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Exeter and College
Lyell entered Exeter College, Oxford in 1816, and attended William Buckland's lectures.
Category: Alumni of Exeter College, Oxford
Category: Alumni of Exeter College, Oxford
He was educated at Exeter Grammar School and Eton College.
In June 1852 Morris entered Exeter College, Oxford, though since the college was full, he was unable to go into residence until January 1853.
Category: Alumni of Exeter College, Oxford
Known as ` Peter ' to his friends and colleagues, Cleave was born in Exeter in 1906, and educated at Clifton College.
The Royal Military Academy at Woolwich held an organised competition in 1849, but the first regular series of meetings was held by Exeter College, Oxford from 1850.
In 1943, at the age of eighteen, Richard Burton ( who had now taken his teacher's surname but would not change it by deed poll for several years ), was allowed into Exeter College, Oxford for a special term of six months study, made possible because he was an air force cadet obligated to later military service.
Category: Alumni of Exeter College, Oxford
He had recently finished work on a similar project at Exeter College, Oxford, and went about constructing the Chapel of St John's College along similar lines, drawing inspiration from the Church of Saint Chapelle in Paris.
Webster attended Phillips Exeter Academy, a preparatory school in Exeter, New Hampshire, before attending Dartmouth College.
At two of the Oxford colleges, Lincoln College and Exeter College, the head is called " rector ".
University College Falmouth has two campuses in the Falmouth area ; the original town site, Woodlane, and the other in the Combined Universities in Cornwall campus at Tremough, Penryn which it shares with the University of Exeter.
He was accepted by Exeter College, Oxford from which he graduated with a first-class degree in history.
Bennett was made an Honorary Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford in 1987.
Category: Alumni of Exeter College, Oxford
Francis Atterbury, Dean of Christ Church thought a 90 ft room would be built on Exeter College land, and that the lower storey would be a library for Exeter College and the upper story Radcliffe's Library.

Exeter and Oxford
After teenage years spent in flowery shirts and a short spell at Westminster School while living in Hampstead, he graduated from Exeter College, Oxford with a " Congratulatory " First in English — " the sort where you are called in for a viva and the examiners tell you how much they enjoyed reading your papers.
Paddington station is the terminus for commuter services to the west of England ( e. g., Slough, Maidenhead, Reading, Swindon ) and mainline services to Oxford, Bristol, Bath, Taunton, Exeter, Plymouth, Cornwall and South Wales ( including Cardiff, Bridgend and Swansea ).
* Exeter College Chapel, Oxford
St Mary's of Charity in Faversham, which was restored ( and transformed, with an unusual spire and unexpected interior ) by Scott in 1874, and Dundee Parish Church ( St Mary's ), and designed the chapels of Exeter College, Oxford, St John's College, Cambridge and King's College London.
File: Exeter College, Oxford chapel door. jpg | Chapel door, Exeter College, Oxford ( 1857-9 )
File: Exeter College Chapel, Oxford-Stained Glass-Oct 2006. jpg | East end, Chapel, Exeter College, Oxford ( 1857-9 )
Exeter College ( in full: The Rector and Scholars of Exeter College in the University of Oxford ) is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England and the fourth oldest college of the University.

Exeter and is
Camulodunum was burned to the ground, as well as Londinium and Verulamium, there is some archaeological evidence that the same happened at Winchester as well, and the Second Legion Augusta, stationed at Exeter, refused to move for fear of revolt among the locals there as well.
A summer bus service, the Transmoor link from Plymouth to Exeter and vice versa, passes through the town and there is a daytime service linking Princetown to Yelverton and Tavistock, but in general public transport is poor and any visitors hoping to visit Plymouth or the nearby town of Tavistock via bus in the evening will be disappointed.
The 14th century ' Life of Saint Piran ', probably written at Exeter Cathedral, is a complete copy of an earlier Irish life of Saint Ciarán of Saighir, with different parentage and a different ending that takes into account Piran's works in Cornwall, and especially details of his death and the movements of his Cornish shrine ; thus " excising the passages which speak of his burial at Saighir " ( Doble ).
The earliest Bonifacian vita does not mention his place of birth but says that at an early age he attended a monastery ruled by abbot Wulfhard in escancastre, or Examchester, which seems to denote Exeter, and may have been one of many monasteriola built by local landowners and churchmen ; nothing else is known of it outside the Bonifacian vitae.
Later tradition places his birth at Crediton, but the earliest mention of Crediton in connection to Boniface is from the early fourteenth century, in John Grandisson's Legenda Sanctorum: The Proper Lessons for Saints ' Days according to the use of Exeter.
This is true, for instance, of many departments in the United Kingdom, including the Department of Theology and Religion at the University of Exeter, and the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Leeds.
* December 13 – WWII – Battle of the River Plate: The German pocket battleship, Admiral Graf Spee is trapped by cruisers HMS Ajax, HMNZS Achilles, and HMS Exeter after a running battle off the coast of Uruguay.
* April 3 – John Wheelwright is banished from Boston and founds Exeter New Hampshire.
It is about south of the city of Exeter and is the administrative centre of the South Hams District Council.
* September 29 – John Holland, Earl of Huntingdon is created Duke of Exeter by his half-brother Richard II of England.
* Construction of Exeter Cathedral is begun.
The Inquisitio Eliensis is a record of the lands of Ely Abbey ; and the Exon Domesday ( so called from the preservation of the volume at Exeter ), which covers Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Somerset, Wiltshire ( however only one manor of Wiltshire is included and parts of Devon, Dorset and Somerset are also wanting ) also all contain the full details supplied by the original returns.
Wirth is a graduate of Phillips Exeter Academy, received his B. A.
Hardy and his first wife visited Tintagel on various occasions: she drew a sketch of the inside of the church as it was about 1867 R. S. Hawker's poem about the bells of Forrabury refers also to those of Tintagel, but more notable is his one on the Quest for the Sangraal ( first published at Exeter in 1864 ).
The character of Exeter in Shakespeare's play Henry V is based on Beaufort, although Beaufort was not actually created Duke of Exeter until after the battle of Agincourt.
Salisbury railway station is the crossing point of the West of England Main Line, from London Waterloo to Exeter, and the Wessex Main Line from Bristol to Southampton.
The ring is the fifth heaviest ring of twelve in the world, only the bells in the cathedrals of Liverpool, Exeter, York and St Paul's, London are heavier.
Axminster is a market town and civil parish on the eastern border of the county of Devon in England, some from the county town of Exeter.
Axminster railway station is on the West of England Main Line that runs from Exeter via Salisbury to London Waterloo.

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