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Hugh and Trevor-Roper
* Trevor-Roper, Hugh.
* 1914 Hugh Trevor-Roper, English historian ( d. 2003 )
* Trevor-Roper, Hugh ( 1967 ).
The Invention of Scotland ( 2008 ) by Hugh Trevor-Roper conclusively follows the evolution of Macpherson's version ( s ) and the work's early support by some Scottish intellectuals.
* Trevor-Roper, Hugh ; Princes and Artists, Patronage and Ideology at Four Habsburg Courts 1517-1633, Thames & Hudson, London, 1976, ISBN 0-500-23232-6
Historian Hugh Trevor-Roper said in 1977 that More was " the first great Englishman whom we feel that we know, the most saintly of humanists, the most human of saints, the universal man of our cool northern renaissance.
During this period, which coincided with the mastership of Hugh Trevor-Roper, the college endured a period of significant conflict amongst the fellowship, particularly between Trevor-Roper and Cowling.
In 1969, along with Hugh Trevor-Roper and A. J. P. Taylor, he became a member of the editorial board of Sir Winston Churchill's four volume A History of the English-Speaking Peoples.
As the American historian Gerhard Weinberg noted, German demands for territorial revision went beyond merely regaining land lost under the Treaty of Versailles, and instead embraced calls for the German conquest and colonization of all Eastern Europe, regardless of whether the land in question had belonged to Germany before 1918 or not Likewise, the British historian Hugh Trevor-Roper argued that the goal of overthrowing Versailles was only a prelude to seizing Lebensraum in Eastern Europe for Germany with no regard as to where Germany's 1914 frontiers had been.
Macmillan had been elected Chancellor of the University of Oxford in 1960, in a campaign masterminded by Hugh Trevor-Roper, and continued in this distinguished office for life, frequently presiding over college events, making speeches and tirelessly raising funds.
* Trevor-Roper, Hugh Redwald.
Irving was an early proponent of the argument that the diaries were a forgery, and went so far as to crash the press conference held by Hugh Trevor-Roper at the Hamburg offices of Der Stern magazine on 25 April 1983 to denounce the diaries as a forgery and Trevor-Roper for endorsing the diaries as genuine ( Trevor-Roper had called the press conference to announce his withdrawal of his endorsement ).
Oxford University, The Great Histories Series, Ed., Hugh R. Trevor-Roper and E. Badian.
Wildeblood had been convicted and sent to prison, while Winter and Trevor-Roper were more respectable: Winter was director of the Fitzwilliam Museum and Trevor-Roper was a distinguished eye surgeon and brother of the famous historian Hugh Trevor-Roper.
Hugh Trevor-Roper said about them: " It is thanks to Camden that we ascribe to Queen Elizabeth a consistent policy of via media rather than an inconsequent series of unresolved conflicts and paralysed indecisions.
* Hugh Trevor-Roper, Baron Dacre ( 1914 2003 ), historian
Taylor had a famous rivalry with the right-wing historian Hugh Trevor-Roper, with whom he often debated on television.
A subtle but important difference in the style between the two historians was their manner of addressing each other during their TV debates: Trevor-Roper always addressed Taylor as " Mr. Taylor " or just " Taylor ", while Taylor always addressed Trevor-Roper as " Hugh ".
Hugh Redwald Trevor-Roper ( 15 January 1914 27 January 2003 ) was an English historian of early modern Britain and Nazi Germany and Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford.

Hugh and "'
The issue featured a series of exclusives including the actor Hugh Grant's secret recording of former News of the World journalist Paul McMullan, and a much-commented on interview with Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg, in which Clegg admitted that he " cries regularly to music " and that his nine-year-old son asked him, "' Why are the students angry with you, Papa?

Hugh and ':
Yet close friends, brothers, sisters, and even sometimes partners of the friends were not necessarily members of Bloomsbury: Keynes ’ s wife Lydia Lopokova was only reluctantly accepted into the group, and there were certainly " writers who were at some time close friends of Virginia Woolf, but who were distinctly not ' Bloomsbury ': T. S. Eliot, Katherine Mansfield, Hugh Walpole ".
) and on one occasion in the third series as a wrestling tournament MC ; Horne comments after being introduced as ' Your referee for the contest-Kenneth " Man Mountain " Horne ': ' That was Hugh Paddick, the wrestling vicar of St Barnabas Without.
' A Merry Little Christmas ': Songwriter Hugh Martin Dies at 96.

Hugh and King's
* Walpole ( WL ) ( 51 girls, 1935 ) is named after the novelist Sir Hugh Walpole ( King's Scholar 1896 ).
Isabella had married Hugh without waiting to receive the consent of the King's council in England, which was the required procedure for a former Queen of England, as the Council had the power to not only choose the Queen Dowager's second husband, but to decide whether or not she should be allowed to marry at all.
The Domesday Book entry reads ' Kessingalanda / gelanda: King's land, kept by Roger Bigot ; Earl Hugh and Hugh FitzNorman from him ; Hugh de Montfort
Hugh James Rose ( 9 June 1795 22 December 1838 ) was an English churchman and theologian who served as the second Principal of King's College London.
Hugh Capet, king of France, made Arnulf archbishop of Reims in 988, even though Arnulf was the nephew of the King's bitter rival, Charles of Lorraine.
With the introduction of the feudal system to Scotland by David I, a provincial Lordship of Regality of Lauderdale, had been created for the King's favourite, Hugh de Morville ( who founded Dryburgh Abbey ), which covered an extensive amount of territory, although Thomson states that the family of de Lawedre were " there in the previous century.
After leaving school he went up to King's College, Cambridge, where his socialist views, then very rare amongst undergraduates, earned him the nickname " Comrade Hugh ".
On her 94th birthday in March 1914, Alice Rector and the King's Daughters of the First Methodist Church of Bridgeport, Connecticut organized a Violet Day to honor Crosby, which was publicised nationally by Hugh Main.
The King's Speech of October 1937 included " I am looking forward with interest and pleasure to the time when it will be possible for Me to visit My Indian Empire ", to the satisfaction of Sir Hugh O ' Neill.
The 2nd Division included the 3rd British Brigade ( Maj-Gen Frederick Adam ), the 1st King's German Legion ( KGL ) Brigade ( Col Du Plat ), the 3rd Hanoverian Brigade ( Col Hugh Halkett ) and Lieut-Col Gold's two artillery batteries ( Bolton RA and Sympher KGL ).
His only son, Major Hugh Barrow Rowlands, Suffolk Regiment and King's African Rifles, died of wounds in Somaliland in 1903.
A Corrody, no doubt the same one, was held in this Priory in 1509 by Hugh Denys of Osterley ( d. 1511 ), Groom of the King's Close Stool to Henry VII .. On the death of Denys, Henry VIII transferred the Corrody (" in the King's gift by death of Hugh Denys ") to John Porth, another courtier.
Hugh was suspected of involvement in the Young King's revolt in 1173.
Hugh Lloyd was born in Chester, Cheshire, England and went to school at the King's School, Chester.
* (- 1511 ) Hugh Denys of Osterley ( d. 1511 ), Groom to the King's Close Stool of Henry VII.

Hugh and Book
* Folio 22 recto: Horse ( Equus ) ( Isidore of Seville, Etymologiae, Book XII, i, 41-56 ; Hugh of Fouilloy, III, xxiii )
David Brady describes a " lull before the storm " in which, in the early 17th century, " reasonably restrained and systematic " Protestant exegesis of the Book of Revelation was seen with Brightman, Mede and Hugh Broughton ; after which " apocalyptic literature became too easily debased " as it became more populist, less scholarly.
This led to the urban legend that Zappa was the son of Hugh Brannum, who played Mr. Green Jeans, a myth Zappa officially dispelled in his 1989 autobiography, The Real Frank Zappa Book, as did Keeshan in his 1996 autobiography, Good Morning, Captain.
* Hugh Nibley ; Todd M. Compton and Stephen D. Ricks, editors ; Mormonism and Early Christianity ; Deseret Book ; ISBN 0-87579-127-1 ( Hardcover, 1987 )
In the Domesday Book three lords were associated with Swaffham: Walter Giffard, with the largest manor ; his tenant Hugh Bolebec, who held all of the Giffard land there ; and Aubrey de Vere I, who held a smaller manor at Swaffham which the Domesday jurors said Aubrey had seized without the king's permission.
Mormon scholar and apologist Hugh Nibley discussed the Book of Mormon's depiction of Blacks in his writings:
** High Spirits Book, lyrics, and music by Hugh Martin and Timothy Gray.
* 1973: A Little Night Music Book by Hugh Wheeler, music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim.
* 1979: Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street Book by Hugh Wheeler, music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim.
** Meet Me in St. Louis Book by Hugh Wheeler, music / lyrics by Ralph Blane and Hugh Martin
Collins stated in Hugh Fielder's 1984 book, The Book Of Genesis, that backstage after a Lamb concert, " people would steam straight past Tony, Mike, Steve and I, go straight up to Peter and say, ' You're fantastic, we really enjoyed the show.
The manor of Barwell which is described in Domesday Book as " ancient demesne ", was later given to Hugh de Hastings, a steward and favourite of Henry I, and held in fee along with many other local manors from the priory of Coventry for the service of a single knight ’ s fee.
Assuming the document to be genuine, prominent Mormon academic Hugh Nibley predicted that the discovery promised " as good a test as we'll ever get of the authenticity of the Book of Mormon " because he thought the paper might be translated.
In a New York Times Book Review, Hugh Trevor-Roper praised it as " a splendid work of scholarship, objective in method, sound in judgment, inescapable in its conclusions.
In the Domesday Book, it is listed as owned by a Walter Giffard and the tenant was a Hugh de Bolbec.
* Hugh D. Auchincloss Middle East Book Collection at Pell Center of International Relations and Public Policy at the McKillop Library at Salve Regina University
Cole, Hugh Henry Wilding ' The Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador ( St. John's: Newfoundland Book Publishers, 1984 ),
A number of alumni have made meaningful contributions to arts and letters: Joel T. Headley ( 1839 ), author of numerous books about the Adirondack Mountains and early American history ; William James Stillman ( 1848 ), photographer and author ; Fitz Hugh Ludlow ( 1856 ), author of The Hashish Eater ; Andrea Barrett ( 1974 ), winner of the National Book Award ( for Ship Fever ) and the Pulitzer Prize for works of fiction ; and David Markson ( 1950 ), author of titles such as The Ballad of Dingus Magee.
When Sir Hugh Beaver of Guinness came up with the idea for the Guinness Book of Records, it was Chataway who suggested his old university friends Norris and Ross McWhirter as editors, knowing of their liking for facts.
LDS apologist Hugh Nibley states that " we have learned that the papyri are of relatively late date — but the Mormons have always known that — we have seen some of the papyri that were in Smith's possession, but there is no evidence that we have seen them all, and it is apparent that only one small piece among them has any direct bearing on the Book of Abraham and what connection is remains a complete mystery.
* The River Cottage Meat Book, by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall ( 2004 )

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