Results 201 to 210 of about 264,976 (250)
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Nursing Older People, 2009
A review of dementia provision in Wales starts in February 2009. Wales undertook a review of adult mental health services in 2003, resulting in the publication of the revised National Service Framework for adult mental health services in 2005. As part of the 2009 review the Welsh Assembly Government (WAG) should include three neglected areas.
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A review of dementia provision in Wales starts in February 2009. Wales undertook a review of adult mental health services in 2003, resulting in the publication of the revised National Service Framework for adult mental health services in 2005. As part of the 2009 review the Welsh Assembly Government (WAG) should include three neglected areas.
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Nursing Management, 2010
A national forum has been launched for consultant nurses, midwives and allied health professionals in Wales.
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A national forum has been launched for consultant nurses, midwives and allied health professionals in Wales.
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1998
Abstract 8382. Dumville, David N. (ed. & transl.) Anna/es Cambriae, A.D. 682-954: texts A-C in parallel (Basic texts for Brittonic history, 1). Cambridge: Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Celtic, University of Cambridge, 2002. xix, 24p. 8383. Griffiths, Ralph Alan.
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Abstract 8382. Dumville, David N. (ed. & transl.) Anna/es Cambriae, A.D. 682-954: texts A-C in parallel (Basic texts for Brittonic history, 1). Cambridge: Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Celtic, University of Cambridge, 2002. xix, 24p. 8383. Griffiths, Ralph Alan.
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1999
Abstract To understand contemporary writing in Wales requires a complex cultural map. We have to deal with two languages that are used in varying degrees across the whole country. An outsider might think that what is written in the more generally accessible language of the two, English, offers a way into the hidden world of the Welsh ...
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Abstract To understand contemporary writing in Wales requires a complex cultural map. We have to deal with two languages that are used in varying degrees across the whole country. An outsider might think that what is written in the more generally accessible language of the two, English, offers a way into the hidden world of the Welsh ...
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2005
Abstract In 1284 a group of Welshmen came to Edward I at Conwy and presented him with a reliquary cross, the Croes Naid, containing some of the wood of the Cross itself. The surrender of this to the English king was a symbolic, moving acknowledgement of conquest, for the cross had been the prized possession of Llywelyn ap GruVudd, prince
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Abstract In 1284 a group of Welshmen came to Edward I at Conwy and presented him with a reliquary cross, the Croes Naid, containing some of the wood of the Cross itself. The surrender of this to the English king was a symbolic, moving acknowledgement of conquest, for the cross had been the prized possession of Llywelyn ap GruVudd, prince
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2017
This chapter argues that the chief features which distinguished Welsh Anglicanism from English in this period were its poverty, its remote position, and its almost entirely rural nature, at least until the rapid expansion of population associated with the Industrial Revolution. It argues that Anglican clergy in Wales in this period were generally Welsh
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This chapter argues that the chief features which distinguished Welsh Anglicanism from English in this period were its poverty, its remote position, and its almost entirely rural nature, at least until the rapid expansion of population associated with the Industrial Revolution. It argues that Anglican clergy in Wales in this period were generally Welsh
openaire +2 more sources

