The Mill photograph

The Mill

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First episode dateJuly 28, 2013
Final episode dateAugust 24, 2014
Networks Channel 4
Directors James Hawes
Aug 17, 2014
Artists Rembrandt
Locations National Gallery of Art
Created1645–1648
Periods Baroque
Dutch Golden Age
MediaOil Paint
Dimens87.6 cm × 105.6 cm
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2315319
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About The Mill


The Mill is a painting by Dutch baroque artist Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn. It is in the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC. For a long time, the attribution to Rembrandt was regarded as doubtful; it has been restored in recent years, although it is not universally accepted.

Excavating the birthplace of Scotland's tartan industry

Excavating the birthplace of Scotland's tartan industry
Oct 4,2023 2:31 am

... Dr Cook, who has been leading the digs, said: " In the 1850s The Mills complex was huge and straddled the Bannock Burn...

No 10 turned down Larkin, Auden and other poets for laureate job

No 10 turned down Larkin, Auden and other poets for laureate job
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... " Cecil Day-Lewis was " a possible" - he produced " run of The Mill poetry but nothing particularly outstanding"...

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May 21,2023 6:30 pm

... Lyn Pask, chair of Blackwood s history society, said the brothers owned " some of the earliest motorcars in the Gwent region" developed machines for local farmers, and gave the area its " first access to electricity through charging batteries from the generator they d created, powered by The Mill s waterwheel"...

How LinkedIn is changing and why some are not happy

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... LinkedIn has a 200-strong team working on stories primed to attract attention and involvement, all grist to The Mill of recruiting companies that pay it for the right to scour the CVs of its members...

An incomplete history of pop on BBC television

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......

The Crown: Seven takeaways from the latest series of Netflix's royal drama

The Crown: Seven takeaways from the latest series of Netflix's royal drama
Nov 5,2022 4:21 am

... Any drama about the royal family from that time would likely do the same, but it s hard not to imagine the pain it will cause those involved and is grist to The Mill of those who say The Crown should have stopped long before it reached such a recent and difficult period...

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... His father Mike started the UK Giant Vegetable Championships from The Mill Tavern pub in Cwmbran, Torfaen, in the 1980s...

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... But at the same time it will be remembered as an act of heroism for the military that were protecting The Mill for so many weeks...

Excavating the birthplace of Scotland's tartan industry

Jun 14,2022 3:30 am

By Steven McKenzieBBC Scotland Highlands and Islands reporter

Archaeologists have been excavating a site they call The Birthplace of Scotland's modern tartan industry.

Hundreds of people worked at Bannockburn's Wilson Mills at The Height of production in the 1850s.

Only two buildings survive today, while workers' homes and earlier mills were demolished in 1950s and 60s.

Archaeologist Dr Murray Cook said it was an " astonishingly important but poorly recognised" site where tartan was first made on an industrial scale.

Dr Cook, who has been leading the digs, said: " In the 1850s The Mills complex was huge and straddled the Bannock Burn.

" People told of The Burn running lurid red and pink with the dyes. "

Foundations of properties cleared away More Than 60 years ago have been uncovered So Far . Further excavations are planned for next year.

Dr Cook said The Site at the Haugh in Bannockburn, Stirling, was home to a smaller mill that was producing at a time of turmoil in tartan-making.

Weaver William Wilson Set Up The Mill in the 1780s amid The Final years of the 1746 Act of Proscription.

The Act had emerged in The Aftermath of The Battle of Culloden, near Inverness.

Fought on 16 April 1746, it saw Bonnie Prince Charlie and his Jacobite supporters defeated by a British government army.

The Act of Proscription was drawn up as part of a crackdown on clans that had backed Prince Charlie's claim to The British throne.

It included a ban on the wearing of tartan in the form of Highland dress, which the government regarded to be the uniform of the Jacobites.

Dr Cook said rules on wearing tartan were complicated and hit the Highlands, a stronghold of Jacobite support, harder than other parts of Scotland.

He Said William Wilson and His Family may have been able to create a monopoly on tartan production at This Time .

It also meant the Wilsons were in a prime position when romanticised views of Scotland became popular in the 19Th Century , including during the reign of Queen Victoria , a regular visitor to Balmoral Castle in Aberdeenshire.

Dr Cook said: " Tartan is rehabilitated and romanticised and the Wilsons are riding that wave and that explosion of Scottish identity. "

He Said among orders the Wilsons secured was a contract to supply tartan for kilts for soldiers in Scottish regiments.

Dr Cook said something almost on the scale of a factory village grew at the Haugh.

" We Are certainly looking at The First industrial scale production of tartan, and The Birthplace of tartan design, " He Said .

But he added that life for the workers was tough and they lived in slum-like conditions.

The Wilsons' business collapsed at The Turn of The Century , with The Loss of a military contract among the possible reasons for it Going Under .

The Mills complex was later cleared by The Local authority.

Dr Cook said: " There has been a transformation of The Burn from the 1850s to what it is today with kingfishers and otters.

" It's a success story in reclaiming The Burn , but at the cost of jobs and housing. It's a double-edged sword. "

Stirling Council plans to include the history of The Site in celebrations planned for The City next year.

Leader Chris Kane said: " The Stirling area has been central to Scotland's power, politics and economy over the centuries so it's no surprise tartan is also Woven In to our rich history and heritage.

" These remarkable discoveries in Bannockburn shed further light on how the area became The Birthplace of the modern tartan industry and The Challenges faced by The Wilson family of weavers along The Way . "

He added: " As Stirling prepares to celebrate its 900th anniversary as a royal burgh in 2024, this is another fascinating chapter in the area's story that attracts visitors from across The World . "

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Source of news: bbc.com

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