Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6> ?p ?o }
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2009-08-05".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2010-01-01".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2010-01-08".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2010-01-19".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2010-04-03".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2010-04-06".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2010-04-07".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2010-07-25".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2010-08-01".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2012-05-19".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 accessdate "2012-12-29".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 author "Carrington, Sean".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 author2 "Henry Fraser".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 author3 "John Gilmore".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 author4 "Addinton Forde".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "African Heritage".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Alexandra School".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Broadcasting".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Chattle House".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Combermere School".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Falernum".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Glendairy Prison".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Grapefruit".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Parliament".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Pepper sauce".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Police".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Settlement of Barbados".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "St. Michael's Cathedral".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapter "Vestry".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapterurl search_anchor.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 chapterurl search_anchor.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 date "2003".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 first1 "Sean".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 first2 "Henry C.".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 first2 "Henry".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 first2 "HenryC".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Bajan_Creole.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Bajan_pepper_sauce.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Bajan_stick-licking.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Barbados.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Barbados_National_Trust.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Bridgetown.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy CBC_TV_8_(Barbados).
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Cathedral_Church_of_Saint_Michael_and_All_Angels.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Chattel_house.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Combermere_School.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Districts_of_Barbados.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Falernum.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Freemasonry_in_Barbados.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Grapefruit.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy HM_Glendairy_Prison.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Igbo_language.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Igbo_people.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy James_Hay,_1st_Earl_of_Carlisle.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy List_of_Parliamentary_constituencies_in_Barbados.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy List_of_sauces.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy List_of_the_first_female_holders_of_political_offices_in_North_and_Central_America_and_the_Caribbean.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Mount_Hillaby.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy National_Heroes_Square.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Nita_Barrow.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Parishes_of_Barbados.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Royal_Barbados_Police_Band.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy Royal_Barbados_Police_Force.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isCitedBy The_Alexandra_School.
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 isbn "0-333-92068-6".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 last1 "Carrington".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 last2 "Fraser".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 page "25".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 page "4".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 page "43".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 page "82".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 page "87".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 page "Pg. 153".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 page "Pg. 176".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "113, 114".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "135".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "14, 29, 186".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "146–147".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "150".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "185–186".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "199".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "20–21".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "25".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "2–3".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "32".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "51–52".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "74".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 pages "90–91".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 publisher "Macmillan Caribbean Publishers Limited".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 publisher "Macmillan Caribbean - Macmillan Publishers Limited Press".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 publisher "Macmillan Caribbean Publishers Limited".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 publisher "Macmillan Caribbean".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 publisher "Macmillan Caribbean,".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 quote "6.31152E9".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 quote "After emancipation, the slaves were still landless, since most of the land was still owned by the plantations. Through the Located Labours Act of 1840 former slaves were allowed to build their humble homes on marginally productive plantation lands, at 'peppercorn' rent, but the plantation owners reserved the right to evict tenants from these tenantries at short notice. Houses therefore had to be 'chattel', which means 'movable possession', and for this reason were built of timber, and so constructed that they could be easily dismantled in sections, moved to another spot on an ox-cart , and reassembled in a single day, and yet be able to survive this with minimal damage.)".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 quote "Direct African influence declined in Barbados earlier than in other major Caribbean societies. In 1817 only 7 percent of Barbadian slaves had been born in Africa, whereas in Jamaica the proportion was 36 percent and 44 percent in Trinidad. An important result was that the process of acculturation, whereby Afro-Barbadians were persuaded or coerced into accepting European cultural norms was more intensive in Barbados. To give two examples, the proportion of words of African origin in the Barbadian vocabulary is much lower than it is in Jamaica, and there are in Barbados none of the religions of African or partly African origin found elsewhere in the Caribbean, such as Voodoo in Haiti, Shango in Trinidad, or Kélé in St. Lucia.".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 quote "One of many citrus species grown in Barbados. This fruit is believed to have originated in Barbados as a natural cross between sweet orange and Shaddock , both of which were introduced from Asia in the seventeenth century. The grapefruit first appeared as an illustration entitled 'The Forbidden Fruit Tree' in the Rev. Griffith Hughes' The Natural History of Barbados . This accords with the scientific name which literally is 'citrus of paradise'. The fruit was obviously fairly common around that time since George Washington in his Barbados Journal mentions 'the Forbidden Fruit' as one of the local fruit available at a dinner party he attended. The plant was later described in the 1837 Flora of Jamaica as the Barbados Grapefruit. The historical arguments and experimental work on leaf enzymes and oils from possible parents all support a Barbadian origin for the fruit.".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 quote "Women were not able to vote until 1943. The first women to be elected as a Member of the House of Assembly was Ermie Bourne . The first women to become a Minister of Government was the Honourable Billie Miller .".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 ref "Carrington".
- books?vid=ISBN0-333-92068-6 title "A~Z of Barbados Heritage".