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Mabey and Richard
* Mabey, Richard, 1997, Flora Britannica London: Chatto and Windus
* Richard Mabey ( born 1941 ), nature writer
Richard Mabey alleges, in Flora Britannica, that there are farms in the US which specialize in four-leaf clovers, producing as many as 10, 000 a day ( to be sealed in plastic as " lucky charms ") by feeding a secret, genetically-engineered ingredient to the plants to encourage the aberration ( there are, however, widely-available cultivars that regularly produce leaves with multiple leaflets – see below ).
Richard Mabey gives several recipes for samphire, although it is possible that at least one of these may refer to marsh samphire or glasswort ( Salicornia europaea ), a very common confusion.
* Richard Mabey, Gilbert White
Richard Mabey, in Flora Britannica, describes Caltha palustris thus:
* Mabey, Richard, 1997, Flora Britannica London: Chatto and Windus
In 2011 current research secretary Richard Mabey produced a paper with Bernard Jenkin MP on the Alternative Vote system " Death of the Conviction Voter-Fairness and Tactics under AV " which was often cited during the 2011 AV referendum debate and was seen as being an influential contribution to the thinking of the " NOtoAV " campaign.
In November 2007 he debated the future of the English countryside with Richard Girling, Sue Clifford, Richard Mabey and Bill Bryson as part of CPRE's annual Volunteers Conference.
It was based on Flora Britannica by the acclaimed nature writer Richard Mabey, who initiated its sister volume.
Birds Britannica, a project initiated by Richard Mabey and written by Mark Cocker, was British Birds / BTO Bird Book of the Year ( 2005 ) and described by Andrew Motion, the poet laureate as:
* Birds Britannica ( with Richard Mabey ), Chatto and Windus 2005.
* Richard Mabey
* Richard Mabey

Mabey and Sinclair-Stevenson
* 1997-Flora Britannica-Richard Mabey ( Sinclair-Stevenson )

Mabey and ISBN
* Margaret Mabey, A Little History of the Lickey Hills, The Lickey Hills Society, 1993, ISBN 0-9519839-1-1
* Margaret Mabey, A Little History of the Lickey Hills, The Lickey Hills Society, 1993, ISBN 0-9519839-1-1
* Mabey, Margaret ( 1993 ) A Little History of the Lickey Hills, The Lickey Hills Society ISBN 0-9519839-1-1

Richard and Flora
The collector Richard Payne Knight purchased the Flora cameo from an Italian dealer, believing it to be Roman.
* Elfine: Flora teaches her some social graces and dress sense so that Richard Hawk-Monitor falls in love with her.
The department also utilizes the fields and greenhouses of the nearby Oxford Tract for research. The College of Natural Resources provides additional instructional and research facilities such as the Richard B. Gump South Pacific Research Station on the island of Moorea and its associated Moorea Digital Flora Project.
Its primary source materials, consisting of more than 500 archival collections, include the papers and artifacts of Jewish families and individuals such as Judah L. Magnes ; Adolph Sutro ; David and Simon Lubin ; Rosalie Meyer Stern ; Julius Kahn ; Florence Prag ; Flora Arnstein ; Ernest Bloch ; Lloyd Dinkelspiel ; Robert Levinson ; Harris Weinstock ; Ruth Carol Silver ; Benjamin Swig ; Rhoda and Richard Goldman ; Alfred Henry Jacobs ; members of the Haas, Koshland, Gerstle, Sloss, and Lilienthal families ; and many others.
He married Flora Beasley ( 1884 – 1962 ), daughter of Richard William Beasley and Mary Ann Brett, in 1905.
' Flora and Zephyr ' 1834 by Richard James Wyatt, held at Nostell Priory.

Richard and Britannica
Writer George Bernard Shaw claimed to have read the complete 9th edition — except for the science articles — and Richard Evelyn Byrd took the Britannica as reading material for his five-month stay at the South Pole in 1934, while Philip Beaver read it during a sailing expedition.
His other works included well-known monographs on Richard III ( London, 1878 ), and on Henry VII ( London, 1889, and subsequently ); The Houses of Lancaster and York ( London, 1874, and other editions ); The English Church in the 16th century ( London, 1902 ); Lollardy and the Reformation in England ( 1908 ); and contributions to the Encyclopædia Britannica, the Dictionary of National Biography, the Cambridge Modern History, and the English Historical Review.
The Family of Hoge quotes The Encyclopædia Britannica as having this to say about the Howes: " The friendliness of the brothers, Admiral Richard Howe and General William Howe, to the colonies led to their selection for the command of the British forces in the Revolutionary War.
The Family of Hoge quotes The Encyclopaedia Britannica as having this to say about the Howes: " The friendliness of the brothers, Admiral Richard Howe and General William Howe, to the colonies led to their selection for the command of the British forces in the Revolutionary War.
* Richard A. Melcher, “ Dusting Off the Britannica ,” Business Week, October 20, 1997
* Article on Richard Challoner from the 1911 edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica
From a copy of this life, interleaved with manuscript additions from the author's rough draft by the editor ( Le Neve ), and some notes by White Kennett, Richard Gough drew up the ' Life of Field ,' which was printed in an edition of the Biographia Britannica.
to date ; 1993-), Johannes Ockeghem ’ s collected works edited by Dragan Plamenac and Richard Wexler ( 3 vols., 1966, 1992 ), John Dunstaple ’ s complete works edited by Manfred Bukofzer, published jointly with Musica Britannica ( 2 / 1970 ), Joseph Kerman ’ s The Elizabethan Madrigal ( 1962 ), E. R. Reilly ’ s Quantz and his Versuch ( 1971 ), E. H. Sparks ’ s The Music of Noel Bauldeweyn ( 1972 ), Essays in Musicology: a Tribute to Alvin Johnson edited by Lewis Lockwood and Edward Roesner ( 1990 ), and, in conjunction with the International Musicological Society, Doctoral Dissertations in Musicology edited by C. D. Adkins and A. Dickinson in succession to Helen Hewitt ( 1952, 1957, 1961, 1965, 1971, 1977, 1984 cumulative edition, 1990, 1996 series, second cumulative edition ).

Richard and Sinclair-Stevenson
* Linda Kelly, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, A Life ( Sinclair-Stevenson 1997 ).

Richard and London
Adrian Quiney wrote to his son Richard on October 29 and again perhaps the next day, since the bearer of the letter, the bailiff, was expected to reach London on November 1.
Books 2 – 6 of the Itinerarium Regis Ricardi, a Latin prose narrative of the same events apparently compiled by Richard, a canon of Holy Trinity, London, are closely related to Ambroise's poem.
Richard Ingrams, 1974, Muller, London )
The Scoville Memorial Libraries collection began in 1771, when Richard Smith, owner of a local blast furnace, used community contributions to buy 200 books in London.
The Government Department, whose prominent professors include Stephen Brooks, Richard Ned Lebow, and William Wohlforth, was ranked the top solely undergraduate political science program in the world by researchers at the London School of Economics in 2003.
* Fisher, Richard B., " Edward Jenner 1749-1823 ," Andre Deutsch, London, 1991.
Edward V and his 10-year old brother Richard were imprisoned in the Tower of London and their uncle made himself king as Richard III.
Richard of Wallingford, a local landowner, who had presented demands to Richard II on behalf of Wat Tyler in London, brought news of this to St Albans and argued with the abbot over the charter.
* Actor Richard Harris lived at the Savoy Hotel while in London.
In October 1823, Richard Rush, the American minister in London, advised that Foreign Secretary George Canning was proposing that the U. S. and Britain jointly declare their opposition to European intervention.
From late 1962 until the spring of 1964, he played drums for The Beachcombers, a London cover band notable for renditions of songs by Cliff Richard.
* Richard Beeston, Looking For Trouble: The Life and Times of a Foreign Correspondent, 1997, published by Brassey's, London.
The society also lost several major figures over the period: Richard Lovell Edgeworth ceased regular involvement in the society's activities when he returned to Ireland in 1782, John Whitehurst died in London in 1788, and Thomas Day died the following year.
It was widely supported in the Edinburgh and London schools of higher anatomy around 1830, notably by Robert Edmond Grant, but was opposed by Karl Ernst von Baer's ideas of divergence, and attacked by Richard Owen in the 1830s.
* 1851 – Herman Melville's Moby-Dick is first published as The Whale by Richard Bentley of London.
At first, the dictionary was unconnected to Oxford University but was the idea of a small group of intellectuals in London ; it originally was a Philological Society project conceived in London by Richard Chenevix Trench, Herbert Coleridge, and Frederick Furnivall, who were dissatisfied with the current English dictionaries.
By 1598, they were so famous, London poet and sonneteer Richard Barnefield wrote:
* Richard English, Armed Struggle – A History of the IRA, MacMillan, London 2003, ISBN 1-4050-0108-9
Richard Lovelace's mother, Anne Barne ( 1587 – 1633 ), was the daughter of Sir William Barne and the granddaughter of Sir George Barne III ( 1532-d. 1593 ), the Lord Mayor of London and a prominent merchant and public official from London during the reign of Elizabeth I ; and Anne Gerrard, daughter of Sir William Garrard, who was Lord Mayor of London in 1555.
Richard Lovelace's mother was also the daughter of Anne Sandys and the granddaughter of Cicely Wilford and the Most Reverend Dr. Edwin Sandys, an Anglican church leader who successively held the posts of the Bishop of Worcester ( 1559 – 1570 ), Bishop of London ( 1570 – 1576 ), and the Archbishop of York ( 1576 – 1588 ).

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