Ridgeway, Sir William, 1853-1926 (classicist and Disney professor of archaeology, University of Cambridge (England))
Found in 33 Collections and/or Records:
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Albert Sherbourne Le Souef, 08 May 1930
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Alice Hayes, 10 November 1905
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Matthew Horace Hayes, 09 December 1902
Hayes enquires how he could get a copy of Ewart's paper about 'Callosities and the wartless pony'. He also would like to know whether the breed Equus caballus came directly from North America or through its ancestors pliohippus or protohippus. He mentions a paper that Professor William Ridgeway has sent him on the origin of the thoroughbred horse. He also invites Ewart to visit him for hunting.
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Sir William Ridgeway, 02 November 1909
Ridgeway writes concerning the confusion over the provenance of the Ward's zebra skin to which Ridgeway refers in a paper for the Proceedings of the Zoological Society. He asks Ewart to confirm that the skin came from the Lombori Hills, as Rowland Ward are now asking Ridgeway to settle the matter.
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Sir William Ridgeway, 04 December 1902
Ridgeway states that he is sending Ewart an abstract of his paper on the thoroughbred horse. He mentions his thoughts on the evolution of the Barb in North Africa and says how interested he was in Ewart's book The Penycuik Experiments.
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Sir William Ridgeway, 09 December 1902
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Sir William Ridgeway, 28 January 1903
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Sir William Ridgeway, 07 February 1903
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Sir William Ridgeway, 05 March 1903
Letter to James Cossar Ewart from Sir William Ridgeway, 14 March 1903
Ridgeway refers to the existence of the small zebras in upper Africa and mentions that Africa has been much neglected in scientific and anthropological studies. He also states that he has evidence that the Equus hemionus was in Paphlagonia in Homeric days. He invites Ewart to visit him in Cambridge.
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