News

The tired old Edwardian was in Melbourne, the architect was Sydney-based, and the client was also an architect. What could possibly go wrong?
This three-storey townhouse is a successful example of a church conversion. Beautiful leadlights, high ceilings, and exposed brick shine in the practical floor plan. The first-level living space opens ...
While her wild younger brother is a feted household name, Gwen John is hardly known. But a fascinating new book, which ...
The Edwardian Era (1901-1910) was a time when corsets loosened, motorcars chugged along, and then garden parties were truly all the rage.
Study suggests pigs may have been domesticated in China as early as Neolithic period Research shows wild boar were present in human settlements in the Yangtze River Delta thousands of years ago ...
A new option for post-CDK4/6is resistance era? Multicenter real-world study of anlotinib-based combination therapy in hormone receptor-positive metastatic breast cancer resistant to CDK4/6 inhibitors.
Edwardian homes are typically bigger and brighter than their Victorian predecessors, with larger rooms and good-sized gardens, making them ideal for families.
The Student Assembly awaits approval from President Kotlikoff for Resolution 43, which calls for an extended study period before finals.
Let’s call it loose inspiration because of course we’re hopping countries and years a smidge: Mary Poppins is set in London in 1910 during the Edwardian era — King Edward ruled from 1901 to 1910, and ...
A rare exhibition is exploring the glamorous lives and fashions of two royal couples who reigned over Britain during the Edwardian period as the country tipped ever closer to World War I.
This exhibition covers the long Edwardian era, beginning while Edward and his lovely Danish wife, Alexandra, were still Prince and Princess of Wales and closing at the end of the Great War.
A new exhibition opens at Buckingham Palace tomorrow focussing on the opulence of the Edwardian era. The reigns of Edward VII (1901—1910) and King George V (1910—1936) are explored through ...