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Gustavus and British
Subsequently HM Sultan Jamalul Ahlam Kiram ( 1863 – 1881 ), the 29th reigning Sultan of Sulu, leased North Borneo in 1878 to Gustavus Baron de Overbeck and Alfred Dent, representing the British North Borneo Company in what is now the Malaysian state of Sabah.
Upon Frederick's pressing his case with Gustavus Adolphus, Gustavus Adolphus told Frederick that he would accept Frederick's restoration without Dutch / British support only if Frederick would agree to hold the Palatinate as a fief of the King of Sweden.
* The Swedish Intelligencer ( 1632 – 33 ), including an account of the career of Gustavus Adolphus and of the Diet of Ratisbon ( Regensburg ), is attributed to Roe in the catalogue of the British Museum.
The first black British author and anti-slave activist, Olaudah Equiano, also known as Gustavus Vassa, married local girl Susannah Cullen at St. Andrew's Church, Soham on 7 April 1792 and the couple lived in the town for a while.
* Gustavus Hamilton Blenkinsopp Coulson, British Army officer
* George Gustavus Walker ( 1831 – 1897 ), British Conservative Member of Parliament
Olaudah Equiano ( c. 1745 – 31 March 1797 ) also known as Gustavus Vassa, was a prominent African involved in the British movement for the abolition of the slave trade.
( Two members of this same lodge, Washington and James Monroe, would later become American Presidents, and at least eight members were generals of the American Revolution ( Washington, Mercer, George Weedon, William Woodford, Fielding Lewis, Thomas Posey, Gustavus Wallace, and the Marquis de Lafayette ( honorary in 1824 ) – far more than any other group, institution or organization save the pre-Revolution British Army.
Gustavus Hamilton Blenkinsopp Coulson VC DSO ( 1 April 1879 – 18 May 1901 ) was an English recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.
* William Gustavus Brown ( died 1883 ), commander of British troops in China and Hong Kong
Operation Gustavus was aimed at establishing an espionage network in Malaya and Singapore to gather intelligence about Japanese activities, thereby aiding the British in planning their re-capture of the colonies, codenamed Operation Zipper.
* Operation Gustavus, WWII British commando operation in Malaya
On 22 January 1878 the ruler of Sulu, His Majesty Sultan Jamalul A ' Lam, signed a treaty, under what he leased the territory of North Borneo to Gustavus von Overbeck, an Austrian who was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire's consul-general in Hong Kong and to his British partner Alfred Dent, residing in London, as representatives of the British North Borneo Company, without giving away his sovereign rights, and for as long as they desire to use these coastlines.

Gustavus and American
* Gustavus Vasa Fox ( 1821 – 1883 ), U. S. Naval officer during the American Civil War
The word was first used in the American Meteorological Journal in 1888 by Gustavus Detlef Hinrichs in a paper describing the phenomenon and based on a significant derecho event that crossed Iowa on 31 July 1877.
The Gustavus soccer team finished second in the NCAA Division III national tournament in 2005 — led in part by three-time all American Robert " Bobby " Kroog.
After attending Robbinsdale Cooper High School, Gustavus Adolphus College, and the Institute for Advanced Theatre Training at American Repertory Theater at Harvard University, his first professional acting role was in Biloxi Blues, a Minnesota production at the Old Log Theater ; but his first big break came in 1994, when he was noticed by Ben Stiller, who cast him in his picture, Reality Bites.
His The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion, 1860-1898 ( 1963, 1998 ) received the Albert J. Beveridge Prize of the American Historical Association ; Inevitable Revolutions: The United States in Central America ( 1984, 1992 ) received the Gustavus Meyers Prize, and The Clash: U. S .- Japanese Relations Throughout History ( 1997 ) received both the Bancroft Prize in American History and the Ellis Hawley Prize of the Organization of American Historians.
Captain Gustavus Conyngham: a sketch of the services he rendered to the cause of American independence.
He'd also rather not face them or Gustavus again in battle, and in particular not the American rifles which tore up his jaw and put him in declining health since he could not ingest solids.
) is an American law review established in 1902, after Gustavus Ohlinger, a student in the Law Department ( now the Law School ) of the University of Michigan, approached the dean with a proposal for a law journal.

Gustavus and For
For example, although the Swedish Army under Gustavus Adolphus was originally recruited by a kind of national conscription, the losses of the Thirty Years ' War meant that by 1648 over 80 % of its troops were foreign mercenaries.

Watts and Recent
Recent advances in digital signal processing have allowed EME contacts, admittedly with low data rate, to take place with powers in the order of 100 Watts and a single Yagi antenna.
*' Religion in Recent Art: Being Expository Lectures on Rossetti, Burne Jones, Watts, Holman Hunt, and Wagner '.

Watts and British
* 10-Sir John Watts, 73, British army general.
The story, where Den Watts served his wife Angie Watts | Angie with divorce papers, was the highest-rated soap episode in British history, and the highest-rated programme in the UK during the 1980s
* July 1 – George Frederic Watts, British Symbolist painter and sculptor ( b. 1817 )
The British philosopher Alan Watts wrote extensively about this subject.
He was rewarded for his work in 1752 when he was promoted and sent to Kasimbazar, an important British trading post in Bengal where he worked for William Watts.
With Admiral Watson, Governor Drake and Mr. Watts, Clive made a gentlemen's agreement in which it was agreed to give the office of viceroy of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa to Mir Jafar, who was to pay a million sterling to the Company for its losses in Calcutta and the cost of its troops, half a million to the British inhabitants of Calcutta, £ 200, 000 to the native inhabitants, and £ 70, 000 to its Armenian merchants.
* In the British soap opera EastEnders, in 1986, characters Den and Angie Watts spent their honeymoon on the train.
In early September 1976, concert promoter Ron Watts approached Malcolm McLaren, manager of the Sex Pistols, the leaders of the new British punk rock scene, and proposed that they headline the event.
Hymns from all three churches were sung: All people that on earth do dwell from the Scottish Presbyterian psalm tradition ; the Methodist favourite O for a thousand tongues to sing by John Wesley ; the Congregationalist O God of Bethel ; and When I survey the wondrous cross by the British Nonconformist, Isaac Watts.
Regarding her nationality, Watts has stated: " I consider myself British and have very happy memories of the UK.
* Watts Point, British Columbia, Canada
On Tuesday, 6 December 2011, former MEP Mark F. Watts organised a commemorative event in the European Parliament hosted by Peter Skinner, a senior British MEP, to mark the 70th Anniversary of the raid by the German Abwehr on the Red Orchestra Brussels headquarters.
British artists such as Hunt, Watts, Rossetti, Brown and Burne-Jones would become friends.
The earliest recorded use of the term was by the British preacher Philip Henry in 1672, and later, apparently independently, by the preacher Isaac Watts in 1725.
* Charles Watts ( 1905 – 1985 ), cricketer and British Army officer
The earliest work on phosphating processes was developed by British inventors William Alexander Ross, British patent 3119, in 1869, and by Thomas Watts Coslett, British patent 8667, in 1906.
Two British soldiers: Corporal Laurence G Watts and Acting Corporal Jeremy Smith were killed, and twenty-six were wounded.
He was an editor of the British Yearbook of International Law ; co-authored ( with Sir Arthur Watts ) 9th edition of Oppenheim's International Law.
The prize from the Westminster competition did, however, fund a long visit to Italy from 1843 onwards, where Watts stayed and became friends with the British ambassador Henry Fox, 4th Baron Holland and his wife Mary Augusta at their homes in Casa Feroni and the Villa Careggi.
Alaric Alexander Watts ( 16 March 1797-5 April 1864 ), British poet and journalist, born in London.
| 9448 Donaldavies || || Donald Watts Davies, British physicist *

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