Peppa Pig The Museum
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Origin | Georgia |
---|---|
United States | |
Record labels | BEC Recordings |
Members | Ben Richter |
Chris Brink | |
Josh Kirk | |
Loyd Rieves | |
Albums | Let Love Win |
My Only Rescue | |
What We Stand For | |
Genres | Contemporary Christian Music |
Pop Rock | |
Movies/Shows | Peppa |
Air date | November 1, 2004 |
Episode number | 39 |
Previous episode | Fancy Dress Party |
Season number | 1 |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2423579 |
About Peppa Pig The Museum
Peppa and her family visit a museum, and Peppa likes the Kings and Queens room, whereas George's favourite is the dinosaur room.
King's tie resembles Greek flag after Elgin Marbles row
... He said The Museum was exploring a deal " whereby they spend part of their time in Athens and part of their time in London"...
Artist and Tutti Frutti writer John Byrne dies, aged 83
... His work is held by the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, The Museum of Modern Art, and the Kelvingrove Art Gallery...
How the Elgin Marbles scream injustice for most Greeks
... " The Museum thrives on presenting all these amazing pieces of history on display, and if they lose the marbles then the British Museum will not be the British Museum...
Women's remarkable Civil War roles revealed in Huntingdon display
... " The Museum tells Oliver Cromwell s story from his Huntingdon childhood until his death as Lord Protector in 1658...
Museum reclassifies Roman emperor as trans woman
... The Museum has one coin of Elagabalus, which is often displayed amongst other LGBTQ+ items in its collection...
Black women most likely to die in medieval London plague
...Black women of African descent were more likely to die of the medieval plague in London, academics at The Museum of London have found...
The Troubles: 'Forgiving my sister's IRA killer healed me'
... A number of her personal items are currently on display in The Museum of Free Derry...
Israel Gaza: Hostages' fates haunt Israel as war intensifies
... Every Friday on the Jewish sabbath, relatives gather in what is now known as Hostages Square outside The Museum of Art...
Women's remarkable Civil War roles revealed in Huntingdon display
By Katy PrickettBBC News, Cambridgeshire
The Women who " rose to the occasion and played a remarkable role in the Civil War" is the theme of an exhibition called The Weaker Vessel?
Historian Stuart Orme said the Biblical phrase was used to denigrate 17Th Century women, but their 1640s experiences were " complex and richer".
Women ran businesses, were spies, preachers, accused of witchcraft and faced violence and starvation.
The Exhibition is at, from 6 December.
It aims to challenge the impression in the " popular imagination" that women during the 1640s were " aristocratic ladies defending their husbands' estates, or women camp-followers accompanying armies".
Instead it focuses upon The Women who had to " run households and businesses by themselves while their husbands were away and cope with food shortages and rising taxes which rose 1,000% during the 1640s" said Mr Orme.
Both Royalist and Parliamentarian armies placed their soldiers with households in towns and villages.
Mr Orme said: " Huntingdon was briefly captured by The Royalists in 1645 and every house had 20 to 30 soldiers billeted on them.
" These were people who might just have enough to see them through The Winter and The Soldiers would take all their food before they moved off. "
The Exhibition draws upon The Work of, which looks at petitions from veterans and their families for welfare payments as a result of their injuries or bereavement.
Mr Orme said: " This includes complaints about The Way women were treated by The Soldiers billeted on them - Theft , violence and rape were not uncommon. "
The Museum tells Oliver Cromwell 's story from his Huntingdon childhood until his death as Lord Protector in 1658.
So The Exhibition features his younger daughters, Mary and Frances, who became the " Puritan princesses" after their father's elevation.
It also highlights, who ran a printing business, who was " unusual if not to say scandalous in the 17Th Century by being involved in public preaching" said Mr Orme.
She led a march of women on Parliament calling for their husbands to be freed, but Parliament told them to " concentrate on their washing up".
, who tried twice to free Charles I from Parliamentarian captivity.
At the same time, " women were accused of being at the root of what was Going Wrong in this period with a resurgence of witchcraft led by The Infamous deeply misogynistic Witchfinder General Matthew Hopkins - 90% of those accused were women" He Said .
The Weaker Vessel? Women of the Civil Wars will run until 7 April.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com