Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "St Kilda, Scotland" ¶ 56
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Macaulay and Kenneth
| Kenneth Macaulay
| rowspan =" 2 "| Kenneth Macaulay

Macaulay and ),
* Zachary Macaulay ( 1768 – 1838 ), estate manager, colonial governor, father of Thomas Babington Macaulay
* Thomas Babington Macaulay ( 1800 – 1859 ), Fran Pritchett, Columbia University
* Black and White ( book ), 1990 children's picture book by David Macaulay
George Macaulay Trevelyan, OM, CBE, FRS, FBA ( 16 February 1876 – 21 July 1962 ), was a British historian.
Later recipients included Thomas Babington Macaulay ( 1853 ), John C. Frémont ( 1860 ), Theodor Mommsen ( 1868 ), Charles Darwin ( 1868 ), Thomas Carlyle ( 1874 ) ( who never accepted any other honor ), Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ( 1875 ), William Thomson, Lord Kelvin ( 1884 ), Heinrich von Treitschke ( 1887 ), Johannes Brahms ( 1887 ), Giuseppe Verdi ( 1887 ), William Henry Flower ( 1899 ), Camille Saint-Saëns ( 1901 ), Luigi Cremona ( 1903 ), John Singer Sargent ( 1908 ), Ferdinand von Zeppelin ( 1910 ), Otto Lessing ( sculptor ) ( 1911 ), Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen ( 1911 ), Sir William Ramsay ( 1911 ), Max Planck ( 1915 ), and Rudolph Sohm ( 1916 ).

Macaulay and History
According to George Macaulay Trevelyan in A Shortened History of England, during the Viking occupation: “ The Scandinavians, when not on the Viking warpath, were a litigious people and loved to get together in the ‘ thing ’ to hear legal argument.
" However, the Whig historian, Thomas Macaulay, denigrates Marlborough throughout the pages of his History of England who, in the words of historian John Wilson Croker, pursues the Duke with " more than the ferocity, and much less than the sagacity, of a bloodhound.
The Liberal historian Lord Acton read Macaulay's History of England four times and later described himself as " a raw English schoolboy, primed to the brim with Whig politics " but " not Whiggism only, but Macaulay in particular that I was so full of ".
Potter noted that Macaulay has had many critics, some of whom put forward some salient points about the deficiency of Macaulay's History but added: " The severity and the minuteness of the criticism to which the History of England has been subjected is a measure of its permanent value.
Of course Macaulay thought that the Whigs of the seventeenth century were correct in their fundamental ideas, but the hero of the History was William, who, as Macaulay says, was certainly no Whig ... If this was Whiggism it was so only, by the mid-nineteenth century, in the most extended and inclusive sense, requiring only an acceptance of parliamentary government and a sense of gravity of precedent.
However his voluminous notes on the Glorious Revolution came into the possession of Thomas Macaulay, who used them for his own History of the Revolution.
* Thomas Babington Macaulay, The History of England from the Accession of James the Second.
Hume still dominated English historiography but this changed when Thomas Babington Macaulay, utilising Fox and Mackintosh's work and manuscript collections, published the first volumes of his The History of England from the Accession of James II in 1848.
* Thomas Babington Macaulay, The History of England from the Accession of James the Second.
Thomas Macaulay in his History of England said of Rochester:
* Thomas Babington Macaulay, The History of England from the Accession of James the Second.
* Thomas Babington Macaulay, The History of England from the Accession of James the Second.
* Thomas Babington Macaulay, The History of England from the Accession of James the Second.
If Burke is excluded, other candidates for coining the term are Henry Brougham speaking in Parliament in 1823 or 1824 and Thomas Macaulay in an essay of 1828 reviewing Hallam's Constitutional History: " The gallery in which the reporters sit has become a fourth estate of the realm.
* Macaulay, History of England, vol.
In 1876 he published The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay, and in 1880 he published The Early History of Charles James Fox.
* Article Macaulay, Zachary ( and Macaulay, Aulay ) in the Dictionary of Scottish Church History and Theology ( Edinburgh, 1993 ) ISBN 0-567-09650-5
Macaulay Museum of Dental History
Between 1763 and 1783 Macaulay wrote, in eight volumes, The History of England from the Accession of James I to that of the Brunswick Line.
* Royal Berkshire History: Catherine Sawbridge, Mrs. Macaulay Graham
Thomas Babington Macaulay spent a year in rented accommodation in Thames Ditton while writing some of his famous History of England.

Macaulay and St
He then attended St Paul's School in London for three years, where he was taught by F. S. Macaulay, now known for his contributions to ideal theory.
* William E. Macaulay Honors College – this collaborative endeavor of CUNY's senior colleges occupies the 92nd St Y's former Makor / Steinhardt Building on West 67th Street, east of Columbus Avenue, the latter having relocated to Tribeca.
Lascelles Abercrombie-Joseph Addison-AE-Mark Akenside-William Alexander, Earl of Stirling-William Allingham-Matthew Arnold-Sir Robert Ayton-Lady Grizel Baillie-Joanna Baillie-Frances Bannerman-Anna Laetitia Barbauld-John Barbour-Richard Barnefield-William Barnes-James Beattie-Francis Beaumont-Sir John Beaumont-Thomas Lovell Beddoes-Henry Charles Beeching-Aphra Behn-Hilaire Belloc-Arthur Christopher Benson-Laurence Binyon-Richard Doddridge Blackmore-William Blake-Edmund Blunden-Wilfrid Scawen Blunt-Gordon Bottomley-Francis William Bourdillon-William Lisle Bowles-Mark Alexander Boyd-Nicholas Breton-Robert Bridges-Alexander Brome-Rupert Brooke-William Broome-Emily Brontë-Thomas Edward Brown-William Browne of Tavistock-Elizabeth Barrett Browning-Robert Browning-Michael Bruce-William Cullen Bryant-John Bunyan-Robert Burns-George Gordon, Lord Byron-Jeremiah Joseph Callanan-Thomas Campbell-Thomas Campion-Thomas Carew-Henry Carey-Bliss Carman-William Cartwright-George Chapman-Thomas Chatterton-Geoffrey Chaucer-G. K. Chesterton-John Clare-Arthur Hugh Clough-Hartley Coleridge-Mary Elizabeth Coleridge-Samuel Taylor Coleridge-William Collins-Padraic Colum-William Congreve-Henry Constable-William Cornish-William Cory-Charles Cotton-Abraham Cowley-William Cowper-George Crabbe-Richard Crashaw-Allan Cunningham-Robert Cunninghame-Grahame of Gartmore-Henry Cust-Samuel Daniel-George Darley-Sir William Davenant-John Davidson-Sir John Davies-William Henry Davies-F. or W. Davison-Thomas Dekker-Walter de la Mare-John Leicester Warren, Lord De Tabley-Aubrey De Vere-Sir Aubrey de Vere-Emily Dickinson-Richard Watson Dixon-Sydney Dobell-Henry Austin Dobson-John Donne-Earl of Dorset-Lord Alfred Douglas-Ernest Dowson-Sir Francis Hastings Doyle-Michael Drayton-William Drummond of Hawthornden-John Dryden-Agnes Mary Frances Duclaux-George du Maurier-William Dunbar-Thomas d ' Urfey-Richard Edwardes-Ebenezer Elliott-Jane Elliot-Ralph Waldo Emerson-Sir George Etherege-Sir Richard Fanshawe-Sir Samuel Ferguson-Edward FitzGerald-Thomas Flatman-James Elroy Flecker-Giles Fletcher-John Fletcher-Phineas Fletcher-John Ford-George Fox-Norman Gale-George Gascoigne-John Gay-Oliver St. John Gogarty-Oliver Goldsmith-Sir Edmund Gosse-James Graham, Marquis of Montrose-Thomas Gray-Robert Greene-Julian Grenfell-Fanny Greville-Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke-Gerald Griffin-Nicholas Grimald-William Habington-Thomas Hardy-Bret Harte-Stephen Hawes-Robert Stephen Hawker-Felicia Dorothea Hemans-William Ernest Henley-Robert Henryson-George Herbert-Lord Herbert of Cherbury-Robert Herrick-John Heywood-Thomas Heywood-Katharine Tynan Hinkson-Thomas Hoccleve-Ralph Hodgson-Thomas Hood-James Hogg-Gerard Manley Hopkins-Richard Henry Horne-Lord Houghton-Alfred Edward Housman-Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey-William Dean Howells-Leigh Hunt-Douglas Hyde-Selwyn Image-Jean Ingelow-Richard Jago-James I of Scotland-Lionel Johnson-Samuel Johnson-Ebenezer Jones-Sir William Jones-Ben Jonson-Thomas Jordan-James Joyce-John Keats-John Keble-Henry Clarence Kendall-John Kenyon-Henry King-Charles Kingsley-Rudyard Kipling-Charles Lamb-Mary Lamb-Walter Savage Landor-Andrew Lang-William Langland-Emily Lawless-Richard Le Gallienne-Lady Anne Lindsay-John Gibson Lockhart-Thomas Lodge-Henry Wadsworth Longfellow-Richard Lovelace-John Lydgate-John Lyly-Thomas Babington Macaulay, Lord Macaulay-George MacDonald-Francis Mahony-James Clarence Mangan-Robert Mannyng of Brunne-Christopher Marlowe-Andrew Marvell-John Masefield-Jasper Mayne-George Meredith-Alice Meynell-John Milton-Alexander Montgomerie-Thomas Moore-T. Sturge Moore-Thomas Osbert Mordaunt-William Morris-Anthony Munday-Carolina, Lady Nairne-Thomas Nashe-Sir Henry Newbolt-Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton-Alfred Noyes-John Oldham-William Oldys-John Boyle O ' Reilly-Orinda-Thomas Otway-Wilfred Owen-Isabel Pagan-Herbert Edward Palmer-Sir Gilbert Parker-Thomas Parnell-Coventry Patmore-Thomas Love Peacock-George Peele-Katherine Philips-Eden Phillpotts-William Philpot-Edgar Allan Poe-Alexander Pope-Winthrop Mackworth Praed-Matthew Prior-May Probyn-Bryan Waller Procter-Francis Quarles-Sir Walter Raleigh-Allan Ramsay-Thomas Randolph-William Brighty Rands-John Reynolds-Ernest Rhys-Samuel Rogers-Thomas William Rolleston-Christina Georgina Rossetti-Dante Gabriel Rossetti-Henry Rowe-Richard Rowlands-John Ruskin-Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset-Siegfried Sassoon-Alexander Scott-John Scott of Amwell-Sir Walter Scott-William Bell Scott-Sir Charles Sedley-William Shakespeare-John Sheffield, Duke of Buckinghamshire-Percy Bysshe Shelley-William Shenstone-James Shirley-Sir Philip Sidney-Dora Sigerson-John Skelton-Christopher Smart-Walter Chalmers Smith-Tobias George Smollett-Charles Hamilton Sorley-Robert Southey-Edmund Spenser-Thomas Stanley-James Stephens-Robert Louis Stevenson-William Stevenson-William Strode-Sir John Suckling-Earl of Surrey-Algernon Charles Swinburne-Joshua Sylvester-Sir Henry Taylor-Frederick Tennyson-Lord Tennyson-William Makepeace Thackeray-William Thom-Edward Thomas-Francis Thompson-James Thomson ( The Seasons )-James Thomson (' B. V.
He was educated at St Paul's School, as a pupil of F. S. Macaulay, and Trinity College, Cambridge.
On 18 June 1760 she married a Scottish physician, Dr. George Macaulay ( 1716 – 1766 ), and they lived at St James's Place, London.
Derwent was sent to St. John's College, Cambridge, where he formed intimate lifelong friendships with W. M. Praed, Macaulay, John Moultrie, Sidney Walker, Charles Austin, and Bulwer.
He wrote Disco Bloodbath ( now published under the title Party Monster ) that was later made into the feature film Party Monster starring Macaulay Culkin as Michael Alig and Seth Green as St. James.
* ( Now published under the title " Party Monster ") recreated as the feature film Party Monster starring Macaulay Culkin as Alig and Seth Green as St. James.
When St. Andrew's United Church across the street closed, Selwyn House purchased and renovated it, where it is now currently known as the Macaulay Building.

Macaulay and T
* Macaulay, Lord, Historical Essays, T. Nelson & sons.
The Whig historian T. B. Macaulay wrote in 1841:
P. Haynes, Douglas Woodruff, Charles Petrie, J. F. C. Fuller, Alfred Noyes, Rose Macaulay, Brian Lunn, Rebecca West, K. Hare, T. W. Earp
* Macaulay, S. & Reynolds, T. Excavation and Site Management at Cambridgeshire Car Dyke, Waterbeach ( TL 495 645 ) in Fenland Research No 8 ( 1993 ) ISSN 0268-263X
* Macaulay, T. B., History of England from the Accession of James II, 1985 reprint.
It carries the dedication: Erected in 1865 by Charles Buxton MP in commemoration of the emancipation of slaves 1834 and in memory of his father, Sir T Fowell Buxton, and those associated with him: Wilberforce, Clarkson, Macaulay, Brougham, Dr Lushington and others.

0.549 seconds.