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  1. Great St Mary's is not only a beautiful medieval church, it's also one of the largest non-collegiate performance venues in Cambridge. Friday Lunchtime Concerts. We host a series of free lunchtime concerts on a Friday at 1pm (except in August & September). Check our Facebook & Twitter accounts for details. To apply to perform, please contact us ...

  2. Come experience our world-famous panoramic views of Cambridge! Climb the 123 steps of the University Church tower and enjoy a 360° view on our newly-refurbished outdoor viewing platform. Tickets for the tower are £7 for adults and £4.50 for individual accompanied children (age 5-16), £19 for a family ticket (2 adults + 2 children).

  3. Worship. Worship lies at the heart of Christian life. It is in worship that we express our faith in story, song, and sacrament. It is through encountering God within worship that we are formed, and transformed, as God’s people. Our 10am Sunday service follows the Church of England's Common Worship, with choir and familiar hymns, while ...

  4. To date, some 1,307 of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley's letters have been published, spanning the years from September 1814 until shortly before her death on February 1, 1851. The letters are wide-ranging in subject - family, friends, politics, travel, literature, culture, publishing, finances, and issues of daily life - as would be expected of a ...

  5. Church of England parish in central Cambridge, UKwww.lsm.org.uk

  6. Mary’s work is grounded in the social and cultural history of early modern Italy and Europe, and she has particular interests in religion, gender, sociability, and material culture. She is responsible for the Creative Encounters strand of the project, which focuses on people and their creative engagement with the material world.

  7. Once viewed solely in relation to the history of feminism, Mary Wollstonecraft is now recognised as a writer of formidable talent across a range of genres, including journalism, letters and travel writing, and is increasingly understood as an heir to eighteenth-century literary and political traditions as well as a forebear of romanticism.