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Isidore and Geoffroy
Simpson's system of taxonomy, however, was far from the first ; taxonomies / descriptions for the classification of intersexuality were developed by Italian physician and physicist Fortuné Affaitati in 1549, French surgeon Ambroise Paré in 1573, French physician and sexology pioneer Nicolas Venette in 1687 ( under the pseudonym Vénitien Salocini ), and French Zoologist Isidore Geoffroy St. Hilaire in 1832.
During this period, too, she also met and became friends with the father and son comparative anatomists and zoologists Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire and Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire by whom her father was employed to create natural history illustrations.
Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire ( 16 December 1805 – 10 November 1861 ) was a French zoologist and an authority on deviation from normal structure.
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He resigned his chair at the museum in 1841, and was succeeded by his son, Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire.
* Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire begins publication of Histoire générale et particulière des anomalies de l ’ organisation chez l ’ homme et les animaux, a key text on teratology.
* Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, in the second volume of Histoire naturelle générale des Règnes organiques, introduces the term ethology.
In 1862 he succeeded Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire in the long-vacant chair of zoology.
* 1860 to 1861: Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire
Some of our modern ideas of birth defects can be traced to French anatomist Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire ( 1805 – 1861 ), who pioneered the field of teratology.
* Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire ( 1805-1861 ), French zoologist who coined the term ethology, son of Étienne Saint-Hilaire
* Albert Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire ( 1835-1919 ), French zoologist, coined the binomial nomenclature name for the Chinese Monal pheasant, son of Isidore Saint-Hilaire
# REDIRECT Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire
# REDIRECT Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire
# REDIRECT Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire
# REDIRECT Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire
| 12896 Geoffroy || || Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, French naturalist, or Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, French zoologist, or, Henry Geoffroy, French painter *

Isidore and ),
), Anatho ( Isidore Charax ), Anatha ( Ammianus Marcellinus ) by Greek and Latin writers in the early Christian centuries, Ana ( sometimes, as if plural, Anat ) by Arabic writers.
Saint Isidore of Seville, one of the greatest scholars of the early Middle Ages, is widely recognized as being the author of the first known encyclopedia of the Middle Ages, the Etymologiae or Origines ( around 630 ), in which he compiled a sizable portion of the learning available at his time, both ancient and modern.
Deckard's story is interwoven with that of J. R. Isidore ( a surname Dick also used in Confessions of a Crap Artist ), a " special " ( i. e. genetically-damaged ) driver for an animal repair shop who cannot qualify to leave Earth due to his " special " status.
The actual transition may be captured by Isidore of Seville's Etymologiae ( 7th century AD ), an etymological dictionary.
* Petequakey (‘ Comes to Us With the Sound of Wings ’, better known as Isidore Cayen dit Boudreau, Chief of the Parklands or Willow Cree at Muskeg Lake, born in St. Boniface, Manitoba, as son of Pierre Narcisse Cayen dit Boudreau and Adelaide Catherine Arcand (‘ Kaseweetin ’), though he was a Métis he became chief of the Willow Cree an the Métis, who were living with the Cree, brother and counselor of chief Kee-too-way-how ( a. k. a. Alexander Cayen dit Boudreau ), after Kee-too-way-how had left the reserve on the Muskeg Lake to live around Batoche, became Petequakey chief ( 1880 – 1889 ) of the remaining Cree and Métis living in the reserve, he participated on 26 March 1885 along with the Métis leader Gabriel Dumont at the battle at Duck Lake, thereafter he led his tribal group to St. Laurent to participate in the defense of Batoche, one of the largest Métis settlements and the seat of the Saskatchewan's provisional government during the rebellion )
* Hippolyte Isidore Dreyfus-Barney ( 1873 – 1928 ), prominent early Bahá ' í
Isidore in the 7th century thought the word was from Greek βαρύς " heavy " ( because of the " heavy work " done by mercenaries ), but the word is presumably of Old Frankish origin, cognate with Old English beorn meaning " warrior, nobleman ").
Isidore de Lara, born Isidore Cohen ( 9 August 18582 September 1935 ), was an English composer and singer.
* Maximilien Francois Marie Isidore de Robespierre ( 1758 – 1794 ), French revolutionary leader
Isidore Auguste Marie François Xavier Comte ( 19 January 1798 – 5 September 1857 ), better known as Auguste Comte (), was a French philosopher.
Broca first become acquainted with anthropology through the works of Isidore Geoffroy-Saint Hilaire ( 1805 – 1861 ), Antoine Étienne Reynaud Augustin Serres ( 1786 – 1868 ) and Jean Louis Armand de Quatrefages de Bréau ( 1810 – 1892 ), and anthropology soon became his lifetime interest.
Damascius's biography of his teacher Isidore ( perhaps a part of the philosophos historia attributed to Damascius by the Suda ), of which Photius has preserved a considerable fragment.
St. Isidore of Seville's etymology is, if doubtful, certainly colourful: " Thanet is an island in the Ocean in the Gallic channel ( English channel ), separated from Britannia by a narrow estuary, with fruitful fields and rich soil.
Until the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls ( DSS ), the only surviving manuscripts of Jubilees were four complete Ge ' ez texts dating to the 15th and 16th centuries, and several quotations by the Church fathers such as Epiphanius, Justin Martyr, Origen, Diodorus of Tarsus, Isidore of Alexandria, Isidore of Seville, Eutychius of Alexandria, John Malalas, George Syncellus, and George Kedrenos.
Many of the earliest Christians who followed the Septuagint calculated creation around 5500 BC, and Christians up to the Middle-Ages continued to use this rough estimate: Clement of Alexandria ( 5592 BC ), Julius Africanus ( 5501 BC ), Eusebius ( 5228 BC ), Jerome ( 5199 BC ) Hippolytus of Rome ( 5500 BC ), Theophilus of Antioch ( 5529 BC ), Sulpicius Severus ( 5469 BC ), Isidore of Seville ( 5336 BC ), Panodorus of Alexandria ( 5493 BC ), Maximus the Confessor ( 5493 BC ), George Syncellus ( 5492 BC ) and Gregory of Tours ( 5500 BC ).

Isidore and son
The latter defines Sparta to be Lacedaemonia Civitas but Isidore defines Lacedaemonia as founded by Lacedaemon, son of Semele, relying on Eusebius.
* Kee-too-way-how (‘ Sounding With Flying Wings ’, better known as Alexander Cayen dit Boudreau, Chief of the Parklands or Willow Cree at Muskeg Lake, born 1834 St. Boniface, Manitoba, son of Pierre Narcisse Cayen dit Boudreau and Adelaide Catherine Arcand (‘ Kaseweetin ’), though he was of Métis descent he became chief of the Willow Cree and the Métis, who were living with the Cree, brother of Petequakey (‘ Isidore Cayen dit Boudreau ’), lived along Duck Lake, signed 1876 Treaty 6 and settled in a reserve at Muskeg Lake-that was later named after his brother Petequakey-but left the reserve in 1880 and lived again in the following years close to St. Laurent de Grandin mission, played a prominent role during the Northwest Rebellion of 1885 in which he participated in every battle, served also as an emissary of the Métis leader Gabriel Dumont to ask the Assiniboine for support, on 23 May 1885 he also submitted the declaration of surrender of Pitikwahanapiwiyin (' Poundmaker ') to General Middleton, was captured on the 1st June 1885, in the subsequent trial of Kee-too-way-how at Regina, Louis Cochin testified that he and the carters in the camp of Pitikwahanapiwiyin survived only thanks to the intercession by Kee-way-too-how and its people, despite the positive testimony, he was on 14 August 1885 sentenced to imprisonment for seven years for his involvement in the Métis rebellion, died 1886 ).
Oz was born in Hereford, England, the son of Frances ( née Ghevaert ) and Isidore Oznowicz, both of whom were puppeteers.
His son Isidore ( 1805 – 68 ) formed a partnership with Daguerre after his father's death and was granted a government pension in 1839 in return for disclosing the technical details of Nicéphore's heliogravure process.
He was the second son of Isidore Dumont and Louise Laframboise.
Arrangements were made for Daguerre's rights to be acquired by the French Government in exchange for lifetime pensions for himself and Niépce's son Isidore ; then, on 19 August 1839, the French Government presented the invention as a gift from France " free to the world " and complete working instructions were published.
" And at the time of his death, whilst Abba Isidore was sitting with him, Abba Moses looked up to heaven, and said, " Rejoice and be glad, O my son Zechariah, for the gates of heaven have been opened.
It is elsewhere related that Isidore had a wife called Domna, who died five days after the birth of their son whom they named Proclus.
His son, Isidore, went on to develop the drapery business and to create a large, fashionable, store.
* Fragments of his son Isidore
The parents sent three of their children to London to live with their grandparents ; one of the children was his favorite son Isidore, aged four.
Apart from single names, many inscriptions list combinations such as " the two Aurelii Heraclae, father and son ", " the Fadii ", " Cutius Celsianus and Fabius Galaticus ", " the two Junii, Melissus and Melissa ", " the partners Hyacinthus, Isidore and Pollio ", " L. Marius Phoebus and the Vibii, Viator and Retitutus.
It was established in 1849 by Isidore Boudin, son of a family of master bakers from Burgundy, France, by blending the sourdough prevalent among miners in the Gold Rush with French techniques.
He was born in Leeds and is the youngest son of the financier Isidore Jack Lyons, a former director of the UDS Group.
First was the revolt of the city of Córdoba, which Isidore of Seville suggests was due to local Roman Catholics objecting to his Arianism: in his account, Isidore mentions that Agila defiled the church of a local saint, Acisclus, by drenching the sepulcher " with the blood of the enemy and of their pack-animals ", and attributes the death of Agila's son in the conflict — along with the majority of his army, and the royal treasury — to " the agency of the saints ".

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