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                  <text>Medievalism at the Foundations</text>
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                  <text>This Collection illustrates how medievalism has always existed â€˜in plain viewâ€™ in Australian public life, as a conspicuous cultural memory ghosting Australiaâ€™s modernity. It focuses on discourses about, debates over, and changing interpretations of i) Australiaâ€™s medievalist political and religious institutions and rituals, ii) its architecture, and iii) its civic environment. In this Collection are items relating to all three of these key areas. Firstly, you will find items that point to the medieval influences and inflections that still permeate and influence our political, legal and religious institutions and traditions. Secondly, you will find numerous examples of neo-gothic and neo-romanesque architecture, and some cases where architectural features are known to have been modelled on specific medieval buildings. Thirdly, you will find items relating to the ways in which medievalism is incorporated into our civic environments and expressed through statues, monuments and war memorials.</text>
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              <text>&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.nla.gov.au/ferguson/13276638/18450130/00010032/11-16.pdf"&gt;http://www.nla.gov.au/ferguson/13276638/18450130/00010032/11-16.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</text>
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                <text>Livery Buttons Leading Families of New South Wales </text>
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                <text>NSW, New South Wales, Medieval Allegiance, crests, heraldry, livery, James McEvoy, clothing imports, clothing</text>
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                <text>Livery and its insignia were integral to medieval culture; their bestowal and wearing marked allegiance and identification to particular lords, factions or beliefs. As late as the early fifteenth century, regular livery awards at Christmas or Easter or livery rewards for good service were still part of the Kingâ€™s rituals towards his retainers or, in the case of the hybrid wage system around 1400, his government clerks. This advertisement in the early colonial journal (some 60 years after settlement) offers to import buttons with crests from England to anyone who believes their family name is associated with a heraldic tradition.&#13;
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                <text>Colonial literary journal and weekly miscellany of useful information&#13;
vol. 1. 32 1845, p. 79&#13;
James McEvoy, Albert House, Pitt Street</text>
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                <text>National Library of Australia</text>
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                <text>1845</text>
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                <text>Copyright Expired</text>
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                <text>Print Journal; Hyperlink</text>
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                <text>English</text>
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        <name>James McEvoy</name>
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