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Hosking and Geoffrey
Historian Geoffrey Hosking in his 2005 Modern Scholar lecture course suggested that citizenship in ancient Greece arose from an appreciation for the importance of freedom.
Geoffrey Hosking suggests that fear of being enslaved was a central motivating force for the development of the Greek sense of citizenship.
* Hosking, Geoffrey.
* Hosking, Geoffrey.
* Russia and the Russians, Geoffrey Hosking ; ISBN 0-14-029788-X
* Geoffrey Hosking
* Myths and Nationhood ( Hurst, 1997, co-edited with Geoffrey Hosking )
* Prof Geoffrey Hosking, Professor of Russian History from 1984-2007 at University College London

Hosking and Press
S. Williams, D. Lonergan, R. Hosking, L. Deane and N. Bierbaum, Lythrum Press, Adelaide, 2004, 241-50 ; reprinted as ‘ The Unsettled 70s – Moorhouse, Wilding, Viidikas ,’ in Bruce Bennett, Homing In: Essays on Australian Literature and Selfhood, Network, Perth, 2006, 209-20.

Hosking and University
Gladys Hosking, 40, was the next victim, murdered on May 18 while walking home from work at the Chemistry Library at Melbourne University.

Hosking and 2001
In 2000, after the over budgeted £ 1million restoration of Flying Scotsman was complete, Marchington sold Bittern to Jeremy Hosking, who moved her to the Mid-Hants Railway in Hampshire in January 2001, for full restoration.

Hosking and ).
* Roger Hosking, Paquebot Cancellations of the World ( Oxted 1977 ).
Here too all parts were to be made available for the burial of any person, regardless of religious creed, making Abney Park Cemetery the only Victorian garden cemetery in Britain with " no invidious dividing lines " and a unique nondenominational chapel ( see the architecture of William Hosking ).

Geoffrey and Russia
After Diamonds are Forever had been published, Fleming received a letter from a thirty-one-year-old Bond enthusiast and gun expert, Geoffrey Boothroyd, criticising the author's choice of firearm for Bond: his suggestions came too late to be included in From Russia, with Love, but one of Boothroyd's guns – a. 38 Smith & Wesson snub-nosed revolver modified with one third of the trigger guard removed – was used as the model for Chopping's image.

Geoffrey and History
Academic historians decidedly sided with Geoffrey Elton's The Practice of History against Edward Hallett Carr's What Is History ?.
She makes no appearance in Bede's work, the Historia Brittonum, the Mabinogion or Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain.
* Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen Edwards, Cyril John Gadd, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond ( 1970 ) The Cambridge Ancient History, Cambridge University Press, 780 pages ISBN 0-521-07051-1
Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain is the first non-Welsh source to speak of the sword.
Nowell-Smith Geoffrey Ed: Oxford History of World Cinema.
Nowell-Smith Geoffrey Ed: Oxford History of World Cinema.
Nowell-Smith Geoffrey Ed: Oxford History of World Cinema.
Other 15th century manuscripts, such as The Book of Fermoy also contain interesting materials, as do such later syncretic works such as Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn ( The History of Ireland ) ( ca.
The legendary Arthur developed as a figure of international interest largely through the popularity of Geoffrey of Monmouth's fanciful and imaginative 12th-century Historia Regum Britanniae ( History of the Kings of Britain ).
The creator of the familiar literary persona of Arthur was Geoffrey of Monmouth, with his pseudo-historical Historia Regum Britanniae ( History of the Kings of Britain ), written in the 1130s.
The first narrative account of Arthur's life is found in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Latin work Historia Regum Britanniae ( History of the Kings of Britain ).
Historically, the ideals of chivalry were popularized in medieval literature, especially the Matter of Britain and Matter of France, the former based on Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae (" History of the Kings of Britain "), written in the 1130s.
According to Geoffrey Keating's 17th century History of Ireland, Ériu, Banba, and Fódla worshipped Badb, Macha, and the Morrígan respectively.
* Keating, Geoffrey, A History of Ireland
It is home to the Faculty of Humanities, Law and Social Science with the Geoffrey Manton Building accommodating the Departments of English, History and Economic History, Information and Communications, Politics and Philosophy, and Sociology.
* Ward, Geoffrey C. Jazz: A History of America's Music.
The priory may have once been the residence of the monk Geoffrey of Monmouth, who was born around 1100 and is best known for writing the chronicle Historia Regum Britanniae (" History of the Kings of Britain ").
People associated with Monmouth include Geoffrey of Monmouth, the Oxford-based cleric, born in about 1100 and believed to be originally from the area, who wrote Historia Regum Britanniae, the " History of British Kings ".
In their introduction to The Reader's Companion to Military History Robert Cowley and Geoffrey Parker summarise this side of the modern view of the Battle of Tours by saying " The study of military history has undergone drastic changes in recent years.
Caratacus does not appear in Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain ( 1136 ), although he appears to correspond to Arviragus, the younger son of Kymbelinus, who continues to resist the Roman invasion after the death of his older brother Guiderius.
* Bunn, Geoffrey C. The Truth Machine: A Social History of the Lie Detector ( Johns Hopkins University Press ; 2012 ) 256 pages
Few further attempts to bring counterfactual history into the world of academia were made until the 1991 publication of Plausible Worlds: Possibility and Understanding in History and the Social Sciences by the Cambridge sociologist Geoffrey Hawthorn, who carefully explored three different counterfactual scenarios.
* Geoffrey Hawthorn: Plausible Worlds: Possibility and Understanding in History and the Social Sciences, ISBN 0-521-40359-6 ; ISBN 0-521-45776-9

Geoffrey and Cambridge
Geoffrey gave in, but once free he headed north-east into the Fens to the Isle of Ely, from where he began a military campaign against Cambridge, with the intention of progressing south towards London.
In criticizing The Elements of Style, Geoffrey Pullum, professor of linguistics at Edinburgh University, and co-author of The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language ( 2002 ), said that: Pullum noted, for example, that the authors misunderstood what constitutes the passive voice, and he criticized their proscription of established and unproblematic English usages, such as the split infinitive and the use of which in a restrictive relative clause.
" New Standards in a Glorious Grammar: Review of The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language by Rodney Huddleston and Geoffrey K. Pullum ( eds )".
Geoffrey gave in, but once free he headed north-east into the Fens to the Isle of Ely, from where he began a military campaign against Cambridge, with the intention of progressing south towards London.
The phase of the conflict known as " the Castle War " saw both sides attempting to defeat each other through sieges, such as Stephen's attempts to take Wallingford, the most easterly fortress in Matilda's push towards London, or Geoffrey de Mandeville's attempts to seize East Anglia by taking Cambridge Castle.
* Huddleston, Rodney and Pullum, Geoffrey K., The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language, Cambridge University Press, Suffolk, UK, 2002
* Geoffrey P Thomas, BSc Wales, MA Oxford, PhD Cambridge President Emeritus of Kellogg College ; Fellow of Linacre College, 1978 – 1990 ; Honorary Fellow of Linacre College
Heath's son Geoffrey went to Trinity College, Cambridge, before becoming a teacher at Ampleforth College and had 6 children.
In 1895, the great alpinist Geoffrey Winthrop Young, started to climb the roofs of Cambridge University, England.
The identification of the first recreational or professional builderer remains an open question, but at Cambridge, Geoffrey Winthrop Young is generally regarded as the original pioneer.
In 1895, Geoffrey Winthrop Young pioneered the sport of night climbing in Cambridge, England.
Geoffrey Bruce Oliphant, an infant son, born Oct. 6, 1930 died of meningitis on Sep. 5, 1933 and was interred in an unmarked grave in the Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge alongside Timothy Cockcroft ( 1927-1929 ), the infant son of Sir John Cockcroft and Lady Elizabeth Cockcroft, who were also later interred in the same plot.
1488 – 30 April 1544 ), Lord Chancellor of England, born in Earls Colne, Essex, the son of Geoffrey Audley, is believed to have studied at Buckingham College, Cambridge.
On his first night at Magdalene College, Cambridge he met Kingsley Martin and Geoffrey Webb, later recalling that he had never before, in his naval training, heard intellectual conversation.
Geoffrey Clifton-Brown was born in Cambridge and educated at Tormore School, in Upper Deal, Kent and Eton College before attending the Royal Agricultural College where he qualified as a chartered surveyor in 1975.
He was educated at Repton School ( where the headmaster was another future Archbishop of Canterbury, Geoffrey Francis Fisher ) and Magdalene College, Cambridge, where he was President of the Cambridge Union Society and where his support for the Liberal Party won him praise from Herbert Asquith.
* Geoffrey Lloyd, emeritus professor of classics at Cambridge ; Master of Darwin College, Cambridge
Brian Geoffrey Marsden ( 5 August 1937 Cambridge, England – 18 November 2010 Burlington, Massachusetts, US ) was a British astronomer born in Cambridge, England, and educated at The Perse School in Cambridge, New College, Oxford and Yale University.

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