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  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfsonnight03.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson12.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson09.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson07.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson06.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson05.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfsonnight02.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfsonnight01.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson18.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson16.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson15.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson13.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson11.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson10.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson03.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson02.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfsonnight04.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson19.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson17.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson14.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson08.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson04.tif
  • Accommodation Block, Wolfson College, University of Oxford
    wolfson01.tif
  • Bathroom
    BGS027_QL-14.tif
  • Study bedroom desk and chair with window
    BGS025_QL-24.tif
  • Above bed notice board, closed
    BGS025_QL-20.tif
  • Detail of shoe/laundry storage box and top cupboard step
    BGS025_QL-16.tif
  • View from washroom to quod with shutters open and window reflected in mirror
    BGS025_QL-11.tif
  • First floor flat kitchen/living room
    BGS027_QL-16.tif
  • Second floor bedroom
    BGS027_QL-13.tif
  • Second floor kitchen/living interior
    BGS027_QL-12.tif
  • Second floor balcony
    BGS027_QL-11.tif
  • Detail of terrace flat facade
    BGS027_QL-10.tif
  • Detail of window bays & facade
    BGS027_QL-09.tif
  • Detail of window bays
    BGS027_QL-08.tif
  • Terrace flats (TV Aerial digitally removed)
    BGS027_QL-07.tif
  • Detail of facade showing balcony detail
    BGS027_QL-05.tif
  • Facade from carpark
    BGS027_QL-04.tif
  • Exterior showing landscaping
    BGS027_QL-03.tif
  • Wide angle exterior from terrace flats
    BGS027_QL-02.tif
  • Exterior from terrace flats
    BGS027_QL-01.tif
  • Original stairwell showing erosion of steps
    BGS025_QL-25.tif
  • Above desk cupboard/notice board, open
    BGS025_QL-23.tif
  • Study bedroom showing bed, chair and window
    BGS025_QL-19.tif
  • Study bedroom showing desk and storage area
    BGS025_QL-18.tif
  • Wide angle view of study bedroom showing desk window and bed with glimpse of back quod
    BGS025_QL-17.tif
  • MDF Storage unit & shelving
    BGS025_QL-15.tif
  • View towards storage/cooking area with doors open
    BGS025_QL-14.tif
  • View towards storage/cooking area with doors closed
    BGS025_QL-13.tif
  • Sunlight streaming into washroom showing basin, toilet and shower
    BGS025_QL-12.tif
  • Detail of washroom shutters
    BGS025_QL-10.tif
  • Washroom to quod with shutters closed
    BGS025_QL-09.tif
  • View from washroom to quod with shutters open
    BGS025_QL-08.tif
  • Detail of refurbished corridor showing doors
    BGS025_QL-06.tif
  • Refurbished corridor showing new paintwork, lighting & carpet, view to stairwell
    BGS025_QL-05.tif
  • Refurbished Corridor showing new paintwork lighting, & carpet
    BGS025_QL-02.tif
  • First floor flat kitchen/living room
    BGS027_QL-15.tif
  • Terrace flats in context (TV Aerial digitally removed)
    BGS027_QL-06.tif
  • Oblique view of original stairwell through arch showing Keble brick work
    BGS025_QL-26.tif
  • Above desk cupboard/notice board, closed
    BGS025_QL-22.tif
  • Above bed notice board, open
    BGS025_QL-21.tif
  • Detail of refurbished corridor showing light feature above doors
    BGS025_QL-07.tif
  • Refurbished Corridor showing new paintwork lighting, & carpet. view to stairwell
    BGS025_QL-04.tif
  • Original corridor
    BGS025_QL-03.tif
  • Refurbished Corridor showing new paintwork lighting, & carpet
    BGS025_QL-01.tif
  • Emergency Accommodation (the entrance tunnel was converted into a dormitory for personnel in the 1980s), RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-03.jpg
  • Forestair at 4 West Shore I, St Monans Harbour, Fife, Scotland. Living accommodation would have been on the first floor with a boat store, workshop and sail store on the ground floor.
    359-StMonans-Buckhaven-01.jpg
  • Senior Officers Accommodation, RAF Inverbervie Cold War Radar Station Bunker (Now Bervie Brow Research Station), Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
    352-Inverbervie-Montrose-10.jpg
  • Forestair at 4 West Shore I, St Monans Harbour, Fife, Scotland. Living accommodation would have been on the first floor with a boat store, workshop and sail store on the ground floor.
    Fife-Print-Collection-15.jpg
  • Bedouin tents and modern accommodation near Qasr al-Hayr al-Sharqi (Eastern al-Hayr Palace or the "Eastern Castle") a castle in the middle of the Syrian Desert
    Bedouin-Syria-Desert-03.jpg
  • Caution High Voltage Sign (German: Vorsicht Hochspannung Lebensgefhr) on the electrified perimeter fence and accommodation blocks at Auschwitz I Extermination Camp
    Auschwitz-I-01.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-19.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-18.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-16.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-15.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-14.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-13.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-20.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-17.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-12.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-11.jpg
  • The long house and the matrilineal family The long house is the residence of a great matrilineal family. Traditionally, the house accommodates the families of daughters and grand daughters who were the descendants of one mother. Before the middle of the 20th century, there were dozens of families living in the long house. The whole family worked together and shared rice and other food. Property was held in common and customary law of the Ede stipulated that the property should be managed by the household's most senior woman. After marriage, a son would reside in this wife's house but still retain a special position in the families of his sisters and his nieces. The important role of women was (and continues to be) a special feature of Ede society.
    Vietnamese-Museum-of-Ethnology-10.jpg
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