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Sheppard and Frere
John Crook, John Clapper, Henry Coons, John Warner, Major Thomas Frothingham, who was an officer in the Continental army during the War of the Revolution ; N. Smith, Reuben Underwood, David Arnold, and families bearing the names of Fethers, Ford, Davis, Cook, Emmons, Culver, Farrell, Pratt, Lewis, Wells, Huntley, Wickham, Fuller, Strope, Hegeman, Sheppard, Higgenbottom, De Freest, Rykert, Woodworth, Hayes, Townsend, Richmond, Cornwell, Carmichael, Stone, Russell, Frear ( probably Frere ), Guyot, Kelly, Kerner, Jacobs, Simmons, Comb, Calkins, Kilmer and others.
Sheppard Frere wonders how Carausius was able to win support from the army when his command had been sea-based, and speculates that he had perhaps been involved in an unrecorded victory in Britain, connected with Diocletian's assumption of the title Britannicus Maximus in 285, and signs of destruction in Romano-British towns at this time.
* Sheppard Frere, Britannia.
* Sheppard Frere ( 1998 ), Britannia: a History of Roman Britain, Pimlico
Academics such as Sheppard Frere have argued that it may have been Vortigern who, adopting elements of Roman statecraft, moved the Votadini south, just as he invited Saxon settlers to protect other parts of the island.
* Sheppard Frere, former House Master, Professor of the Archaeology of the Roman Provinces at the University of London ( 1961 – 1966 ), Professor of the Archaeology of the Roman Empire at Oxford University
* Sheppard Frere ( 1987 ), Britannia: a history of Roman Britain ( 3rd edition )
Mary Leakey was a direct descendant of antiquarian, John Frere, and cousin to archaeologist, Sheppard Frere, on her mother's side.
Sheppard Frere suggests that Caracalla briefly continued the campaign after his father's death rather than immediately leaving, citing an apparent delay in his arrival in Rome and indirect numismatic and epigraphic factors that suggest he may instead have fully concluded the war but that Dio's hostility towards his subject led him to record the campaign as ending in a truce.
The inscription was reconstructed by Professor Sheppard Frere to read as follows:
* Frere, Sheppard Sunderland: Britannia: a history of Roman Britain.
Frere was born in Roydon Hall, Norfolk, the son of Sheppard Frere and Susanna Hatley.
* Sheppard Sunderland Frere: Britannia: A History of Roman Britain.
Sheppard Frere, an eminent Romano-British authority, has concluded that " further evidence is needed before more can be said ".
And while Rutupiæ ( Richborough, on the east coast of Kent ) is often stated as the site of the landing ( e. g. by Sheppard Frere ), there are equally plausible arguments in favour of a landing further west along the south coast of Britain.

Sheppard and History
, members of the Burlington County Board of Chosen Freeholders ( with their term end dates and committee chairmanships listed in parentheses ) are Freeholder Director William Whelan ( 2011 ; Finance ), Deputy Freeholder Director James A. Dunkins ( 2011 ; Health ), Samuel L. Fiocchi, Sr. ( 2013 ; Public Works ), Jane Jannarone ( 2011 ; Public Affairs, Cultural & History ), Carl W. Kirstein ( 2013 ; Public Property & Personnel ) and Thomas Sheppard ( 2012 ; Agriculture ).
In his History, Defoe reports that Sheppard made light of his predicament, joking that " I am the Sheppard, and all the Gaolers in the Town are my Flock, and I cannot stir into the Country, but they are all at my Heels Baughing after me ".
Daniel Defoe, working as a journalist, wrote an account for John Applebee, The History of the Remarkable Life of John Sheppard.

Sheppard and Roman
Publishers were bribed, critics accused of running secret campaigns to further other nations ' colonial ambitions, and eyewitness reports from missionaries such as William Henry Sheppard dismissed as attempts by Protestants to smear honest Roman Catholic priests.
Sheppard was deeply religious, "... as strong in his Roman Catholic faith as anybody I knew ," wrote his longtime friend, George Vecsey.

Sheppard and Britain
The film, a co-production of Argentina, France, Germany, Netherlands and the United Kingdom, was produced by Christopher Sheppard in Britain, and Oscar Kramer in Argentina and was shot mostly in black and white in Paris and Buenos Aires.

Sheppard and 1991
" The first ( and believed only ) performance of Teeko was produced by Alan Sheppard and given on 29 January 1991 in the Old Combination Room, Trinity College, Cambridge, hosted by the Trinity Mathematical Society.
The band consisted of three members, Robin Proper-Sheppard ( born Gary Sheppard ) ( guitar / vocals ), Jimmy Fernandez ( bass ) and Ronald Austin ( drums ), and they first performed officially under the name The God Machine in 1991.

Frere and Britannia
* Frere, S. S. Britannia: a History of Roman Britain.
* Frere, S, Britannia, Routledge, London, 1987, ISBN 0-7102-1215-1
Frere, Britannia, 337, 340-41, 350 n. 28.

Frere and Britain
With the annexation of the Transvaal, Britain had also to deal with Mbelini and because Frere was convinced that the bandit chief was in the pay of the Zulu king, his surrender was included in the ultimatum.
Despite objections from leading members of Cape Colony's high society and from Great Britain itself, Bartle Frere authorises Lord Chelmsford to lead a British invasion force into Zululand.

Britannia and History
According to sources such as the History of Bede, after the invasion of Britannia, the Angles split up and founded the kingdoms of the Nord Angelnen ( Northumbria ), Ost Angelnen ( East Anglia ), and the Mittlere Angelnen ( Mercia ).
* Britannia: The History of the Peasants ' Revolt by Jeff Hobbs with useful bibliography
Uther is best known from Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain ( 1136 ) where he is the youngest son of King of Britannia Constantine II.
William Strachey, a secretary of the Jamestown Colony, wrote in The History of Travel Into Virginia Britannia in 1612 that, at the Indian settlements of Peccarecanick and Ochanahoen, there were reportedly two-story houses with stone walls.
Ultima IV: Quest of the Avatar included The History of Britannia, which did not state whether the heroes from the first three games or the current one were the same person or not, leaving it rather vague.
* Britannia History Peace of Wedmore
Holland was extremely productive, but his best known translations are of Pliny the Elder's Natural History ( 1601 ), Plutarch's Moralia ( 1603 ), Suetonius's Lives of the Twelve Caesars ( 1606 ), Xenophon's Cyropaedia, and William Camden's Britannia.
* Britannia: History of St. Mary's Church, Old Basing
* The Early History of Lympstone, Britannia. com, reproduced from The Lympstone Story: The Red Cliffs of Lympstone, Lympstone Society
In his 1998 essay, “ Rethinking the Ruthwell Monument: Fragments and Critique ; Tradition and History ; Tongues and Sockets ,” scholar Fred Orton discusses a note Reginald Bainbrigg wrote to William Camden in 1600 for possible publication in any new edition of his 1586 Britannia: “ Bainbrigg saw a ‘ column ’ which he referred to as a ‘ cross ,’” Orton said of the note.

Britannia and Roman
** Roman Britain or Britannia, a Roman province covering most of modern England and Wales and some of southern Scotland from 43 to 410 AD
The southern Britons met Julius Caesar with chariots in 55 and 54 BC, but by the time of the Roman conquest of Britain a century later chariots were obsolete even in Britannia.
In AD 40, Caligula expanded the Roman Empire into Mauretania and made a significant attempt at expanding into Britannia – even challenging Neptune in his campaign.
Additionally, there are only limited details on later significant events, such as the annexation of Mauretania, Caligula's military actions in Britannia, and his feud with the Roman Senate.
Indeed John Morris, the English historian who specialized in the study of the institutions of the Roman Empire and the history of Sub-Roman Britain, suggested in his book The Age of Arthur that as the descendants of Romanized Britons looked back to a golden age of peace and prosperity under Rome, the name " Camelot " of Arthurian legend may have referred to the capital of Britannia ( Camulodunum, modern Colchester ) in Roman times.
Anglicans assert unbroken episcopal succession in and through the Church of England back to St. Augustine of Canterbury and to the first century Roman province of Britannia.
In AD 43 the Roman conquest of Britain began ; the Romans maintained control of their province of Britannia through to the 5th century.
The Roman Empire, in the reign of Hadrian ( r. 117-138 ), including the imperial province of Britannia, and the three Roman legion | legions deployed there in 125.
Roman Britain, referred to by the Romans as Britannia, was the part of the island of Great Britain controlled by the Roman Empire from 43 until c. 410.
Beyond the first few decades after the initial invasion, Roman historians generally mention Britannia only in passing.
For much of the later period of the Roman occupation, Britannia was subject to barbarian invasions and often came under the control of imperial usurpers and pretenders to the Roman Emperorship.
When Hadrian reached Britannia on his famous tour of the Roman provinces around 120, he directed an extensive defensive wall, known to posterity as Hadrian's Wall, to be built close to the line of the Stanegate frontier.
The Roman army in Britannia continued its insubordination: they sent a delegation of 1, 500 to Rome to demand the execution of Tigidius Perennis, a Praetorian Prefect who they felt had earlier wronged them by posting lowly equites to legate ranks in Britannia.
Laycock ( Britannia the Failed State, 2008 ) has investigated this process of fragmentation and emphasised elements of continuity from the British tribes in the pre-Roman and Roman periods to the kingdoms that formed in the post-Roman period.
Germanic migration into Roman Britannia may well have begun much earlier even than that.
‘ Coasting Britannia: Roman trade and traffic around the shores of Britain ’, in Gosden, C. Hamerow, H. de Jersey, P. and Lock, G.
The recorded history of Scotland begins with the arrival of the Roman Empire in the 1st century, the Roman province of Britannia reached as far north as the Antonine Wall, which once ran from the Clyde to the Forth.
It has been suggested that Cruthin was a name used to refer to all the Britons who were not conquered by the Romans ; those who lived outside Roman Britannia, north of Hadrian's Wall.

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