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Ambrose and England
The following year he embarked on the Queen Mary for England where he toured, playing for three months at Ciro's Club owned by bandleader Ambrose.
* Hamilton Sisters and Fordyce, harmony trio, tour Variety Theater's with Savoy Havana Band, record with Orpheans, Bert Ambrose, and other's in England June – November.
They have employed many notable people as cricket professionals including current England coach and former Zimbabwe cricketer Andy Flower, West Indies fast bowlers Curtley Ambrose and Sherwin Campbell and Australian fast-bowler and former Pakistan coach Geoff Lawson.
Ambrose Dixon ( c. 1619 – April 12, 1687 ) was an early American Quaker pioneer who was born in England and emigrated to the America at an early age where he lived in the Virginia Colony before moving to Maryland.
Ambrose Dudley himself had been shot in the leg when parleying with the French and returned to England seriously ill.
Until August 2006 he was the first-choice wicketkeeper for England in both Test and One-day cricket, but fell behind Chris Read, Paul Nixon, Matt Prior and Tim Ambrose.
On 9 August 1991, during a match between England and the West Indies at the Oval, Ian Botham fell over his stumps whilst attempting to hook Curtly Ambrose and so was dismissed " hit wicket ".
* Sir Anthony Browne ( d. 1548 ), son of Sir Anthony ( or Ambrose ) Browne, Standard Bearer of England and Governor of Queenborough Castle
Answering accusations of heresy and “ tumultuous defection ,” among others, Jewel establishes the truth and legitimacy of the claims of not only the Church of England but the whole protestant reformation by demonstrating the continuity between the reformers and Scripture, the apostles ( especially, Paul ), the church fathers ( i. e., Augustine, Tertullian, Ambrose, Jerome, etc.
In June 1927, while the Hamilton Sisters and Fordyce were on tour in England they recorded two versions of this song one with The Savoy Orpheans, and the other with Bert Ambrose and His Orchestra.
* Tim Ambrose, wicketkeeper for the England cricket team
In April 1707, King James II of England, in exile at Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France recommended Ambrose as Bishop of Elphin to Pope Clement XI.
Two of them, SS John Roberts and Ambrose Barlow, were among the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1970.
* Mount Ambrose, a suburb of Redruth in Cornwall, England
* St Ambrose Barlow RC High School, a Catholic technology college in Swinton, Greater Manchester, England.
* St. Ambrose College a Voluntary Aided Christian Brothers Catholic boys ' grammar school in Hale Barns, Altrincham, Greater Manchester, England.

Ambrose and with
As a result, Lincoln replaced Buell with William Rosecrans ; and, after the 1862 midterm elections, he replaced McClellan with Republican Ambrose Burnside.
The body of Ambrose ( with white vestments ) in the crypt of Sant ' Ambrogio basilica.
In the confrontation with Arians, Ambrose sought to theologically refute their propositions, which were heretical.
Painting of St. Ambrose with whip and book in the church of San Giuseppe alla Lungara, RomeAn address by Ambrose to Christian young people warns them against intermarriage with Jews (" De Abrahamo ," ix.
The imperial court was displeased with the religious principles of Ambrose, however his aid was soon solicited by the Emperor.
Theodosius was threatened with excommunication by Ambrose for the massacre of 7, 000 persons at Thessalonica in 390, after the murder of the Roman governor there by rioters.
Ambrose ranks with Augustine, Jerome, and Gregory the Great, as one of the Latin Doctors of the Church.
Catching the impulse from Hilary and confirmed in it by the success of Arian psalmody, Ambrose composed several original hymns as well, four of which still survive, along with music which may not have changed too much from the original melodies.
In his writings, Ambrose refers only to the performance of psalms, in which solo singing of psalm verses alternated with a congregational refrain called an antiphon.
St. Ambrose was also traditionally credited with composing the hymn Te Deum, which he is said to have composed when he baptised St. Augustine of Hippo, his celebrated convert.
In a passage of Augustine's Confessions in which Augustine wonders why he could not share his burden with Ambrose, he makes a comment which bears on the history of celibacy:
In the late 19th century, there was a great deal of speculation about who might have authored the creed, with suggestions including Ambrose of Milan, Venantius Fortunatus, and Hilary of Poitiers, among others.
Origen often speaks of Ambrose in affectionately as a man of education with excellent literary and scholarly tastes.
Following the Physiologus, Saint Isidore of Seville ( Book XII of the Etymologiae ) and Saint Ambrose expanded the religious message with reference to passages from the Bible and the Septuagint.
As a poet, Smith is grouped with the West Coast Romantics ( alongside Ambrose Bierce, Joaquin Miller, Sterling, Nora May French, and others ) and remembered as ' The Last of the Great Romantics ' and ' The Bard of Auburn '.
Ambrose argues that Eisenhower, by not participating in the Geneva agreement, had kept the U. S out of Vietnam ; nevertheless, with the formation of SEATO, he had in the end put the U. S. back into the conflict.
So long as Ambrose continued at Preston he was favoured with the warm friendship of the Hoghton family, their ancestral woods and the tower near Blackburn affording him sequestered places for those devout meditations and " experiences " that give such a charm to his diary, portions of which are quoted in his Prima Media and Ultima ( 1650, 1659 ).
On account of the feeling engendered by the civil war Ambrose left his great church of Preston in 1654, and became minister of Garstang, whence, however, in 1662 he was ejected with the two thousand ministers who refused to conform.
In art, he is often represented as one of the four Latin doctors of the Church along with Augustine of Hippo, Ambrose, and Pope Gregory I.
In accordance with his will, the castle passed first to his brother Ambrose, Earl of Warwick, and after the latter's death in 1590, to his illegitimate son, Sir Robert Dudley.

Ambrose and Ambrosiaster
* Ambrosiaster or the " pseudo-Ambrose " is a brief commentary on Paul's Epistles, which was long attributed to Ambrose.
In 1527 Erasmus threw doubt on the accuracy of ascribing the authorship of this document to Ambrose, and its author is now usually spoken of as Ambrosiaster, or pseudo-Ambrose.
Tertullian, Cyprian, Ambrose and Ambrosiaster considered that mankind shares in Adam's sin, transmitted by human generation.
A form of apocatastasis was also attributed to Gregory of Nyssa and possibly the Ambrosiaster, attributed to Ambrose of Milan.
From the language of many later writers who speak of Symmachus, he must have been a man of great importance among the Ebionites, for " Symmachians " remained a term applied by Catholics even in the fourth century to the Nazarenes or Ebionites, as we know from the pseudepigraphical imitator of Ambrose, the Ambrosiaster, Prologue to the Epistle to the Galatians, and from Augustine's writings against heretics.

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