Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Scientists - Brouncker William
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 97    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Brouncker William:     more detail
  1. Pi: Formule Bbp, Formule de Leibniz, Formule de Machin, Fabrice Bellard, Journée de Pi, Projet de Loi Pi de L'indiana, William Brouncker (French Edition)
  2. Viscount William Brouncker: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001
  3. William Brouncker, 2nd Viscount Brouncker
  4. Vicomte de La Pairie D'irlande: Henry John Temple, James Caulfeild, John Vereker, John Ligonier, William Lamb, William Howe, William Brouncker (French Edition)

41. Melksham History
Melksham was passed down two more generations to another william brouncker beforeit was conveyed to Sir John Danvers, who married into the family, in 1634.
http://www.rollasmoke.com/melksham.htm
A Short History Of Melksham
The name Melksham is derived from Melchoir's enclosure.
This norseman founded a settlement on the bank of the river Avon probably where there was shallow water to allow crossing, or at a narrow point where fallen trees could span the water. An area of water meadow would be required to feed the animals, and the enclosure would also be close to a ready supply of wood to be used for fuel and making shelters.
The Melksham Forest extended along the river to Cippa's enclosure.(Chippenham) The Domesday Book of 1086 assessed the Lordship of Melksham, which belonged to William the Conqueror, as 84 hides, and the Melksham Forest covered 8,400 acres.
This vast area of forest became the favourite hunting ground of the Tudor kings. In 1158 the estate of Melksham was handed to Humphrey de Bohun III, but, in 1184, King Henry II reclaimed it as a crown possession.
It stayed in royal hands until King Henry III gave the lordship to Alice, Countess of Devon, for life in 1257.
On her death the title reverted to Amesbury Priory.
In 1286 a Royal Charter granted the Prioress rights of tenure and a second Royal Charter gave her free warren.

42. William Petty
william Petty was born at Romsey, Hampshire on 26 May 1623 and died in London Pettyand Lord brouncker carried out some of this work but little is known about
http://www.thoemmes.com/dictionaries/petty.htm
Dictionary of Seventeenth-Century British Philosophers
PETTY, William (1623–87)
Hobbes , whose influence was considerable, and there met Mersenne, John Pell , the Marquess of Newcastle and Sir Charles Cavendish . Back in England in 1646 he worked in his father’s business on the mechanical aspects of textile manufacture. He met Samuel Hartlib , under whose guidance he wrote a tract on education (1647). In it he proposed the formation of a society for ‘the advancement of mechanical arts and manufactures’ which helped to stimulate the founding of the Royal Society. He moved to Oxford to continue his medical studies and took a doctorate in physick in 1650. He was a member of John Wilkins’ scientific and philosophical group, a Fellow of Brasenose College, and later its Vice-Principal, Deputy, and then Professor of Anatomy (1651). He also taught chemistry at Oxford and was a Professor of Music at Gresham College. He was highly praised for his intelligence, learning, even genius, and for his eloquence, charm and good looks by

43. Entries
brouncker, Lord william (c 16201684), mathematician in early Royal Society. BROWNE,Peter (1664/5-1735), counter-Enlightenment Irishman. BROWNE, Thomas.
http://www.thoemmes.com/dictionaries/17entries.htm
Dictionary of Seventeenth-Century British Philosophers
A B C D ... P Q R S T U ... W X Y Z
REVISED LIST (September 1999)
A
ABERCROMBY, David (d 1701 or 1702). Scottish philosopher, precursor of Reid
AIRAY, Christopher
ALLEN, Thomas (1542-1632) , mathematician.
ALLESTREE, Richard. 1619-1681, royalist divine.
ASGILL, John (1659-1738), accused of blasphemy.
ASTELL, Mary (1668-1731), feminist, Cartesian, critic of Locke.
ASHMOLE, Elias (1717-1692) occultist, collector, founder of the Ashmolean.
ATTERBURY, Francis (1662-1732). conservative theologian.
ATWOOD, William (d c 1715) Whig politics.
AUBREY, John. (1626-1697), biographer. top B BACON, Francis. (1561-1626), Novum Organum, Advancement of Learning, etc. BACON, Nathaniel. (1587-1657), conservative politics. BAILLIE, Robert (1599-1662) learned Scots Presbyterian. BAINBRIDGE, John (1582-1643), mathematician

44. 1680
william brouncker * (?) Richard Lawrence (Cromwellian colonel; advocate of transplantaionof Irish to Connacht) * Proinsias Ó Maolmhuaidh * James Touchet
http://www.chirl.com/1600/1680.html
* Peter Talbot, Archbishop of Dublin, dies while imprisoned in Dublin Castle for alleged involvement in 'Popish Plot'
* The first stone of the Royal Hospital, Kilmainham is laid by the Duke of Ormond (29 April) Births * John Abernethy (dissenting clergyman) near Moneymore, Co. Tyrone (19/10)
* Richard Cantillon (banker and political economist) in Ballyheige, Co. Kerry
* (?) James Gallagher (Catholic Bishop of Raphoe; author of printed sermons in Irish) in Cavan or Leitrim
* (?) George Grierson (Dublin printer and bookseller)
* John Ligonier (1st Earl; leader of Irish regiment in British army) in France
* (?) Hugh McCurtin (Aodh Mac Cruitín; poet and Irish-language lexicographer) in Corcomroe, Co. Cork
* Alexander MacDonnell (4th Earl of Antrim; suspected Jacobite conspirator 1714-15)
* (?) Cathal Buí Mac Ghiolla Ghunna (poet) probably in Co. Fermanagh Deaths * Thomas Blood * Oliver Plunkett is hanged, drawn and quartered in London (1 July), although witnesses against him have been discredited

45. Finch1
m. (02.08.1789) Mary brouncker (d 06.10.1813, sister of Henry brouncker of Boveridge).((i))+, issue (d unm) william (b 14.09.1791, d 19.10.1880, minister
http://www.stirnet.com/HTML/genie/british/ff/finch1.htm
Index links to: Top Section Letter
Families covered: Finch of Aylesford, Finch of Eastwell, Finch of Nottingham, Finch of Winchilsea According to BP1934 (Winchilsea and nottingham), reporting Sir William Dugdale, this Finch family is probably descended from Henry Fitz-Herbert, chamberlain of King Henry I and ancestor of the Herbert Earls of Pembroke. They are thought to have changed their name to Finch after marriage to an heiress daughter of an earlier Finch family. William Finch of Netherfield, Sheriff of Sussex and Surrey (a 1430) m. Agnes Roo (dau of Walter Roo of Dartford) John Finch (dsp) Henry Finch of Netherfield m. Alice Belknap (dau of Philip Belknap of The Moat) A. Sir William Finch of Burmarshe m1. Elizabeth Crowmer (dau of Sir James Crowmer of Tunstal) i. Lawrence Finch (dsp) m. Mary Kemp (dau of Christopher Kemp) ii. Sir Thomas Finch of Eastwell (d 02.1563) m. Catherine Moyle (d 09.02.1586-7, dau of Sir Thomas Moyle of Eastwell) a.

46. Editions Jacques Gabay - TANNERY P. : MEMOIRES SCIENTIFIQUES, Tome VI, Sciences
Translate this page Boncompagni (prince Baldassare). - brouncker (william), lord vicomte de Castle-Lyons.- Cantor (Moritz). - Cantor (Georg). - Cardano (Girolamo).
http://www.gabay.com/sources/Liste_Fiche.asp?CV=165,06

47. Return Home
brouncker, william (16201684), Maths Archive; Brouwer, Dirk (1902-1966),BM; Brouwer, Luitzen Egbertus Jan (1881-1966), Maths Archive;
http://members.aol.com/jayKplanr/images.htm
return home An Alphabetical A-Z List of Famous Scientists and Mathematicians Indicates a portrait photograph or illustration is included. browse a section: A B C D ... Z
A

48. So Biografias Britanicos Em B
Translate this page Alexandre Bronson, Charles Brönsted, Johannes Nicolaus Bronstein, Lev DavidovitchBrontë, Charlotte Brooks, Rand brouncker, william Brower, Luitzen Egbertus
http://www.sobiografias.hpg.ig.com.br/LetraBB.htm
<”â*,% "?`Œ%ÂrFLôÄçL.;# ]U¶÷“»·bÊ+)50)ŒX¦º÷öíÁ÷½½Ns² Ñ9Q¯[[D º3²«ËŠ!‹U—`v¹ò*Ú W¤՚ƒêˆSjÓeËDÌ0.¹ÕlD~[r¿M©käõ$deö­;^ Éçu’jØy#²ø­Êqžþ_ß ›‹WꦚdN‡~KAŒ] ¯pŠÄI®¬¹†úNÙô O5E„4ILáäh(e45z‰˜àãRÎqŠƒZHsdw0lÀ# ý <-ðÊUq+⃠”zBìV(¶©Q°$O#¡ÜÖúät'…5ú†¯Ï”CIBބ€ê«‹X/k¢yÌ«²‹ÑPK½FþúVÔtÊ9áƒ+v+l„ <ï¬Jԅ«+r(;‹W¾ )tú/µõä$ÊöNœ·x ’¤âÔ@°ºïö'ks f5U6Õ+ªCŒO ”ÚOe¥ïd) ˆ( †Ÿ øe©¨IhT"ÇyÞhcòž¤¿Â=³H½‡â¹8¼Ò+?ë ’-;ºVVfà-B/u"¯Díu">‰¸» ŒJۄY

49. Pell bookmarks
william brouncker.
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/jean-paul.davalan/liens/liens_pell.html

Accueil
English Plan du site Bloc notes ... .net
Votre portail e-Learning
Pell
SOMMAIRE Demos Papiers Tutoriels ... Liens
DEMOS
Pell Equation solver X^2 - dY^2 = +/- 1
DOCUMENTS - PAPERS
Michael A. Bennett Publication List Solving families of simultaneous Pell equations Pell's equation
TUTORIELS - TUTORIALS
Pell Equation Mathworld Pell's equation Article by: J J O'Connor and E F Robertson Pell's Equation Solutions for Pell's Equation Ask Dr. Math Math Forum Home
HISTORIQUES - HISTORY
John Pell 1 March 1611 in Southwick, Sussex, England - 12 Dec 1685 in London, England Pell worked on algebra and number theory. He gave a table of factors of all integers up to 100000 in 1668. Pell's equation y2 = ax2 + 1, where a is a non-square integer, was first studied by Brahmagupta and Bhaskara. Its complete theory was worked out by Lagrange, not Pell. William Brouncker It is believed that Euler made an error in naming the equation 'Pell's equation', and that he was intending to acknowledge the outstanding contribution made by Brouncker. It is interesting to think that if Euler had not made this error then Brouncker, instead of being relatively unknown as a mathematician, would be universally known through 'Brouncker's equation'. PELL John anglais, 1611-1685

50. Mayors In The 17th Century
In 1606 the Lord President of Munster, Sir Henry brouncker, obtained a commissionto take action against the mayors 1629 1630, william Dobbyn of Ballinakill.
http://members.tripod.com/waterfordhistory/mayors_in_the_17th_century.htm
var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Check out the NEW Hotbot Tell me when this page is updated
In 1606 the Lord President of Munster, Sir Henry Brouncker, obtained a commission to take action against the mayors of corporate towns who refused to take the Oath of Supremacy. The four Waterford mayors marked thus were elected in succession but having refused to take the oath were arrested and sent to Cork gaol. Heavy fines were also levied on them and they were made to pay the legal costs. Eventually Sir Peter Aylward took the oath and became the mayor. In 1612 King James ordered Lord Deputy Chichester to seize the liberties of any town left without magistrates. In 1616 the administration of Waterford was in chaos. Eight mayors marked thus had been elected and refused to take the oath. In the following year four more acted in similar fashion before the government acted. Chichester entered the city, seized the charters and dissolved the corporation. From then until the death of James in 1625 the city was administered by government appointees. Between 1651 and 1656 the corporation was dissolved by Cromwell's son-in-law, General Henry Ireton and the city was placed under military law and administered by commissioners.

51. Admiralty Examinations Relating To Ireland - A-B Surname Index, ©Jane Lyons
Richard, see Brumfield Brooke, Morgan, 109 Brooke, Robert, 53 Brooke, william, 220,223 Brookes, Mr, 290 Brotheridge, william, 203 brouncker, Sir Henry, 109
http://www.from-ireland.net/history/admirindex/a.htm
High Court of Admiralty Examinations Material Relating to Ireland A B Surname Index A Surname, name and item number Surname, name and item number Abbot, John, 247
Abbott, John, 265
Ablin, Abraham, 161, 164, 165
Ablin, Jacques, 161
Ablin, John, 161
Abrey, Nathaniel, 150
Acland, Abraham, 106
Acton, Philip, 55
Adams, Mark, 16
Adams, Nicholas, 69
Adams, Thomas, 95 Addams, Thomas, 270 Addams, William, 245, 258 Adderley, Thomas, 285, 289 Adis, Richard, alias Richard Bassett, 306 Adlowe, Alexander, 230 Adrianson, Cornelius, 177 Adrianson, Hubright, 250 Adrianson, Jacob, 168 Adyn, Arthur, 109 Adyn, John, 109 A'Fawlwen, John, 31 Albertson, Hendrick, 226 Albinoni, James, 185 Albinoni, Mr, 130, 139 Aldach, Zachary, 95 Aldensey, John, 42 Alderton, William, 90,91

52. BSHM: Gazetteer -- LONDON MAIN INDEX
Bragg; Jacob Bronowski; william, 2nd Viscount brouncker; Robert Brown;Giordano Bruno; william Burnside. C. Thomas Carlyle; George Shoobridge
http://www.dcs.warwick.ac.uk/bshm/zingaz/London.html
The British Society for the History of Mathematics HOME About BSHM BSHM Council Join BSHM ... Search
BSHM Gazetteer LONDON
Main Gazetteer A B C D ... Z Written by David Singmaster (zingmast@sbu.ac.uk ). Links to relevant external websites are being added occasionally to this gazetteer but the BSHM has no control over the availability or contents of these links. Please inform the BSHM Webster (A.Mann@gre.ac.uk) of any broken links. [When the gazetteer was edited for serial publication in the BSHM Newsletter, references were omitted since the bibliography was too substantial to be included. Publication on the web permits references to be included for material now being added to the website, but they are still absent from material originally prepared for the Newsletter - TM, August 2002]
London
Because of its size, the London section of the Gazetteer is divided into nine pages: this main index page; and sections covering the scientific institutions and societies the British Museum, British Library and Science Museum other institutions and places ; and mathematical people ( A-C D-G H-M N-R and S-Z ). Inevitably these categories are somewhat arbitrary so use of this index page and / or the

53. Science: The Scientific Revolution
The former was a private institution in London and included such scientists as RobertHooke, John Wallis, william brouncker, Thomas Sydenham, John Mayow, and
http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/sci/A0860977.html

Encyclopedia
science
The Scientific Revolution
Science, in the modern sense of the term, came into being in the 16th and 17th cent., with the merging of the craft tradition with scientific theory and the evolution of the scientific method. The feeling of dissatisfaction with the older philosophical approach had begun much earlier and had produced other results, such as the Protestant Reformation, but the revolution in science began with the work of Copernicus, Paracelsus, Vesalius, and others in the 16th cent. and reached full flower in the 17th cent.
The Rejection of Traditional Paradigms
Improved Communication of Scientific Knowledge
Another important factor in the scientific revolution was the rise of learned societies and academies in various countries. The earliest of these were in Italy and Germany and were short-lived. More influential were the Royal Society in England (1660) and the Academy of Sciences in France (1666). The former was a private institution in London and included such scientists as Robert Hooke, John Wallis, William Brouncker, Thomas Sydenham, John Mayow, and Christopher Wren (who contributed not only to architecture but also to astronomy and anatomy); the latter, in Paris, was a government institution and included as a foreign member the Dutchman Huygens. In the 18th cent. important royal academies were established at Berlin (1700) and at St. Petersburg (1724). The societies and academies provided the principal opportunities for the publication and discussion of scientific results during and after the scientific revolution.

54. Jan Heweliusz And Royal Society Of London
the Society. The secretary of the Royal Society was then Henry Oldenburgand william brouncker was its president. Since then Heweliusz
http://gnu.univ.gda.pl/~emcz/hewrseng.html
Jan Heweliusz and Royal Society of London
POLISH Jan Heweliusz was the first Pole included among the members of the Royal Society in London. This important event took place on 19 th March 1664. Portrait of Jan Heweliusz from the Library of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Gdansk Royal Society of London Jan Heweliusz i Royal Society w Londynie MENU

55. Leeuwenhoek And Spermatozoa
4. Leeuwenhoek to william brouncker, November 1677, ibid., II, 290291. 6. Leeuwenhoekto william brouncker, November 1677, in Leeuwenhoek,AdB, II, 284-291.
http://zygote.swarthmore.edu/fert1a.html
LEEUWENHOEK'S PERCEPTION OF THE SPERMATOZOA
Adapted from an article by E. G. Ruestow, J. History of Biology Leeuwenhoek may have been the model for his friend, Vermeer, in Vermeer's picture, The Geographer. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, no scientific question was more laden with religious and philosophical overtones than the problem of generation. This was the question that asked if and how a mechanistic nature, devoid of spirit, could engender the purposeful complexity of living organisms, including man. It is not surprising, then, that the learned (and probably the unlearned) public expected much from the new microscopistsmen such as Marcello Malpighi, Jan Swammerdam, and Antoni van Leeuwenhoek. Leeuwenhoek's conclusions, made from observations with microscopes whose resolution was not bettered until the nineteenth century, unsettled a recently recast consensus. Moreover, it suggested that the microscope may not be the tool that would solve these longstanding problems. Leeuwenhoek's knowledge of the religious and philosophical debates among the learned communities was scanty at first, but expanded dramatically during the half-century of his microscopic research. A tradesman in Delft, he lacked any university education and knew no language other than Dutch. In 1673, however, Leeuwenhoek's fellow townsman, the prominent young anatomist Regnier de Graaf, brought him to the attention of the Royal Society in London as a maker of exceptional microscopes (1).

56. Chapter3part2
So a quadrature at the time of one Viscount william brouncker, cofounder ofthe Royal Society in England, and its first President in 1662, would have
http://doe.ncia.net/~bobmead/chapter3part2.htm
Chapter 3, Part 2
Gregoire de Saint-Vincent
Saint-Vincent was born at Ghent in 1584, became a Jesuit teacher practicing in Rome, Prague, and later in Spain. Europe was in turmoil at this time, and as a result of his uprootings, Saint-Vincent became separated from his papers. In them he had the keys to solving the quadrature of the hyperbola, and, he believed, the squaring of the circle as well. His method was correct in the former case, not so in the latter. Since the hyperbola is asymptotic and thus open-ended, we need to define other boundaries in order to have a finite area to measure. In addition to y = 1/x, we arbitrarily make those boundaries the x-axis, and the lines x = 1 and x = b, where b, now known as the upper limit of integration, can be any positive number. In his Geometrical Work on the Squaring of the Circle and of Conic Sections , published in 1647, some 25 years after his discovery, Saint-Vincent advanced the notion that if the upper limits were increased by a factor, that is, if they grew geometrically, the associated areas would grow arithmetically. See Figure 1. Specifically, the area under 1/x from x = 1 to x = b is the natural logarithm (in base e) of the number b. The appendix also shows how this base number can be established.

57. Fellows Of The Royal Society
william brouncker 1663 Robert Boyle 1663 John Wilkins 1663 Isaac Barrow 1663 RobertHooke 1663 william Neile 1663 John Pell 1663 John Wallis 1663 Christopher
http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/~history/Societies/FRS.html
Fellows of the Royal Society of London
The list of fellows given below is only those scientists elected Fellows of the Royal Society whose biographies appear in the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, together with some present day mathematicians. The list also gives their date of their election to the Society. William Brouncker
Robert Boyle

John Wilkins

Isaac Barrow
...
H S M Coxeter

Leslie Howarth 1950
Hans A Heilbronn

Alan M Turing

Freeman J Dyson 1952
William McCrea 1952
A Cyril Offord 1952 John C Burkill Michael James Lighthill Louis V P R de Broglie Wolfgang Pauli ... Werner Heisenberg Walter K Hayman 1956 Fred Hoyle Harry R Pitt 1957 Satyendranath Bose Graham Higman Bernhard Neumann C Ambrose Rogers ... Lev Landau Douglas G Northcott 1961 Solomon Lefschetz Michael Atiyah John W S Cassels J Frank Adams ... Richard P Feynman Peter Swinnerton-Dyer 1967 Ioan M James Douglas S Jones 1968 David Rees 1968 J Anthony H Halsbury 1969 James H Wilkinson C Terence C Wall Frank F Bonsall 1970 Eugene P Wigner John F C Kingman Henri Cartan John Bell Bryan J Birch1972 Roger Penrose Fritz J Ursell 1972 Alan Baker Harish-Chandra Stephen W Hawking Jean-Pierre Serre ... Richard Rado Ian G Macdonald 1979 John G Thompson Jerzy Neyman Paul M Cohn John H Conway Michael Berry 1982 Graeme Segal 1982 Evgenii M Lifshitz Christopher Hooley 1983 George Lusztig 1983 Michael J D Powell 1983 Ian N Sneddon William Parry 1984 David Williams 1984 John H Coates James D Murray 1985 Ian C Percival1985 S S Chern Simon K Donaldson Henry K Moffatt 1986 James A Green 1987

58. The Mediadrome - History
and the members who were present at this meeting are considered the Founding FellowsRobert Boyle, Alexander Bruce, william Viscount brouncker, Sir Robert
http://www.themediadrome.com/content/articles/history_articles/royal_society.htm
The Mediadrome
Search WWW
These Were All Pleasure: The Founding of the Royal Society by Helen Stringer But it wasn't always so. There was a time, not all that long ago, when there were no "scientists," when science itself was being defined, and when men gathered, out of interest, at a local pub to talk about what we might now regard as "neat stuff." The time was 1645, the place London, and this casual group of men went on to found what is now the world's oldest scientific academy, The Royal Society. Ideas about how the natural world should be explored had been changing throughout the Rennaissance, of course. But most educated people still looked towards the classical authorities, particularly Aristotle, for the road map to discovery. Aristotle's system was based on deductive reasoning, you would look at a thing and deduce what led it to be so. The problem with this, is that this kind of reasoning is dependent on the experiences of the observer, which may or may not be focusing on the relevant issues. Also, simple observation can lead to false conclusions. For example, when looking at the circulation of blood, people had noticed that after death the most blood could be found in the liver, so they deduced that the liver must drive the circulation.

59. Browse Keywords
william WADWORTH (1). · william WESLEY PETERS LIBRARY (1). · william,VISCOUNT brouncker (1). · williamS SYNDROME (1). · williamS, DF (1).
http://infomine.ucr.edu/cgi-bin/browse?browse_key=list;keywords;all;expert&node=

60. Pepys, Samuel, 1633-1703. Miscellaneous Papers Of Samuel Pepys And John Evelyn:
1s.(2p.) Signed by Samuel Pepys, Sir Thomas Allin, Sir Jeremiah Smith,Sir John Ernle and william brouncker, 2nd viscount brouncker.
http://oasis.harvard.edu/html/hou00885.html
MS Eng 991
Pepys, Samuel, 1633-1703. Miscellaneous papers of Samuel Pepys and John Evelyn: Guide.
Houghton Library, Harvard College Library
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138
Descriptive Summary
Repository: Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University
Location: b
Call No.: MS Eng 991
Creator: Pepys, Samuel, 1633-1703.
Title: Miscellaneous papers of Samuel Pepys and John Evelyn,
Date(s):
Quantity: 1 box (.5 linear ft.)
Abstract: Letters by English diarists John Evelyn and Samuel Pepys to various correspondents.
Administrative Information
Acquisition Information: Received from various sources at various times.
Historical Note
Samuel Pepys, English diarist and naval administrator, is also chiefly celebrated for his highly detailed and honest Diary, kept mostly between 1660 and 1669. John Evelyn (1620-1706) was an English country gentleman whose life-long diary is considered an invaluable source of information on life in 17th-century England. Evelyn and Pepys formed a lifelong friendship after the Restoration.
Arrangement
Arranged alphabetically by author.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 3     41-60 of 97    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter