See the connection between the eponymous Poniz scheme and Maryland.
Welcome to H-Maryland, a member of H-Net Humanities & Social Sciences OnLine. H-Maryland provides a netowrk for those persons who research, write, read, teach, and preserve Maryland history and culture.
This week's MdHS Library blog post deals with film censorship in the 1970s, pornography, and a Catholic grandmother.
This week's post examines different copies of the Declaration of Independence.
The Maryland Historical Society just posted an inventory of over 600 images in their collection with detailed descriptions of the lithographs, woodcuts, and newspaper images from early Maryland.
For any sports fans, a photo essay on the 1993 Baltimore Orioles.
THE HISTORY OF US ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
Location:District of Columbia, United StatesDate Submitted:2014-04-03Announcement ID:212782Instructor:
Mark Tushnet is William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. An expert on constitutional history, Professor Tushnet is the author of numerous works on constitutional history and law.
His books include The Constitution in Wartime: Beyond Alarmism and Complacency; A Court Divided: The Rehnquist Court and the Future of Constitutional Law; The New Constitutional Order; Taking the Constitution Away From the Courts; and Making Constitutional Law
Daniel K. Richter. Trade, Land, Power: The Struggle for Eastern North America. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013. viii + 315 pp. $45.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-8122-4500-4.
Reviewed by Jeremy George (University of Southern Mississippi)
Published on H-War (April, 2014)
Commissioned by Margaret Sankey
In Trade, Land, Power: The Struggle for Eastern North America, Daniel K. Richter examines European and Native American conceptions of these three subjects. He argues that trade, land, and power were always intrinsically linked, but Europeans and Native Americans fundamentally differed in
As the new editor I'm still trying to get a feel for what you, the members, would like to see. Specifically, do you want me passing along CFPs and conference announcements? If so, what makes them relevant? If they're happening in the area? If the concern the general Mid-Atlantic region?
Feel free to click the link to reply to this post (you may need to login to H-Net first) about this subject or things in general you'd like to see.
This week's post from the MdHS Library covers the little-known history of the first championship prizefight in 1849.
A replica of the original flag, created by volunteers in the summer of 2013 and presented to the Governor on March 25, 2013.