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  2. John Eric Langdon-Davies MBE (18 March 1897 – 5 December 1971) was a British author and journalist. He was a war correspondent during the Spanish Civil War and the Soviet-Finnish War . As a result of his experiences in Spain, he founded the Foster Parents' Scheme for refugee children in Spain, which is now the aid organisation Plan ...

  3. Aug 22, 2020 · Yet two years earlier, Secker and Warburg, the publishers of Homage, had brought out John Langdon-Davies’s Behind the Spanish Barricades: Reports from the Spanish Civil War and it had been a best-seller. Reportage Press Edition. Langdon-Davies’s text is now largely forgotten (though it was republished in 2007 by the Reportage Press).

  4. Carlos, The King Who Would Not Die. By Langdon-Davies, John. , . . . Pp. . $4.95. Hispanic American Historical Review (1964) 44 (3): 452–453. This is a hereditary “who-dunnit.”. The victim is Charles II, ill-fated biological specimen of Hapsburg inbreeding, who served as the last feeble representative of that dynasty and whose death in ...

    • Jack D. L. Holmes
    • 1964
  5. Mar 17, 2021 · Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2021-03-17 15:08:16 Boxid IA40076604 Camera USB PTP Class Camera

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  7. Apr 1, 2008 · Truly, this was a man of many talents. John Langdon-Davies was born in Zululand in 1897, although he was raised in the south-east of England. In the Twenties, he moved with his first wife and two children to Ripoll in northern Catalunya, the start of his long fascination with the region. His third wife, Patricia Langdon-Davies, who moved to ...

    • Hannah Pennell
  8. It was Carlos II who signed the decree outlawing Indian slavery in 1679. Langdon-Davies never mentions it. Langdon-Davies, a journalist best known as founder of the aid agency Plan, narrates Carlos' life with energy and a knowing wit. The author concludes that Carlos was the victim of poisoning centuries before the king was even born.

  9. John Langdon-Davies. born Eschowe, Zululand, South Africa: 18 March 1897. died 5 December 1971. works. A Short History of the Future (London: George Routledge and Sons, 1936) [hb/] The Unknown, Is It Nearer? (New York: New American Library/Signet, 1956) with Eric J Dingwall [nonfiction: pb/Richard Powers] links. Internet Speculative Fiction ...

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