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Sherratt
Sherratt may refer to: ;People * Andrew Sherratt (1946–2006), English archaeologist *Brian Sherratt (educator) (born 1942), Headmaster of Great Barr School in Birmingham, England (1984–2005) * Brian Sherratt (footballer) (born 1944), footballer * John Sherratt (born 1923), English former amateur footballer * Robert Simon Sherratt, British engineer ;Other * Sherratt & Hughes or Bowes & Bowes, bookselling and publishing company based in Cambridge, England * Sherratt Bay, bay between Cape Melville and Penguin Island on the south side of King George Island, in the South Shetland Islands See also *Cherat Cherat (Pashto: چېراټ) is a hill station dating from the 1860s that is located immediately above the villages of Chapri, Saleh Khana, Kotli Kalan and Dak Ismail Khel in the Nowshera District of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan. Cherat lies 3 ... * Sarratt * Sharratt * Surratt {{disambiguation ...
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Andrew Sherratt
Andrew George Sherratt (8 May 1946 – 24 February 2006) was an English archaeologist, one of the most influential of his generation. He was best known for his theory of the secondary products revolution. Early life and education Sherratt was born in Oldham, Lancashire on 8 May 1946. From 1965, he studied archaeology and anthropology at Peterhouse, Cambridge University, completing his degree in 1968. He received his PhD from Cambridge in 1976, writing his thesis on ''The Beginning of the Bronze Age in south-east Europe''. Academic career He moved to Oxford, having been appointed Assistant Keeper of Antiquities at the Ashmolean Museum in 1973. He was a reader at the University of Oxford from 1997 and Professor from 2002. Oxford remained his academic home until 2005, when he took up a professorship at the University of Sheffield. Sherratt travelled widely and received international recognition for his work. He was invited to give the prestigious Human Context and Society lectures ...
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Brian Sherratt (educator)
Dr Brian Sherratt OBE JP FIMgt FRSA is a political science researcher with a particular interest in Whitehall bureaucracy and the role of the permanent secretary. Formerly he was Headmaster (1984–2005) of Great Barr School a secondary school on Aldridge Road in Great Barr, Birmingham, England for children aged 11 to 19. During his time as Headmaster, Great Barr was the largest school in the UK. Acclaim He is acclaimed with making Great Barr School one of the best in the country until his formal retirement from the school in August 2005. Under Sherratt's leadership, Great Barr was noted as a school with very high standards of pupil behaviour and pupil achievement. For these reasons, the school was heavily oversubscribed by parents on first choices. Visiting Great Barr School in November 1999, Sir Chris Woodhead, the then Chief Inspector of Schools, said "You have here an outstanding city comprehensive school – it is one of the most impressive schools I have visited. Great ...
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Brian Sherratt (footballer)
Brian Sherratt (29 March 1944 – 1 October 2021) was an English former footballer who played in the Football League for Barnsley, Colchester United, Nottingham Forest, Oxford United and Stoke City. Career Sherratt started his footballing career at his local side Stoke City's youth team. He progressed up to first team level for the 1961–62 season where he provided back-up to City's number one Jimmy O'Neill. He made just a single appearance all season where he kept a clean sheet in a 2–0 home win over Middlesbrough in April 1962. Sherratt was released at the end of the season and joined Oxford United where he played 44 times in the league before moving to Barnsley. He spent a year at the "Tykes" but failed to establish himself as number one and joined Colchester United for the 1970–71 season but left at the end of the season. Career statistics Honours Oxford United * Football League Third Division The Football League Third Division was the third tier of the English ...
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John Sherratt
John Hubert Sherratt (9 March 1923 – 1975) was an English amateur footballer who played at centre-forward for Port Vale in 1949. Career Sherratt joined Port Vale in January 1949, and made his debut in a 3–1 defeat by Swansea Town at Vetch Field The Vetch Field was a football stadium in Swansea, Wales. It was used for football matches and was the home ground of Swansea City until the club moved to the newly built Liberty Stadium in 2005. Opened in 1912, the ground held around 12,000 at ... on 5 March. He played just one more game in 1948–49, before being released by manager Gordon Hodgson in the summer. Career statistics Source: References {{DEFAULTSORT:Sherratt, John 1923 births 1975 deaths Footballers from Stoke-on-Trent English footballers Association football forwards Port Vale F.C. players English Football League players ...
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Robert Simon Sherratt
Robert Simon Sherratt from the University of Reading, Reading, Berkshire, UK was named Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in 2012 ''for contributions to embedded signal processing in consumer electronic devices and products''. References Fellow Members of the IEEE Living people Year of birth missing (living people) Place of birth missing (living people) {{england-engineer-stub ...
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Sherratt & Hughes
Bowes & Bowes was a bookselling and publishing company based in Cambridge, England. It was established by Robert Bowes (1835–1919), a nephew of Daniel Macmillan (1813–1857) — the founder, with his brother Alexander, , of a firm which by 1850 was a thriving bookshop with the official name ‘’ The same bookshop was eventually owned by Alexander Macmillan in partnership with Robert Bowes. The company became known as ‘’ only , George Brimley Bowes (1874-1946, Robert Bowes’ son) having become a partner in the business . The firm continued as a family business until 1953 when it was acquired by , who continued to operate it under the original name . In that year the business’s name was changed to Sherratt & Hughes. The site at 1, Trinity Street, Cambridge has a claim to be the oldest bookshop in the country, books having been sold there since 1581. Since the closure of in 1992, the site has been the home of the Cambridge University Press bookshop. The firm’s bac ...
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Sherratt Bay
Sherratt Bay is a bay between Cape Melville and Penguin Island on the south side of King George Island, in the South Shetland Islands. The existence of the bay was known and roughly charted by sealers working in the area in the early 1820s. It was named by the United Kingdom Antarctic Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) in 1960 for Richard Sherratt, Master of the Lady Trowbridge from Liverpool Liverpool is a city and metropolitan borough in Merseyside, England. With a population of in 2019, it is the 10th largest English district by population and its metropolitan area is the fifth largest in the United Kingdom, with a popul ... which was wrecked off Cape Melville on December 25, 1820. Sherratt occupied his time until rescued by making an inaccurate but historically interesting map of the South Shetland Islands. References SCAR Composite Antarctic Gazetteer Bays of King George Island (South Shetland Islands) {{KingGeorgeIslandAQ-geo-stub ...
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Cherat
Cherat (Pashto: چېراټ) is a hill station dating from the 1860s that is located immediately above the villages of Chapri, Saleh Khana, Kotli Kalan and Dak Ismail Khel in the Nowshera District of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa in Pakistan. Cherat lies 34 miles south east from the city of Peshawar at an elevation of 4,500 feet on the west of the Khattak range, which divides the district of Nowshera from Kohat District. History During British rule Cherat was important as a hill cantonment and sanitarium for British troops in what was then the Nowshera Tehsil of the Peshawar District of British India. Cherat was first used as a sanitarium for troops in 1861 and was used during the hot weather as a health station for the British troops who were quartered in the hot and malarious valley of Peshawar. It was declared a cantonment in 1886. The cantonment commands a view of the whole of the Peshawar valley on one side, and on the other of a portion of the Khwarra valley in Peshawar District, ...
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Sarratt
Sarratt is both a village and a civil parish in Three Rivers District, Hertfordshire, England. It is situated north of Rickmansworth on high ground near the county boundary with Buckinghamshire. The chalk stream, the River Chess, rising just north of Chesham in the Chiltern Hills, passes through Sarratt Bottom in the valley to the west of the village to join the River Colne in Rickmansworth. The conditions offered by the river are perfect for the cultivation of watercress. Sarratt has the only commercially operating watercress farm in Hertfordshire. The valley to the east of Sarratt is dry. Church and chapel The parish church of Sarratt is the ''Church of the Holy Cross''. Founded , construction is flint-and-brick built with, reputedly, reused Roman tiles. From the 17th century a large linear village developed nearly away. Nowadays, this area is referred to as Sarratt Green and the area around the church is known as Church End. The village also included a Baptist Chapel a ...
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Sharratt
Sharratt may refer to any of the following: People with surname Sharratt *Bryan Sharratt (1947–2007), US attorney *Harry Sharratt (1929–2009), British athlete in football * Henry Sharratt, English rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s and 1960s * John Sharratt (1850–1892), English cricketer * Mary Sharratt, American novelist *Nicholas Sharratt, English operatic tenor *Nick Sharratt (born 1962), British artist *Paul Sharratt (1933–2009), British television personality * Martin Sharratt (born 1964), British revolutionary thinker Other * George Sharratt Pearson (1880–1966), English-born wholesale grocer, political figure in British Columbia *Pringle Richards Sharratt (formed 1996), British architectural firm See also *Charrat * Sarratt *Sarrot Sarot is a town in the Sarot second-order division of the Castries District of the island nation of Saint Lucia. The Sarot division has a population of 690. Sarot is located towards the heart of the island, between Vana ...
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