A biographical note of Professor E.H.S. Simmonds as a teacher.
Rough biographical notes concerning Professor E.H.S. Simmonds.
Business card for the funeral directors, Arthur W. Bruce Ltd.
A form for the registration of the Death of "Stuart Edward Simmonds".
Letter from Christopher Westmacott to Arthur W. Bruce Ltd., Funeral Directors, to enclose a donation of £20 to the Lady Nuffield Home in memory of Stuart Simmonds.
Material concerned with the inaugural Memorial Lecture in honour of Professor E.H.S. Simmonds.
Photographs of Professor E.H.S. Simmonds.
Sin títuloPhotographs with one envelope and list:
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- Panorama of Selarang Square taken at the time of the "incident"
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- That of the Australian corner sewing their socks
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- View of the latrines in the middle of the square
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- Beds made from stretchers and old wood
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- Men sitting on their kits. This gives a fair idea of the overcrowding
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- Two or three "lucky" once who got a place on the verandah, Collins R.I.A.S.C., Gwyn Roberts R.A.S.C.
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- The final day. An officer signing the non-escape from "Under Duress"
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- Scenes on the square during the heavy rain
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- Selarong Square, British Battalion cook house. They are cutting up one of their goats
With these photographs is a typed list describing them and the envelope in which they were sent, addressed to Simmonds at Keble College and postmarked, May 1946.
The Selarang Barracks incident was a revolt of British and Australian prisoners-of-war interned in a Japanese camp in Changi, Singapore.
The events started on 30 August 1942 after the Japanese recaptured four POWs escaped from the Selarang Barracks camps, and required that the other prisoners sign a pledge not to escape. After they refused, they were forced to crowd in the areas around the barracks square for nearly five days with little water and no sanitation. The executions of the recaptured POWs failed to break the men. The commanders, however, finally capitulated on 5 September when their men started to fall ill and die from dysentery. Upon signing the pledge, the men were allowed to return to the barracks buildings. Simmonds was at this camp and these photographs give a clear depiction of some of the conditions.
E.H.S. Simmonds welcomes a guest. The occasion is unknown.
'Facsimiles of three Muhammedan Gold Coins, found on the Coast of Malabar with some remarks upon them'. The three coins described were thrown up during a heavy gale on the beach at the mouth of the Balliaputtan river, five miles from Cananow on the Coast of Malabar in 1818. One of them is dated AH301 and appears to have been struck at the mint of Constantine near Cordova, the Capital of a province of the same name in Andalusia, under the reign of Abdurrahman the third. The other two are dated AH407 and bear the name of Abd ul Hussein Ali. The coins were presented to the Madras Literary Society by Thomas Hervey Baber. There are a number of papers with the facsimiles. These are:
- Letter from Thomas Hervey Baber to Mr Anderson, Acting Secretary of the Madras Literary Society, dated 25 November 1818.
- A list of the Moorish Kings of Andalusia.
- A list of Khalifs. An extract from the Arabic Dictionary entitled 'Kamood'.
- Facsimiles of the coins.
- A letter from J. Stokes containing remarks on the coins.
- Facsimiles of the coins with Malayalam translations of the inscriptions.
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A letter from Mr Anderson acknowledging receipt of the coins.
All these items and their descriptions are listed in the handwritten Catalogue of English Manuscripts in the Royal Asiatic Society . However there is also further material within the file:
- Facsimiles of the coins with English translations of the inscriptions
- A list of the names of the Princes of the Dynasty of a Fatimites
*. Original label identifying their listing in the Catalogue of English Manuscripts.