Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Scientists - Tunstall Cuthbert
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-99 of 99    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
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  

         Tunstall Cuthbert:     more books (26)
  1. A sermon of Cuthbert Tunstall, Bishop of Durham, preached on Palm Sunday, 1539, before King Henry VIII; by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-08-29
  2. Deans of Salisbury: Richard Poore, Thomas Pierce, Eustace, Cuthbert Tunstall, Adam Moleyns, John Piers, Thomas Ruthall, Dean of Salisbury
  3. Évêque de Londres: Mellitus, Cuthbert Tunstall, Robert Lowth, William Warham, Geoffrey Fisher, Dunstan de Cantorbéry (French Edition)
  4. The Last Years of Cuthbert Tunstall (1547-1559). [Subtitle]: (Durham Cathedral Lecture) by D.M. Loades, 1973-01-01
  5. People From Hambleton (District): Roger Ascham, Frank Wild, Jack Hatfield, Cuthbert Tunstall, Walter Braithwaite, Robin Turton, Baron Tranmire
  6. The Last Years of Cuthbert Tunstall (1547-1559). by D.M. Loades, 1973
  7. Évêque de Durham: Rainulf Flambard, Guillaume de Saint-Calais, Thomas Wolsey, Cuthbert Tunstall, Guillaume Walcher, David Edward Jenkins (French Edition)
  8. Diplomate Britannique: Richard Hakluyt, George Jellicoe, Nathaniel Parker-Forth, George Bogle, Cuthbert Tunstall, James Maitland (French Edition)
  9. A Sermon of Cuthbert Tonstall, Bishop of Durham, Preached on Palm Sunday ... by bishop of Durham Cuthbert Tunstall, Cuthbert Tunstall, 2008-08-21
  10. A Sermon Of Cuthbert Tonstall: Bishop Of Durham (1823) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2009-06-13
  11. A sermon of Cuthbert Bysshop of Duresme made vpon Palme sondaye laste past, before the maiestie of our souerayne lorde kynge Henry the. VIII. kynge of England [and] of France. (1539) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-07-13
  12. A Sermon Of Cuthbert Tonstall: Bishop Of Durham (1823) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-09-10
  13. A Sermon Of Cuthbert Tonstall: Bishop Of Durham (1823) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-09-10
  14. A Sermon Preached on Palm Sunday, 1539, Before King Henry Viii. by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-07-24

81. WHITCHURCH
WEM, Sal m 10 Jul 1841 WHITCHURCH - died 28 Feb 1853 tunstall Staffs (Typhus m 21Nov 1842 WHITCHURCH Witnesses Hannah TURNER William CALTRUTH - (cuthbert).
http://www.phc.igs.net/~gordpace/uk/whit.htm
PACES of WHITCHURCH
and related surnames
Shropshire - migration to Staffordshire BROOKES BROWN CARTLEDGE CHIDLOW ... WORTHINGTON with thanks to
Richard PACE
+ Jane TURNER
Richard PACE
+ Jane TURNER
- b 3 Oct 1777 WHITCHURCH - m 1 Apr 1797 WEM, Shropshire
witnesses Thomas COOKE and Francis OWEN
click here
- for TURNER page
  • John PACE - 24 Jan 1806 TILSTOCK
  • Ann PACE - 10 Dec 1809 TILSTOCK
    + James PEARCE - b 1807 MARKET DRAYTON
  • Thomas PACE - 23 Feb 1812 TILSTOCK
    + Elizabeth WHITAKER - m 16 Sep 1833
  • Mary PACE - b 27 Feb 1814 TILSTOCK
    + William SUMNER - m 21 Nov 1842 WHITCHURCH
    • Richard SUMNER - b 1848 WHITCHURCH - d January 1931 + Elizabeth CHIDLOW - b 1846 MARKET DRAYTON - wed 29 Dec 1870 WHITCHURCH daughter of SAMUEL CHIDLOW and JANE MILLINGTON from 1881 census Tilstock Source: FHL Film 1341640
      • Alice Ann SUMNER - b. 1870 WHITCHURCH d. July 1940
      • Mary Ellen SUMNER - b. 1872 WHITCHURCH + George CUFLER - wed April 14, 1898, TILSTOCK Shropshire
      • Wm. SUMNER - b. 1874 WHITCHURCH; d. June 1942 WHITCHURCH + ELIZABETH - b. 1876; d. November 1941
      • Edwin SUMNER - b. 1876, WHITCHURCH - d Nov 29 1952 WHITCHURCH

82. Adressaten Von Widmungen Und Beigaben (Kirchliche Würdenträger
Translate this page Truchsess a Rinfeld, Amandus, 197, 288. Tschudi, Aegidius, 133, 289. Tubenheym,Jacob von, 210. tunstall, cuthbert, 177, 283. Turzo, Alexius, 94. Turzo, Stanislas,409.
http://www.ub.unibas.ch/kadmos/gg/index_widmadr.htm
Adressaten von Widmungen und Beigaben
Acoolti, Benedetto Aldridge, Robert Amellus, Johann Xartin Amerbach, Basillus Amerbach, Bonifacius Anhalt, Georg von Anhalt, Ludwig von Antimaco, Matteo Antonin, Jan Aquila, Johannes Argentier, Georges Augsburg, Rat und Volk Auratus, Johannes (Dorat) Baden und Hochberg, Philipp von Basel, Rektor und 4 Dekane Baume, Jean de la Bayern, Albrecht V. von Bentheim und Teklenburg, Arnold von Bertrandos, Rheginos Bernardos Bettendorf, Theoderich von Bibra, Courad von Billy de Prunae, Jacques de Bla(u)rer, Ambrosius Bla(u)rer, Thomas und Ambrosius Bocsperger, Sebastian Bombasius, Paulus Bouvier, Jean Brand, Bernhard Brandenburg, Albrecht von Brandenburg, Joachim von, d.J. Brandis, Johann und Joachim Braunschweig, Julius von Bucheymer s. Puchamer Burdingus, Jacobus Burgund, Maximilian von Caffoz, Gilbert Camerarius, Joachim jr. Camicianus, Andreas Francus Campegius, Thomas Cervini, Marcello Claymond, John Clericus, Philippus Cles, Bernhard von Cognatus, Gilbert Coignet, Mathieu Cook, Antony Cranmer, Thomas Cratander, Polykarp

83. Griechischer Geist Aus Basler Pressen: Griechischer Geist Aus Basler Pressen: 2a
Translate this page 2ar Vorrede des Herausgebers Simon Grynaeus an cuthbert tunstall,den Bischof von Durham, datiert von Basel, den 31. August (1533
http://www.ub.unibas.ch/kadmos/gg/pic/gg0283_002_vor.htm
Griechischer Geist aus Basler Pressen GG 0283 2ar: Vorrede des Herausgebers Simon Grynaeus an Cuthbert Tunstall, den Bischof von Durham, datiert von Basel, den 31. August (1533), 1. Seite (von 8). Marginalien eines unbekannten Vorbesitzers.

84. INDEX Virginia - King And Queen County 1799 Personal Property
John 12 Temple, Joseph 12 Temple, Joseph, Jr 12 Temple, William 12 Tinsbloom,John 12 Tinsbloom, William 12 Trice, Sally 12 tunstall, cuthbert 12 tunstall
http://freepages.misc.rootsweb.com/~vataxlists/KingQueen/1799PersonalB/IndexPers

85. Krown & Spellman Booksellers: Browse By Author
Catalogue Of Manuscripts and Library at Freemasons Hall tunstall,cuthbert Guillaume Bude.. De Arte Supputandi Libri Quator.
http://www.krownspellman.com/cgi-bin/spellman/find/author/Tu.html
Login:
Password:
Browse by Subject: any Africa Alchemy Americana Ancient Near East Antiques Antiquarian Arabic Archaeology Architecture Art Asia Astrology Astronomy Autographs Bible Bibliography Books-on-Books Business Calligraphy Chemistry Children Classics Coins Costume Curiosa Dance Decorative Arts Dictionaries Diplomacy Druids Eastern Europe Economics Encyclopedia England Egyptology Erotica FarEast Fencing Food France Gems Genealogy Germany Ghosts Government Greece Greek Hebrew Heraldry History Horses Hypnotism Illustrated Illuminated Incunabula India Inquisition Italy Judaica Kabbalah languages Latin Law Linguistics Literature Magic Manuscripts Maps Marriage Masonry Mathematics Medicine Medieval MiddleEast Military Mining Mineralogy Music Natural History North Africa Numistmatics Occult Paleography Papermaking Persia Philosophy Physics Plays Poetry Politics PressBooks Prestidigitation Psychology Religion Rome Science Sex Spain Spiritualism Sport STC Technology Theology Theosophy Theatre Travel Turkey Utopia Voyages Wine Wing Witchcraft Women Quick Search: Home Search Current Catalogues About Us ...
Site Map

3319 Cattaraugus Avenue, P.O. Box 948
Culver City, CA 90232 (by appointment only)

86. The Bible In English
He attempted to gain the patronage of the cuthbert tunstall, Bishop of London(14741559) for the production of a Bible, but was unsuccessful.
http://www.latin-mass-society.org/bibletranslation.htm
The Bible in English
Arthur Crumly As there are suggestions that there should be only one English translation of the Bible approved for public use in churches it is perhaps an appropriate time to view the history of how we got the Bible in English. The Earliest Translations The Bible was originally written in Hebrew (the Old Testament) and koine Greek (the New Testament) which were, of their day, the vernacular. Koine was the form of Greek spoken from the end of the Classical period until Byzantine times They were translated into Latin (also a vernacular) in the early Church. There may have been one or more Old Latin Versions. St Jerome seems to indicate that there was one single Old Latin Version which was variously amended in different places. The proper chants of the Mass are still in the Old Latin Version. The Scriptures were then retranslated by Saint Jerome in the fourth century. His version is known as the Vulgate (having been translated into the Vulgar tongue - the language of the people). The translation of the Holy Scriptures into our own tongue is not a new idea. It was being translated into English in Anglo-Saxon England. Both St Bede the Venerable and King Alfred the Great translated the Bible into Early English. On his deathbed, the last act of Saint Bede's life was to dictate, to a boy called, Wilbert a translation into Early English of St John's Gospel. He completed the translation, sang

87. William Tyndale
This permission he sought from cuthbert tunstall, bishop of London, a scholarlyman and close friend of Erasmus. Paul s by cuthbert tunstall.
http://www.prca.org/books/portraits/tyndale.htm
Chapter 40 William Tyndale: Father of the English Bible
Introduction We all have many Bibles in our homes: our own Bibles and our children's Bibles, as well as family Bibles used for family devotions. Most of us have the King James Version of the Bible, sometimes called the Authorized Version, prepared under the aegis of James I in 1611. It is a sad fact that our Bibles often lie unused, taken for granted, a somewhat peripheral part of our life. Yet behind our Bibles stands a story of great heroism, towering faith in God, and drops of martyr's blood. The story is that of William Tyndale, fathe r of the English Bible. Tyndale's Early Life William Tyndale was born sometime in the early 1490s on the Welsh border into the home of a well-to-do farmer. He went to Magdalen Hall, Oxford where he received his M.A. degree in 1515 and was ordained into the Roman Catholic clergy. In that same year he transferred to Cambridge University probably because he had heard that the Greek New Testament of Erasmus was available there, and he was interested in reading Scripture in its original language. One must understand the situation in England at this time. Henry VIII, husband of many wives, was on the throne. Dedicated Roman Catholic, but bitter enemy of the pope's rule in England, Henry persecuted Protestants on the one hand, but separated the church of England from papal control on the other hand. The church itself was rife with evil, wickedness in high places, and fornication of every sort. One of the chroniclers of the age characterized the priests as running from the houses of prostitutes to the altar to perform mass; incapable of understanding the Latin in which they mumbled their liturgies; superstitious and worshippers of such relics as a gown of the virgin Mary, a piece of the burning bush of Moses, straw from the manger at Bethlehem, and a complete skeleton of one of the babies murdered by Herod the Great; drunkards and gluttons whose wicked lives were supported by the blood, sweat and tears of the common working folk.

88. Tudor Owners Of Petrarch
The mention of cuthbert tunstall in the original query brings to mind a pertinentarticle appearing in the latest issue of Papers of the Bibliographical
http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byform/mailing-lists/exlibris/1992/10/msg00185.ht
Table of Contents Search
Date Prev Date Next ... Thread Index
Tudor owners of Petrarch
  • Subject : Tudor owners of Petrarch From Date : Tue, 20 Oct 1992 12:39:54 EST Message-id : <"GwjXu.0.f_7.tOBCn"@sul2> Sender
The mention of Cuthbert Tunstall in the original query brings to mind a pertinent article appearing in the latest issue of Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 85 (September 1991), 235-296: "The Library of Cuthbert Tunstall, Bishop of Durham: British Library Add. 40,676." The date of the periodical is correct: they are more than a year behind in publication. Briefly, a manuscript inventory of this library has been found and ascribed to Tunstall. The entire list of 483 item is appended, and at least one (no. 199) is a Petrarch [identified as "Petrarcha in magno volumine (Venice, 1501. fol.] There may be others in the list. An interesting article in any case. Robert Beasecker Special Collections Grand Valley State University Allendale, Michigan 49401 beaseckr@gvsu.edu

89. March 4, Every-Day Bool
he diligently studied the scriptures and the writings of the early fathers, and wasnot sorry to be overcome by the truth. cuthbert tunstall, bishop of Durham
http://www.uab.edu/english/hone/etexts/edb/063-march04.html
Every-Day Book index March 4. St. Casimir. St. Lucius, Pope, A. D. 253. St. Adrian, Bishop, A. D. 874. St. Casimir, marched before his beloved Poles in the air against the enemy, and as "he beat them before, so he beat them again." CHRONOLOGY. the church. Those who hated his integrity and feared his talents, sought his blood by insnaring controversy. He avoided vain jangling, and beat his adversaries in solid argument. bishopric could more enrich him withal! besides that he is free from the great weight of cares." Gilpin annually visited the people of Ridsdale and Tindale, and was "little else than adored by that half barbarous and rustic people." When at Rothbury, in these parts, "there was a pestilent faction among some of them who were wont to resort to the church; the men being bloodily minded, practised a bloody manner of revenge, termed by them a deadly feud: In his younger years, while on a ride to Oxford, Gilpin overtook a youth who was one while walking, and at another time running. He found that the lad came from Wales, knew Latin, had a smattering of Greek, and was bound for Oxford, with intent to be a scholar. "Wilt thou," said Gilpin, "be contented to go with me? I will provide for thee." The youth assented, Gilpin took him first to Oxford, afterwards to Houghton, where he improved him exceedingly in Greek and Hebrew, and sent him at last to Oxford. This youth was the learned Hugh Broughton; he is said to have requited this protection and care by something worse than inconstancy.

90. William Tyndale - Dr. Herbert Samworth
cuthbert tunstall – Bishop of London who rejected Tyndale’s petitionto translate and print the New Testament in English. Although
http://www.solagroup.org/articles/historyofthebible/hotb_0004.html
William Tyndale By Dr. Herbert Samworth On the surface there would have been little reason to think that the birth of a child in Slimbridge, Gloustershire, England in 1494 would change English history. However, that child, William Tyndale, would later translate and print the Word of God in the English vernacular and the impact of that translation is still felt today. Although few recognized it at the time, the dawning of a new day began with the recovery of the Greek language and its application to Biblical studies. In 1499 Erasmus of Rotterdam, the great humanist, arrived at Oxford University. Although Erasmus enjoyed an international reputation as a scholar, it appears that when he landed in England he was still ignorant of the Greek language. At Oxford were Thomas Linacre and John Colet who urged him to undertake its learning. Colet himself was lecturing on the Epistles of Paul and his studies brought a vibrancy to the text that contrasted sharply with the sterility associated with the Scholastic method of teaching. After his time at Oxford, Erasmus departed for the European continent to pursue the study of Greek. That pursuit reached its climax in 1516 when the pages of the

91. Rochdale Cemetery, - Surnames Th-Tz - Lancashire, England
Tomlinson, John Dania, d. 13 Dec 1939, age 78yr, h/of Isabella cuthbert TomlinsonTomlinson Tudor, John, d. 2 Nov 1928, age 58yr, h/of Alice tunstall, Annie, d
http://www.interment.net/data/eng/lancashire/rochdale/rochdale_thtz.htm
Home Search Journal What's New ... Rochdale Cemetery
Rochdale Cemetery
Lancashire, England
Contributed by Dave Ollerton [ dave@dollerton.fsnet.co.uk Thomas, Annie,
Thomas, Beatrice,
d. 4 Jan 1966, age: 74yrs, w/o Clifford
Thomas, Clifford, d. 26 Sep 1957, age: 61yrs, h/o Beatrice
Thomas, Enoch, d. 16 Aug 1935, age: 67yrs, h/o Isabella Jane
Thomas, Gertrude,
Thomas, Gladys,
d. 13 Jan 1916, age: 4 and a Halfyr, d/of Albert and Jane Thomas
Thomas, Isabella Jane, d. 7 May 1957, age: 84yrs, w/o Enoch
Thomas, Jane, d. 26 Mar 1924, age: 52yr, w/of Albert Thomas
Thomas, John Albert, d. 13 Aug 1918, Killed in Action France, 1/6th Lancashire Fusiliers age 26yr
Thomas, Mary Jane (Shaw), b. 5 Sep 1870, d. 27 Dec 1906, d/of William Thomason, Catherine, d. 26 Feb 1912, age: 48yr, w/of Robert Thomason, Reg, d. 21 Dec 1998, age: 51yr Thomason, Robert, d. 23 Nov 1926, age: 62yr, h/of Catherine Thomasson, Ellen, d. 30 Aug 1926, age: 46yr Thompson, Alice, d. 24 Dec 1887, age: 23yr, d/of John and Louisa Thompson, Alice

92. Tertullian : The Durham MS (Lost)
Leland reports that Bishop cuthbert tunstall (153059) found the Greek booksof his predecessor Shirwood at Auckland Palace (Hughes p.116 note, Leland
http://www.tertullian.org/manuscripts_apologeticum/durham_lost.htm
The Durham Tertullian MS (Lost)
A manuscript of the Apologeticum arrived at Durham with its first Norman Bishop in 1081, and remained there to the time of the last medieval catalogue in 1416. It is no longer at Durham, so it's fate is unknown. The first words of the second folio are given in the catalogue; but these do not seem to be present in the text of the Apologeticum Various points could usefully be checked so I've highlighted these. 1095 : Carileph's List - MS. A. ii. 4 - (Botfield pp.117-8) The Benedictine Monastery of St. Cuthbert at Durham was founded after the Norman conquest. William of St.Calais (also known as William of St. Carileph, or Carilef), who had been Abbot of St. Vincent's in Normandy, became Lord Chief Justice of England and Bishop of Durham from 1081-1096. He built the current cathedral, disbanded the Congregation of St. Cuthbert and created a Benedictine Abbey. He also gave a set of 39 books to the library, plus liturgical works, 19 of which are still there. The 11th century list of these, from the mortuary taken on his death on 6th January 1095, has been preserved bound into one of his MSS, MS. A. ii. 4, 'Bibliorum pars posterior, as folio 1. [From where did he get his books?]

93. History Of Our English Bible
1526. In October, cuthbert tunstall began to have all the copies hecould trace gathered and burned. They still were circulated.
http://www.fbinstitute.com/engbible/7.html
Fundamental Baptist Institute Facts From History About Our King James Bible. Written and Published by by Rev. Ronald D. Lesley, Th. M., D.D. Chapter VII William Tyndale THE TYNDALE BIBLE 1534 AD. One of the best-kept secrets in English Bible History is that of William Tyndale’s Bible. Many people have heard something of Tyndale, but very few have ever read his work or about him. Yet no other Englishman, not even Shakespeare, has reached so many by his life’s work. Tyndale translated the New Testament twice, and made three revisions before his death. In 1534 the Tyndale New Testament was finished. And it was his greatest work that would bring many souls to Jesus Christ, as their personal Saviour. Those scholars who prepared the Authorized 1611 King James Bible spoke with one voice. Of course they did, that voice which could never be acknowledged by them was that of William Tyndale. Much of the New Testament in the 1611 Authorized King James Bible came directly from the Tyndale New Testament. In 1611, there were six million English speaking people, today the figure is approaching a billion. The Bible, or parts of it, is now published in over one thousand other languages.

94. CEECS-list Of Texts
words, (20, 25, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49) Tudor, Mary, Queen of France, 1571 words, (39,40, 41, 42, 43, 99) tunstall, cuthbert, 1119 words, (51) Waterton, Robert
http://helmer.aksis.uib.no/icame/ceecs/text.htm
3. List of Texts Each entry is headed by Collection Name, followed by word count and the years covered by the collection and name of text file. That is followed by bibliographical information of the edition used. Last in each entry there is a list of writers, with word counts and letter numbers (or page numbers where the edition has no letter numbering) for the letters chosen. Letters edited by us show folio numbers; the full source for these texts is shown in the heading of each letter. Sample numbers are compatible with the whole CEEC: if there is a sample 1 but no others on this list, the other samples
Collection word count (years) name of text file Basire 7068 words The correspondence of Isaac Basire, D.D. Archdeacon of Northumberland and prebendary of Durham, in the reigns of Charles I. and Charles II. with a memoir of his life . Ed. by Darnell, William Nicholas. London: John Murray. 1831.
Basire, Frances, 4853 words , (p.107, p.111, p.132, p.136, p.138, p.145, p.203)
Basire, Isaac Jr, 1044 words , (p.237, p.249)

95. [EMLS 1.2 (August 1995)] A Bibliography Of Thomas More's Utopia
On tunstall s copy of Utopia. 31. Gee, JA cuthbert tunstall s Copy of theFirst Edition of Utopia. Yale University Library Gazette 7 (1933) 8788.
http://www.humanities.ualberta.ca/emls/01-2/lakoutop.html
A Bibliography of Thomas More's Utopia
Romuald Ian Lakowski
usercong@mtsg.ubc.ca

Main Document: Lakowski, R. I. "A Bibliography of Thomas More's Utopia ." Early Modern Literary Studies http://purl.oclc.org/emls/01-2/lakomore.html
Table of Contents
Introduction
Table of Abbreviations
UTOPIA BIBLIOGRAPHY
I. Editions and Translations ...
Index of Names
UTOPIA BIBLIOGRAPHY
I. Editions and Translations
I.a. Editions, Concordances and Bibliographies:
Modern Editions of Utopia
  • Delcourt, M., ed. L'Utopie ou le traité de la meilleure forme de gouvernement. Les classiques de la pensée politique 13. Paris: E. Droz, 1936. Rpt. Geneva: Droz, 1983. [Rev.: A. Prévost, ("Une rétrospective: Le facsimilé de l' Utopie éditée par Marie Delcourt,") Moreana 85 (1985): 6782; J. Schlumberger, Nouvelle revue française 24 (Jan. 1936): 11617. Latin text. The reprint includes M. Delcourt's 1966 French translation. See also Logan, G. M., R. M. Adams, and C. H. Miller, eds.

96. Tunstall [Tunstal, Tonstall], Cuthbert
The Galileo Project Catalog of the Scientific Community. Catalog of the Scientific Community. in the 16th and 17th Centuries
http://es.rice.edu/ES/humsoc/Galileo/Catalog/Files/tunstall.html
Catalog of the Scientific Community
Tunstall [Tunstal, Tonstall], Cuthbert
Note: the creators of the Galileo Project and this catalogue cannot answer email on genealogical questions.
1. Dates
Born: Hackforth, Yorkshire, 1474
Died: London, 18 Nov. 1559
Dateinfo: Dates Certain
Lifespan:
2. Father
Occupation: Gentry
Tunstall was a natural son of Thomas Tunstall, legitimized later by the marriage of his parents and accepted as a member of the family. Whether because he was not the first born son or whether because of his quasi-illegitimate origin, he was sent to the university and destined for the church.
Clearly the family was prosperous if not more.
3. Nationality
Birth: English
Career: English
Death: English
4. Education
Schooling: Oxford, Cambridge; Padua, L.D.
Oxford, c.1491, Balliol College. Apparently because of the plague he migrated to Cambridge.
Cambridge, c.1496, King's Hall (merged before long into Trinity). Biographia britannica says there is no recorded B.A. I am assuming a B.A. or its equivalent, however.
Padua, 1499-1505; L.L.D., 1505, in both Canon and Roman law.

97. Destins - Biographies - Tholozan A Tyard
tunstall
http://perso.club-internet.fr/j_mirou/t3.htm
T Tholozan Thou Tiraqueau Titon ... Tyard MENU THOLOZAN ACCUEIL SOURCE THOU , Jacques Auguste de. De Thou ACCUEIL SOURCE TIRAQUEAU ACCUEIL SOURCES TITON DU TILLET Evrard. Né en 1677 à Paris. Ecrivain. Entré très tôt dans l'armée, Titon du Tillet est par la suite maître d'hôtel chez la duchesse de Bourgogne, puis commissaire des guerres. Il consacre ses loisirs aux lettres et aux arts et reçoit les célébrités de son temps ; il fait frapper une série de médailles sur lesquelles figurent Louis XIV en compagnie des artistes qui ont peuplé son règne ; et surtout, il rédige une série de biographies sur les artistes du présent et du passé. Titon du Tillet meurt en 1762. Son œuvre majeure est le Parnasse François (1732), description de vies d'artistes célèbres. ACCUEIL SOURCE TORY Geoffroy. Né vers 1480 à Bourges (Cher) Imprimeur. Formé à Bourges puis en Italie (Rome, Bologne), Tory enseigne la philosophie et la littérature à Paris. Libraire, imprimeur du roi, il se consacre à une réforme de la typographie et fait de nombreuses propositions pour l'orthographe et la grammaire du français. Il édite, en 1512, le De re aedificatoria d' Alberti , livre d'architecture de référence. En tant que graveur, il exécute des lettrines, des vignettes, des caractères, pour ses éditions et celles de Colines et de Robert

98. Details Of Patrick Gabridge's Full-Length Plays
(Phillips and Frith are played by the same actor, a man in his 20s.) BishopCuthbert tunstall is a scholar caught in a difficult political time.
http://www.gabridge.com/full-long.html
Detailed Synopses of Patrick Gabridge's Full-Length Plays
God's Voice
Synopsis:
(Full-length historical drama, two acts. Cast: 2 women, 4 men
With an increasingly non-realistic style, God's Voice shows an impressionistic view of a band of religious reformers with a stunning commitment to faith, freedom, and each other. Their story features torture, murder, shipwreck, betrayal, and the Bible. The sound of words, of the poetry that underlies our modern English language, surrounds the characters and the audience. Two women, Alpha and Omega, speak only in biblical verse, serving as the hands of fate, the voice of the Bible, and as the voices in William Tyndale's head as he struggles to translate the Bible from the original Greek, Latin, and Hebrew into English. Bibles fall from the sky, Sir Thomas More is a handpuppet, and other surrealistic images fill the stage.
Fearful the Reformation will spread to England, the Bishops deny Tyndale permission to translate the Bible. With the help of smuggler John Tewkesbury, Tyndale escapes to exile in Europe, where he and his drunken assistant, Friar William Roye, translate and publish the New Testament.
Soon Tewkesbury is smuggling thousands of bibles into England. He even sells one shipment to the bishops, who burn the books on the steps of St. Paul's Cathedral. Unable to staunch the flow of bibles, the bishops start burning the men and women who possess the bibles or who believe in reform. Tyndale's friend and fellow reformer, John Frith, is one of the first to be burnt. Soon he's joined by Tewkesbury and a list of other martyrs.

99. Cut - Dictionary Definition
Dictionary Definitions, Dictionary Definition of cut. Click Here, Thenoun cut has 20 senses. 1. cut
http://www.yourdictionary.net/cut.html
begins with ends with contains
Dictionary Definition of cut
The noun "cut" has 20 senses. cut the act of reducing the amount or number; "the mayor proposed extensive cuts in the city budget"
cut gash slash slice a wound made by cutting; "he put a bandage over the cut"
cut cut of meat a piece of meat that has been cut from an animal carcass
cut track a distinct selection of music from a recording or a compact disc; "he played the first cut on the cd"; "the title track of the album"
cut cutting the act of penetrating or opening open with a sharp edge; "his cut in the lining revealed the hidden jewels"
cut a share of the profits; "everyone got a cut of the earnings"
cut a step on some scale; "he is a cut above the the rest"
cut gash a trench resembling a furrow that was made by erosion or excavation
cut (film) an immediate transition from one shot to the next; "the cut from the accident scene to the hospital seemed too abrupt" cut cutting the act of cutting something into parts; "his cuts were skillful"; "his cutting of the cake made a terrible mess" deletion excision cut the omission that is made when an editorial change shortens a written passage; "an editor's deletions frequently upset young authors"; "both parties agreed on the excision of the proposed clause"

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 5     81-99 of 99    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

free hit counter