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Readifyy.com delivers books to all cities across Saudi Arabia. Please note that certain titles or items may be restricted for delivery due to publisher or regional regulations.
When you place an order, we will provide an estimated shipping and delivery date based on the availability of your items and the shipping option you choose. Delivery timeframes depend on your location and the selected courier service. Estimated delivery dates may appear on the shipping quotes page during checkout.
We offer free delivery on all orders over 150 SAR. Standard shipping rates will apply for orders below this amount, as shown during checkout.
If your package is lost, arrives damaged, or is delayed, please contact Readifyy Customer Support within 7 days of the expected delivery date. We will investigate the issue and arrange a suitable resolution.
For any questions or assistance, feel free to contact us at readifyy01@gmail.com.
At Readifyy.com, we ensure every book is carefully packed and delivered in excellent condition. Returns or exchanges are accepted only if the item you received is damaged, incorrect, or contains three (3) or more blank pages that affect readability.
If you receive a damaged or wrong book, you can request an exchange within 48 hours of receiving your order. Please contact our customer support team and provide clear photos of the issue for verification.
Once your exchange request is approved, our team will guide you through the replacement process. Refunds are only issued if the same book is not available for replacement.
Books that are in good condition, opened, or returned for personal reasons are not eligible for exchange or refund.
For any assistance or to file an exchange request, please contact us at readifyy01@gmail.com.
In London, as the eighteenth century began, there had been significant recovery from the Great Plague and the Great Fire in the past three decades. Tracts of the city had been rebuilt and the population was growing once more. The city, largely through England’s success in battles at sea, was taking centre stage in Europe and, critically, through taking the lion’s share of the lands of the New World of America and snatching slave trading rights in West Africa. England had great wealth at its fingertips and London was at the heart of all of it.
People flocked to the capital to seek their fortune. Wealthy people invested in the new companies exploiting Africa or set up manufacturing concerns in the city. They moved into large houses in the wealthy area of the Strand and spread into other prosperous areas such as Cavendish Place. Their houses were staffed by teams of domestic servants.
At the other end of the income scale, people were leaving their rural homes where traditional jobs as labourers and in the fields were drying up, hoping to make a living in London. So many people arrived searching for work that there were too few jobs and many opportunities to be exploited. With no safety net, they had to resort to desperate measures to survive.
Babies were abandoned on the mounds of animal and human waste which towered over the overcrowded alleys. Some were dead, others dying. People walked past this tragic sight every day and chose to do nothing. One man, however, a ship-builder from Lyme, decided on a plan to save them.
The vilification of illegitimate babies and the general disdain for the poor meant that it took Thomas Coram years to garner enough support to get his plan to save the babies off the ground. However, when, in 1739, he was able to found England’s first institution for abandoned and illegitimate babies, it became a place for London’s high society to be seen.
Royalty, politicians and scientists joined the crowds of people who went to the London Foundling Hospital to see the works of Hogarth or listen to Handel perform. It became the most fashionable charity in London. But even this could not stop the babies dying.
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