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CFE0001613, ucf:47181
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0001613
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Title
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The trial of Ferrer: A clerical-judicial murder.
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Creator
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Angulo, Jaime de
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Date Issued
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1920
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Identifier
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331852, CFDT331852, ucf:5166
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/FCLA/DT/331852
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Title
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History of the working class.
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Creator
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Anonymous
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Date Issued
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c1931
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Identifier
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671409, CFDT671409, ucf:5576
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/FCLA/DT/671409
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Title
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Ballou's pictorial Vol. IX., No. 25, December 22, 1855.
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Creator
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Ballou, Maturin Murray, Austin C. Burdick
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Date Created
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1855
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Identifier
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DP0012649, AP2.A389 No. 233
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Format
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Set of related objects
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/DP0012649
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Title
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Florida for tourists, invalids, and settlers: containing practical information regarding climate, soil, and productions; cities, towns, and people; the culture of the orange and other tropical fruits; farming and gardening; scenery and resorts; sport; routes of travel, etc., etc.
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Creator
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Barbour, George M., PALMM (Project)
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Abstract / Description
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Based on the writer's personal observations, describes and comments upon the various regions of Florida, the climate, people, agricultural products and resources.
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Date Issued
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1884
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Identifier
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AAA3354QF00012/20/200108/04/200515919BfamI D0QF, FHP C CF 2001-12-20, FCLA url 20020606xOCLC, 50187276, CF00001577, 2562653, ucf:9439
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Format
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E-book
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dl/CF00001577.jpg
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Title
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A Sense of Place: Ethnographic Reflection on Two Palestinian Life Histories.
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Creator
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Barrett, Patrick, Howard, Rosalyn, Matejowsky, Ty, Janz, Bruce, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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There is a labyrinth of complex social connections between people and places that deserves careful anthropological reflection. People do not simply occupy places; they experience them, infusing them with life and social meaning. Basso (1996:53) argues that ethnography has reported little about the complex ways in which people are (")alive to the world around them.(") Anthropology is currently experiencing a resurging emphasis on place that seeks to account for its remarkably social features....
Show moreThere is a labyrinth of complex social connections between people and places that deserves careful anthropological reflection. People do not simply occupy places; they experience them, infusing them with life and social meaning. Basso (1996:53) argues that ethnography has reported little about the complex ways in which people are (")alive to the world around them.(") Anthropology is currently experiencing a resurging emphasis on place that seeks to account for its remarkably social features. Rather than primarily thinking about place when determining a location for fieldwork, emerging anthropological reflection shows the discipline is repositioning itself to explore the complex and often fantastic ways people experience, conceptualize, and confer meaning to their natural surroundings. In anthropology, the phrase (")sense of place(") captures these ideas. The phenomenological approach has emerged as the theoretical centerpiece for this effort, promising to open extraordinary new pathways for qualitative exploration.This thesis uses the life history methodology to explore how two female Palestinian immigrants to Central Florida experience and confer meaning to their ancestral homeland and place of birth. Data collected through a series of life history interviews highlight the texture of Palestinian senses of place, including the presence of what I describe as an eschatological sense of place.
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Date Issued
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2011
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Identifier
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CFE0004469, ucf:49312
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0004469
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Title
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The war and slavery, and their relations to each other : a discourse, delivered in the Old South Church, Reading, Mass., December 28, 1862.
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Creator
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Barrows, W. (William)
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Description
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This pamphlet is a discourse delivered by Reverend William Barrows about the relations between the War and Slavery. The pamphlet is a second edition and, as noted on the title page, was "published by request."
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Date Created
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1863
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Identifier
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DP0010862, E449.B276 1863
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/DP0010862
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Title
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East Florida in the American revolution.
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Creator
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Barrs, Burton, PALMM (Project)
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Abstract / Description
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Brief history of the activities of the Continental Army against the British colonies of the Floridas. Includes portraits of officers from both sides.
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Date Issued
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1932
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Identifier
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AAB9018QF00007/26/200511/14/200621353BfamIa D0QF, FHP C UCF 2005-08-03, FCLA url 20060130xOCLC, 75969015, CF00001712, 2583541, ucf:19276
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Format
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E-book
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/tc/fhp/CF00001712.jpg
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Title
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TRIANON AND THE PREDESTINATION OF HUNGARIAN POLITICS: A HISTORIOGRAPHY OF HUNGARIAN REVISIONISM, 1918-1944.
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Creator
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Bartha, Dezso, Pauley, Bruce, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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This thesis proposes to link certain consistent themes in the historiography of interwar and wartime Hungary. Hungary's inability to successfully resolve its minority problems led to the nation's dismemberment at Trianon in 1920 after World War I. This fostered a national Hungarian reaction against the Trianon settlement called the revisionist movement. This revisionist "Trianon syndrome" totally dominated Hungarian politics in the interwar period. As Hungary sought allies against the hated...
Show moreThis thesis proposes to link certain consistent themes in the historiography of interwar and wartime Hungary. Hungary's inability to successfully resolve its minority problems led to the nation's dismemberment at Trianon in 1920 after World War I. This fostered a national Hungarian reaction against the Trianon settlement called the revisionist movement. This revisionist "Trianon syndrome" totally dominated Hungarian politics in the interwar period. As Hungary sought allies against the hated peace settlements of the Great War, Hungarian politics irrevocably tied the nation to the policies of Nazi Germany, and Hungary became nefariously assessed as "Hitler's last ally," which initially stained the nation's reputation after World War II. Although some historians have blamed the interwar Hungarian government for the calamity that followed Hungary's associations with Nazi Germany, this thesis proposes that there was little variation between what could have happened and what actually became the nation's fate in World War II. A new interpretation therefore becomes evident: the injustices of Trianon, Hungary's geopolitical position in the heart of Europe, and the nation's unfortunate orientation between the policies of Nazi Germany and Bolshevik Russia predestined the nation to its fate in World War II. There was no other choice for Hungarian policy in World War II but the Axis alliance. The historian of East Central Europe faces a formidable challenge in that the national histories of this region are often contradictory. Hungarian historiography is directly countered by the historical theories and propositions of its Czech, Serb, and Rumanian enemies. By historiographical analysis of the histories of Hungary, its enemies among the Successor States, and neutral sources, this thesis will demonstrate that many contemporary historians tend to support the primary theses of Hungarian historiography. Many of the arguments of the Hungarian interwar government are now generally supported by objective historians, while the historiographical suppositions of the Successor States at the Paris Peace Conference have become increasingly reduced to misinformation, falsification, exaggeration, and propaganda. The ignorance of the minority problems and ethnic history of East Central Europe led to an unjust settlement in 1919 and 1920, and by grossly favoring the victors over the vanquished, the Paris Peace Treaties greatly increased the probability of a second and even more terrible World War.
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Date Issued
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2006
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Identifier
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CFE0000936, ucf:46724
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0000936
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Title
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Legacy to the people : community and the Orange County Regional History Center.
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Creator
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Beatty, Robert L., Leckie, Shirley A., Arts and Sciences
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Abstract / Description
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University of Central Florida College of Arts and Sciences Thesis; The development and birth of the Orange County Regional History Center is perhaps unlike any other local history museum in the United States. Its story is worth telling because of its long gestation, the difficulties in bringing this center to life, and the goals of the people who made it possible. All of these elements are a vital part of the history of Orange County, Florida and should not be overlooked. In this light, this...
Show moreUniversity of Central Florida College of Arts and Sciences Thesis; The development and birth of the Orange County Regional History Center is perhaps unlike any other local history museum in the United States. Its story is worth telling because of its long gestation, the difficulties in bringing this center to life, and the goals of the people who made it possible. All of these elements are a vital part of the history of Orange County, Florida and should not be overlooked. In this light, this thesis will discuss more fully three topics in relation to the creation of the new History Center. First, it will look at the American museum field and its role as a community-building enterprise in American society. Second, it will examine the history of Central Florida, a region that sorely lacks a strong sense of community. Third, it will trace the transformation of the Orange County Historical Society and Museum from a small volunteer-run museum into the Orange County Regional History Center, the largest history museum in Central Florida. The ultimate goal of the History Center is to foster a sense of community in a region with little feeling of connectedness. This community building goal has evolved from both a renewed emphasis on community service in the museum field, and the desire of the History Center's leaders and staff to serve more effectively the Central Florida region. My thesis tells the story of the history and development of the Regional History Center, an institution dedicated to bringing the diverse community of Central Florida together for discussion, dialogue, and reflection. It also identifies some of the new roles and functions it must assume in the future and the new tasks that await it as it strives to become more useful and relevant to its community. In that way, and through that resource, the institution can help build the foundation for a more promising future for present and future residents of Orange County.
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Date Issued
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2002
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Identifier
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CFR0000195, ucf:52935
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFR0000195
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Title
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Providing Context to the Clues: Recovery and Reliability of Location Data from Android Devices.
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Creator
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Bell, Connie, Lang, Sheau-Dong, Guha, Ratan, Zou, Changchun, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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Mobile device data continues to increase in significance in both civil and criminal investigations. Location data is often of particular interest. To date, research has established that the devices are location aware, incorporate a variety of resources to obtain location information, and cache the information in various ways. However, a review of the existing research suggests varying degrees of reliability of any such recovered location data. In an effort to clarify the issue, this project...
Show moreMobile device data continues to increase in significance in both civil and criminal investigations. Location data is often of particular interest. To date, research has established that the devices are location aware, incorporate a variety of resources to obtain location information, and cache the information in various ways. However, a review of the existing research suggests varying degrees of reliability of any such recovered location data. In an effort to clarify the issue, this project offers case studies of multiple Android mobile devices utilized in controlled conditions with known settings and applications in documented locations. The study uses data recovered from test devices to corroborate previously identified accuracy trends noted in research involving live-tracked devices, and it further offers detailed analysis strategies for the recovery of location data from devices themselves. A methodology for reviewing device data for possible artifacts that may allow an examiner to evaluate location data reliability is also presented. This paper also addresses emerging trends in device security and cloud storage, which may have significant implications for future mobile device location data recovery and analysis. Discussion of recovered cloud data introduces a distinct and potentially significant resource for investigators, and the paper addresses the cloud resources' advantages and limitations.
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Date Issued
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2015
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Identifier
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CFE0005924, ucf:50837
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0005924
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Title
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My pioneer days in Florida, 1876-1898.
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Creator
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Bell, Emily Lagow, PALMM (Project)
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Abstract / Description
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Personal account of the Bell family's move from Indiana to Ft. Pierce, Florida with numerous anecdotes and descriptions of places they saw and people they met.
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Identifier
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AAC2509QF00011/15/200603/02/200712094BnamI? D0QF, FHP S UCF 2006-11-15, FIPS12111, FCLA url 20070302, CF00001730, 2700743, ucf:20074
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Format
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E-book
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/tc/fhp/CF00001730.jpg
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Title
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INDIA AND CHINA SPACE PROGRAMS: FROM GENESIS OF SPACE TECHNOLOGIES TO MAJOR SPACE PROGRAMS AND WHAT THAT MEANS FOR THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY.
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Creator
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BHOLA, GAURAV, HANDBERG, ROGER, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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The Indian and Chinese space programs have evolved into technologically advanced vehicles of national prestige and international competition for developed nations. The programs continue to evolve with impetus that India and China will have the same space capabilities as the United States with in the coming years. This will present new challenges to the international community in spheres civilian, to space and military applications and their residual benefits.
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Date Issued
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2009
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Identifier
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CFE0002745, ucf:48156
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0002745
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Title
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Leninism, the only Marxism today: A discussion of the characteristics of declining capitalism.
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Creator
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Bittelman, Alex
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Date Issued
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1934
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Identifier
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886201, CFDT886201, ucf:5612
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/FCLA/DT/886201
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Title
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Fifteen years of the Communist Party.
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Creator
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Bittelman, Alex (Alexander)
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Date Issued
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1934
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Identifier
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363431, CFDT363431, ucf:5326
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/FCLA/DT/363431
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Title
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The Redeemed, the Condemned, and the Forgotten: Narratives of Dissenting Aristocratic Identity in Medieval Bavaria.
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Creator
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Bohmer, Luke, Hardy, Duncan, Beiler, Rosalind, Dandrow, Edward, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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Identity in the Middle Ages encompassed numerous methods of transmission. Those of which that survive today include artwork, architecture, and written sources. In the case of written sources, the nobility and the clergy dominated the narrative to a substantial degree. Chroniclers of the Holy Roman Empire in specific saw both regional and pan-imperial narratives influence this identity through the exploration of historical figures. The medieval duchy of Bavaria fell into this milieu but...
Show moreIdentity in the Middle Ages encompassed numerous methods of transmission. Those of which that survive today include artwork, architecture, and written sources. In the case of written sources, the nobility and the clergy dominated the narrative to a substantial degree. Chroniclers of the Holy Roman Empire in specific saw both regional and pan-imperial narratives influence this identity through the exploration of historical figures. The medieval duchy of Bavaria fell into this milieu but experienced a substantially different relationship with its nobility from the twelfth century onward. The more condensed and consolidated format of medieval Bavaria under the Wittelsbach dynasty (-) as well as conscious efforts to project said configuration backward through history via chronicles (-) resulted in a uniquely Bavarian aristocratic identity into the early modern period. This aristocratic identity was the result of chroniclers' pedagogical and didactic intention across laity and clergy in informing the mores and values of the Bavarian nobility, in addition to the history of their institution. Through Latin and later vernacular chronicles, courtiers and clergy expressed the veneration or damnation of key historical figures in Bavarian history to instill values and sets of ideal behaviors by the end of the fifteenth century. This thesis explores the changing narratives of three such figures, all of whom acted as thematic antagonists to prominent German kings and emperors: Tassilo III, Arnulf the Bad, and Henry the Lion. Ultimately, the widespread virtues of piety, respect for the clergy, and subservience to the emperor formed the main pillars of Bavarian aristocratic identity. However, Bavarian chroniclers required preexisting clerical traditions of chronicling, as well as adherence to the official narratives of the house of Wittelsbach, in order to fit these dissenting historical figures into a usable symbolic context.
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Date Issued
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2019
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Identifier
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CFE0007790, ucf:52352
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0007790
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Title
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Toward the Red Shore.
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Creator
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Bomhoff, Gary, Rushin, Patrick, Roney, Lisa, Thaxton, Terry, University of Central Florida
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Abstract / Description
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A fictional novel utilizing third person limited narration from the perspective of the primary character, Ilya Kollide, who narrates the story as though it were happening in his head as it occurred, with frequent embellishments. He has come to live near an old mansion on the Trans-Siberian Railroad, named Neimasaurus, to find an antiquated, dusty world of faded aristocracy. Temporarily orphaned at the age sixteen by the recent death of his parents, he has traveled four thousand miles to live...
Show moreA fictional novel utilizing third person limited narration from the perspective of the primary character, Ilya Kollide, who narrates the story as though it were happening in his head as it occurred, with frequent embellishments. He has come to live near an old mansion on the Trans-Siberian Railroad, named Neimasaurus, to find an antiquated, dusty world of faded aristocracy. Temporarily orphaned at the age sixteen by the recent death of his parents, he has traveled four thousand miles to live with his last living relative, an uncle named Demetri, whom he has never met. The year is 1990, only this is not a world where the rule of the Tsar was supplanted by the Soviet Union. Instead, it is a logical exploration of what Russia might resemble, had communism never taken root. While the fantastical may or may not occur, depending upon how the reader chooses to interpret the point of view of the narrator, the setting in and of itself is not meant to be fantastical. Ilya discovers that all the servants who work there are deaf, as is his uncle and his own now deceased parents, whom he carries around in an urn after mixing their ashes together. While working at the great estate of the Neimasaurus family, Ilya discovers a surprising numbers of stories and people who both parallel his own experiences and serve as allegorical warnings toward his future mistakes in life. He becomes obsessed with the idea that he is to blame for his parents' death and sets out on a quest to bring redemption to the wounded inhabitants of the estate, only to discover that not everyone wants to be helped. In fact, they want him dead. They see him as an allegory, just as he sees them. To the young man Shoji Yamano, Ilya represents everything he was, and can no longer be. As such a reflection, he resolves to shatter Ilya like a mirror. The novel charts Ilya's personal growth from a neurotic wreck, incapable of normal interaction with people, to a young man capable of not just self-sacrifice, but an understanding of what it actually means to literally sacrifice himself for the well-being of someone he barely knows. He learns to value time spent with others rather than dwelling within a narcissistic and lonely fantasy world.?
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Date Issued
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2013
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Identifier
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CFE0004976, ucf:49591
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/ucf/fd/CFE0004976
Pages