EdinburghMagazine may refer to: Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine, printed from 1817 to 1980 EdinburghMagazine and Literary Miscellany, a series published...
The Edinburgh Review is the title of four distinct intellectual and cultural magazines. The best known, longest-lasting, and most influential of the four...
The EdinburghMagazine and Review was a Scottish periodical, published monthly from 1773 to 1776. It was founded by Gilbert Stuart, who pursued an aggressive...
Edinburgh (/ˈɛdɪnbərə/ Scots: [ˈɛdɪnbʌrə]; Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Èideann [ˌt̪un ˈeːtʲən̪ˠ]) is the capital city of Scotland and one of its 32 council areas...
In 1801 Archibald Constable bought the magazine, and three years later amalgamated it with the EdinburghMagazine and Literary Miscellany. Its popularity...
(named the Edinburgh Journal of Science until 1832) led to the retitling of the journal as The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal...
the identity of the author. Walter Scott, writing in Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine, praises the novel as an "extraordinary tale, in which the author...
appearance of the phrase in print is in an 1829 issue of Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine, predating the Hatter from Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland...
wicked fairies from English, Scottish and Irish lore. . Though the EdinburghMagazine calls them the 'Unseelie Court', Briggs does not use this term. The...
De Quincey, and the Literary Society of Liverpool in 1801", Tait's EdinburghMagazine, Vol. IV, 1837, pp. 337–340. Bridgwater, Patrick (2010). The German...
the Sydney Hospital. "Push" Larrikinism in Australia. Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine. W. Blackwood & Sons. 1901. pp. 27–40. "Celebrating the original larrikin"...
first version of the legend as a story was printed in Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine for May 1821, which puts the scene as the Cape of Good Hope. This...
names: authors list (link) "The Revolutions in Europe", Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine, May, 1848, p. 638 in Polonius: A Collection of Wise Saws and Modern...
Boast" by James Hyslop, which was first published in 1821 in The EdinburghMagazine. However, Hyslop intended his poem to be sung to the melody of Sir...
1866). "Memoirs of the Confederate War for Independence". Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine. American edition, vol. 62. 99 (606). New York: Leonard Scott & Co...
Travel and Adventure in Newfoundland and the West Indies". Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine. William Blackwood & Sons. p. 111. VERAX, (anonymous) (May 1, 1889)...
Edinburgh Airport (IATA: EDI, ICAO: EGPH) is an international airport located in the Ingliston area of Edinburgh, Scotland. It was the busiest airport...
The University of Edinburgh (Scots: University o Edinburgh, Scottish Gaelic: Oilthigh Dhùn Èideann; abbreviated as Edin. in post-nominals) is a public...
The Edinburgh Festival Fringe (also referred to as the Edinburgh Fringe, Edinburgh Fringe Festival or the Fringe) is the world's largest performance arts...
the book that would give them a new lease." The reviewer for Tait's EdinburghMagazine—Theodore Martin, who was usually critical of Dickens's work—spoke...
rocks will only be a mark for these rebels." "The Army". Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine. 60 (370): 144. "...scarlet is unmilitary, first, because it is tawdry ;...
of the Edinburgh Monthly Magazine was published, which on its seventh number became Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine. "Maga", as this magazine soon came...
historian William Blackwood (1776–1834) publisher, founder of Blackwood's EdinburghMagazine Hugh Blair (1718–1800) minister, author Sir Gilbert Blane of Blanefield...