A h keane biography

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    Title:The early Teutonic, Italian, and French mastersAuthor:Keane, A. H. (Augustus Henry), 1833-1912Author:Dohme, Robert, 1845-1893Note:Chatto and Windus, 1880  Link:page images at HathiTrustNo stable link:This is an uncurated book entry from our extended bookshelves, readable online now but without a stable link here. You should not bookmark this page, but you can request that we add this book to our curated collection, which has stable links.  Subject:Art, MedievalSubject:Art, RenaissanceSubject:Artists -- Europe -- BiographySubject:BiographyOther copies:Look for editions of this book at your library, or elsewhere.

    The World's Peoples

    The World's Peoples (Classic Reprint)

    A. H. Keane

    Published bygd Forgotten Books, 2024

    ISBN 10: 1440044171 / ISBN 13: 9781440044175

    New / Paperback

    Print on Demand

    Seller:Forgotten Books, London, United Kingdom

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    Paperback. Condition: New. Print on Demand. This book fryst vatten about the origins and development of the different races within the human family. The author explores the evidence for the theory that there was one original home for all humans in Southeast Asia, and that from there different groups migrated to other parts of the world, adapting to their new environments and developing distinct physical and cultural characteristics. The book discusses the four primary groups of humans: Negroid or Black, Mongoloid or Yellow, Caucasoid or White, and Amerind or Red, and examines the evidence for their separate evolutions from a common ancestor. The author argues that there is no scientifi

  • a h keane biography
  • Augustus Henry Keane

    Augustus Henry Keane (1833–1912) was an Irish Roman Catholic journalist and linguist, known for his ethnological writings.

    Early life

    [edit]

    He was born in Cork, Ireland.[1][2][3] He was educated in Cork, Dublin and Jersey, and graduated at the Roman Catholic College, Dublin.[4]

    In Glasgow

    [edit]

    Keane was editor of the Glasgow Free Press from 1862. He and his deputy Peter McCorry turned the first Scottish Catholic newspaper into a campaigning sheet, setting the Irish priests against the Scottish priests, and in particular the vicars-apostolic. The paper supported the nationalist Patrick Lavelle,[5] who used its pages to attack Paul Cullen.[6]John Murdoch, the Vicar Apostolic of the Western District was another particular target, the background being the increasing number of Irish Catholic priests in Scotland, and an increasing Irish immigrant population.[7] Keane and McCorry fou