England
(Place)
Also known as: Ingarangi.
Mentioned in
- 18 Battalion and Armoured Regiment
- CHAPTER 1 — Early Days
- CHAPTER 2 — The Orion
- CHAPTER 5 — ‘Freyberg's Wogs’
- CHAPTER 9 — Out of Greece
- CHAPTER 10 — Airborne Invasion
- CHAPTER 11 — The Crete Debacle
- CHAPTER 12 — Reconstruction
- CHAPTER 14 — Calamity in the Desert
- CHAPTER 17 — Interrupted Holiday
- CHAPTER 20 — Disaster at Ruweisat
- CHAPTER 23 — Farewell to the Blue
- CHAPTER 24 — ‘Tanks of our Own’
- CHAPTER 26 — The Brick Wall—Guardiagrele
- CHAPTER 29 — Winter and Spring
- 19 Battalion and Armoured Regiment
- CHAPTER 1 — Trentham
- CHAPTER 2 — New Zealand to Egypt
- CHAPTER 3 — Egypt
- CHAPTER 4 — The Western Desert
- CHAPTER 5 — Baggush Box
- CHAPTER 6 — Helwan
- CHAPTER 8 — Campaign in Greece
- CHAPTER 9 — Reorganisation on Crete
- CHAPTER 10 — Airborne Invasion
- CHAPTER 11 — Back to Egypt
- CHAPTER 12 — The Division in the Desert
- CHAPTER 13 — Baggush to Syria
- CHAPTER 14 — Back to the Western Desert
- CHAPTER 18 — A New Year and a Fresh Front
- CHAPTER 19 — Cassino Fortress
- CHAPTER 21 — Rome and the Pursuit North
- CHAPTER 22 — Back to the Adriatic Coast
- CHAPTER 23 — Faenza to Trieste
- CHAPTER 24 — Repatriation and Rehabilitation
- [section]
- History of New Zealand. Vol. III.
- Chapter XVII. — 1872–1874. — Mclean and The Maoris
- Contents of Vol. III
- Index
- Chapter XVIII. — 1874—1877. — Session of 1874
- CHAPTER XIX. — 1877—1881. — THE “WAKA MAORI” NEWSPAPER
- CHAPTER XX. — 1881—1882. — THE RAID UPON PARIHAKA
- CHAPTER XXI. — 1883 TO 1894
- THE GREAT REFUSAL. — “Colui Che fece per viltate il gran rifiuto!”
- POSTSCRIPT, 1894
- 1. Birthplaces
- History Of Australia: First Edition, 1883
- Introduction to In A German Pension
- Introduction to Old New Zealand
- Introduction to Polynesian Researches
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 02 February 1927
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 10 April 1927
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 13 December, 1926
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 16 June 1927
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 16th May 1927
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 18 September 1926
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 21 February, 1927
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 22 March 1927
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 23 January 1927
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 27 November, 1926
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 28-29 September 1926
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 2 November, 1926
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 3-5 October, 1926
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 3 May 1927
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 7th September, 1926
- Letter from John Cawte Beaglehole to his Mother, 8 January 1927
- Mahoe Leaves; Being a Selection of Sketches of New Zealand and Its Inhabitants, and Other Matters Concerning Them
- Maori Pronunciation and the Evolution of Written Maori
- Mokomokai: Commercialization and Desacralization
- Nelson Historical Society Journal, Volume 7, Issue 1, 2009
- New Zealand Medical Services in Middle East and Italy
- [section]
- CHAPTER 3 — Medical Arrangements in Egypt and England, 1940
- Index
- Changes in Administration
- Awakening to Defence Needs
- Medical Equipment
- Appreciation of Hospital Requirements Overseas
- Medical Units with Third Echelon
- Cooks
- Establishment of a New Zealand General Hospital in Egypt
- 4 NZ General Hospital Opens at Helwan
- Developments at Base—Changes in Administration
- 1 NZ Camp Hospital
- 1 NZ General Hospital, Helmieh
- 1 NZ Convalescent Depot
- Medical Arrangements in United Kingdom
- Pinewood Hospital—1 NZ General Hospital
- Activities of 5 Field Ambulance
- Recruitment of New Zealand Doctors in United Kingdom
- [section]
- General Military Plan of the Campaign
- Evacuation of Greece
- [section]
- Evacuation from Greece—Action taken in Egypt
- 6 Field Ambulance Captured
- Medical Staffs Remain with Wounded
- Reception in Egypt of Battle Casualties
- 1 General Hospital
- Re-equipment
- Hospital Ship Maunganui
- 2 NZ General Hospital
- Auxiliary Departments of Hospitals
- Shortage of Specialists
- Provision of Mobile Surgical Unit
- Graded Men
- New Zealand Medical Units in the Campaign
- [section]
- Medical Records Section
- Formation of New Zealand Section, Motor Ambulance Convoy
- Plastic Surgery
- Medical Units in the Breakthrough
- Conferences
- Education of Medical Officers
- Staffing of New Zealand Medical Corps
- Repatriation of Prisoners of War
- Medical Arrangements for Sangro Crossing
- Hospital Ship Policy
- Shortage of Medical Officers
- Recruitment of New Zealand Doctors in the United Kingdom
- Hospital Staff for Repatriation Units in United Kingdom
- Medical Operations
- MDS Opens in Faenza
- Returned Prisoners of War
- Staff for Repatriation Unit, United Kingdom
- Medical Services with Prisoner-of-war Repatriation Group
- Reminiscences of The War in New Zealand
- Some Problems of Cook's Biographer
- Sport 15: white horse black dog
- Sport 16: Autumn 1996
- The Adventures of Kimble Bent
- The Atoll of Funafuti, Ellice group : its zoology, botany, ethnology and general structure based on collections made by Charles Hedley of the Australian Museum, Sydney, N.S.W.
- The Farthest Promised Land — English Villagers, New Zealand Immigrants of the 1870s
- The Long White Cloud
- The New Zealand Survey
- The Origins of International Rivalry in Samoa: 1845–1884
- The Past and Present Of New Zealand With Its Prospects for the Future
- Chapter I. — Sunshine and Shade; or, the Past, Present, and Future of the Church in New Zealand
- Chapter II. The Church
- Chapter III. The Church
- Chapter VI. The English Church
- Chapter XII. Lecture on Wanganui
- Chapter XV. Hints to Emigrants
- John Williams
- Baron De Thierry
- Acclimatisation
- A List of the earliest Works printed in Maori
- English
- The Right Honourable Sir Francis H. D. Bell, P.C., G.C.M.G., K.C.,: His Life and Times
- Chapter I. — Ancestry
- Contents
- Chapter II. — The First Generation. — Sir Francis Dillon Bell, 1822-1898
- Chapter VI. — Legal Education in England
- Chapter VII. — Sixty Years at the Bar
- Chapter VIII. — Bell Enters Parliament
- Chapter X. — Bell Becomes a Minister of the Crown, 1912
- Chapter XII. — The World War, 1914
- Chapter XV. — Views on Various War Problems
- Chapter XVI. — War Weariness—A Great Speech
- Chapter XVII. — Bell as Attorney-General—Problems of Bench, Bar, and Juries
- Chapter XIX. — Acting Prime Minister, 1921
- Chapter XXI. — Bell Visits London, 1922
- Chapter XXIV. — Massey's Last Parliament, 1923 to 1925
- Chapter XXV. — Bell Becomes Prime Minister, 1925
- Chapter XXVI. — The Coates Ministry, 1925-1928
- Chapter XXVII. — Some Empire Problems and the League of Nations, 1926
- Chapter XXVIII. — New Zealand and the Empire
- Chapter XXIX. — Out of Office—1928-1936
- Chapter XXX. — Conclusion. — Personal Characteristics And Private Life
- Index
- The Wandering Scholars
Searching
For several reasons, including lack of resource and inherent ambiguity, not all names in the NZETC are marked-up. This means that finding all references to a topic often involves searching. Search for England as: "England", "Ingarangi". Additional references are often found by searching for just the main name of the topic (the surname in the case of people).
Other Collections
The following collections may have holdings relevant to "England":
- Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, which has entries for many prominent New Zealanders.
- Archives New Zealand, which has collections of maps, plans and posters; immigration passenger lists; and probate records.
- National Library of New Zealand, which has extensive collections of published material.
- Auckland War Memorial Museum, which has extensive holdings on the Auckland region and New Zealand military history.
- Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, which has strong holdings in Tāonga Māori, biological holotypes and New Zealand art.
- nzhistory.net.nz, from the History Group of the Ministry for Culture and Heritage.