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  1. Alfred Burges (1796–1886) was a British civil engineer. He was apprenticed to the civil engineer James Walker , and in turn trained several other engineers including Sir Joseph Bazalgette . Walker and Burges were responsible for railways, bridges and many marine works, including 21 lighthouses, Surrey Commercial Docks , the ...

  2. Early life and travels. Burges was born on 2 December 1827, [1] the son of Alfred Burges (1796–1886), a wealthy civil engineer. Alfred amassed a considerable fortune, which enabled his son to devote his life to the study and practice of architecture without requiring that he actually earn a living.

  3. The Elizabeth Almshouses are a collection of four almshouses on Elizabeth Road, Worthing built in 1860 by the architect William Burges. The almshouses were paid for by William's father, Alfred Burges, in memory of Alfred's wife. The building is listed Grade II. History and architecture

    • History
    • Architecture and Description
    • Sources

    The hamlet of Kilnsea lies in the parish of Easington, almost at the tip of Spurn Head, in the East Riding of Yorkshire. The hamlet has always been prone to sea erosion and the original church of St Helen fell into the sea in 1826-31.[a] Some thirty years later, on 22 April 1865, the Yorkshire Gazette recorded; "the great liberality of Mr. A. Burge...

    The church is simple and small, comprising a chancel, nave and bellcote. It is constructed of red and yellow brick and incorporates some material from the earlier church. These included the original font, returned from nearby Skeffling. A tablet, commemorating two men from the village who were killed in the First World War, was removed when the chu...

    Allen, Thomas (1831). A New and Complete History of the County of York. Yorkshire: I. T. Hinton. OCLC 820525405. st helens kilnsea.
    Crook, J. Mordaunt (2013). William Burges and the High Victorian Dream. London: Frances Lincoln. ISBN 978-0-7112-3349-2.
    Pevsner, Nikolaus; Neave, David (2005). Yorkshire: York and the East Riding. The Buildings of England. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-09593-7.
  4. Bourges debe su nombre al pueblo galo de los bituriges. Antiguamente se llamaba Avaricum (el nombre celta era Avaricon ). Durante la Guerra de las Galias fue asediada, durante meses, por Julio César. Vercingetórix había aplicado la táctica de la tierra quemada por toda la Galia.

  5. This may have resulted from Burges's father, Alfred Burges, having worked for Bute's father on the East Bute Docks in Cardiff. Together, their joint interests in the medieval world, supported by Bute's money and Burges's skill, transformed the castle into a "Gothic feudal extravaganza". [11]

  6. Inicio. Burguesías medieval y moderna. Era revolucionaria. Burguesía para el marxismo. Valores burgueses y programa burgués. Tratamientos burgueses. Burguesismo y cosmovisión burguesa. Tipología de «las burguesías». Conceptos sobre la burguesía.