ARDIT FLOOR LEVELLER

četvrtak, 27.10.2011.

ARDIT FLOOR LEVELLER : FLOOR LEVELLER


Ardit Floor Leveller : Wood Flooring Trends.



Ardit Floor Leveller





ardit floor leveller






    leveller
  • The Leveller was a British political magazine, c.1976 to 1982, collectively produced by a shifting coalition of radicals, socialists, marxists, feminists, and others of the British left and progressive movements.

  • The Levellers was a political movement during the English Civil Wars which emphasised popular sovereignty, extended suffrage, equality before the law, and religious tolerance, all of which were expressed in the manifesto "Agreement of the People".

  • leveler: a radical who advocates the abolition of social distinctions





    floor
  • All the rooms or areas on the same level of a building; a story

  • A level area or space used or designed for a particular activity

  • shock: surprise greatly; knock someone's socks off; "I was floored when I heard that I was promoted"

  • a structure consisting of a room or set of rooms at a single position along a vertical scale; "what level is the office on?"

  • the inside lower horizontal surface (as of a room, hallway, tent, or other structure); "they needed rugs to cover the bare floors"; "we spread our sleeping bags on the dry floor of the tent"

  • The lower surface of a room, on which one may walk











ardit floor leveller - The Putney




The Putney Debates


The Putney Debates



The Putney Debates were a series of discussions between members of the New Model Army – a number of the participants being Levellers – concerning the makeup of a new constitution for England.

After seizing the City of London from Presbyterian opponents in August 1647, the New Model Army had set up its headquarters at Putney. The debates began at the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Putney, in the county of Surrey starting on 28 October 1647 but moved to Quartermaster General of Foot Thomas Grosvenor's lodgings on 29 October. The debates lasted until 11 November.

The debates were transcribed by secretary William Clarke and a team of stenographers. From 2 November however, all recording ceased. The debates were not reported and Clarke's minutes were not published at the time. They were lost until 1890 when they were rediscovered at the library of Worcester College, Oxford, and subsequently published as part of the Clarke Papers.

This edition of the Putney Debates is specially formatted and includes a Table of Contents.

The Putney Debates were a series of discussions between members of the New Model Army – a number of the participants being Levellers – concerning the makeup of a new constitution for England.

After seizing the City of London from Presbyterian opponents in August 1647, the New Model Army had set up its headquarters at Putney. The debates began at the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Putney, in the county of Surrey starting on 28 October 1647 but moved to Quartermaster General of Foot Thomas Grosvenor's lodgings on 29 October. The debates lasted until 11 November.

The debates were transcribed by secretary William Clarke and a team of stenographers. From 2 November however, all recording ceased. The debates were not reported and Clarke's minutes were not published at the time. They were lost until 1890 when they were rediscovered at the library of Worcester College, Oxford, and subsequently published as part of the Clarke Papers.

This edition of the Putney Debates is specially formatted and includes a Table of Contents.










75% (5)





Levellers




Levellers





Simon Friend of the Levellers at Beautiful Days Festival 2010, Escot Park, Devon, UK











Levellers




Levellers





Jon Sevink of the Levellers at Beautiful Days Festival 2010, Escot Park, Devon, UK









ardit floor leveller







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