Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Camden" ¶ 36
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

William and Camden
William Camden in his Remains commented, singling out some letters — Æ, K, W, Z — not found in the classical Roman alphabet:
William Camden provided a definition of " Anagrammatisme " as " a dissolution of a name truly written into his letters, as his elements, and a new connection of it by artificial transposition, without addition, subtraction or change of any letter, into different words, making some perfect sense applyable ( i. e., applicable ) to the person named.
William Camden, in his 1607 edition of Britannia, describes Cornwall and Devon as being two parts of the same ' country ' which:
The areas around Leeson Street, Harcourt Street, South William Street and Camden / George's Street are popular nightlife spots for locals.
* Camden, William.
* William Camden.
* 1837 The first commercial use of an electrical telegraph is successfully demonstrated by William Cooke and Charles Wheatstone on July 25, 1837 between Euston and Camden Town in London.
* 1551 William Camden, English historian ( d. 1623 )
William Camden in his Remains Concerning Britain ( 1605 ) states that Richard, " albeit he lived wickedly, made good laws ".
* November 9 William Camden, English historian ( b. 1551 )
* William Camden of England ( 1551 1623 ), historian and topographer
From there, she would travel northeast to Sandtown and Willow Grove, Delaware, and onto the Camden area where free black agents, William and Nat Brinkley and Abraham Gibbs, guided her north past Dover, Smyrna, and Blackbird, where other agents would take her across the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal to New Castle and Wilmington.
The first post-Roman record of the ruins at Vindolanda was made by the antiquarian William Camden, in his Britannia ( 1586 ).
* May 2 William Camden, English historian ( d. 1623 )
" William Camden wrote a history of the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England and was granted access to the private papers of Lord Burghley and to the state archives.
Interestingly, William Camden writing in 1607 states in his book Britannia that originally the title " Prince of Wales " was not conferred automatically upon the eldest living son of the King of England because Edward II ( who had been the first English Prince of Wales ) neglected to invest his eldest son, the future Edward III, with that title.
William Camden saw " some secret constellation " of the stars at work between Elizabeth and her favourite, and firmly established the legend of the perfect courtier with the sinister influence.
Pedigrees, elaborated by Cecil himself with the help of William Camden the antiquary, associated him with the Welsh Cecils or Sitsylts of Allt-Yr-Ynys, Walterstone on the border of Herefordshire and Monmouthshire, and traced his descent from an Owen of the time of King Harold and a Sitsyllt of the reign of William Rufus.
William Camden, one of Spenser's main sources, comments on this legend of origin that
Other possible sources are the anonymous play King Leir ( published in 1605 ); A Mirror for Magistrates ( 1574 ), by John Higgins ; The Malcontent ( 1604 ), by John Marston ; The London Prodigal ( 1605 ); Arcadia ( 1580 1590 ), by Sir Philip Sidney, from which Shakespeare took the main outline of the Gloucester subplot ; Montaigne's Essays, which were translated into English by John Florio in 1603 ; An Historical Description of Iland of Britaine, by William Harrison ; Remaines Concerning Britaine, by William Camden ( 1606 ); Albion's England, by William Warner, ( 1589 ); and A Declaration of egregious Popish Impostures, by Samuel Harsnett ( 1603 ), which provided some of the language used by Edgar while he feigns madness.
* William Camden, author of Britannia, author of topographical and historical survey of all of Great Britain and Ireland, first published in 1586.

William and 1551
William Turner mentions horseradish as Red Cole in his " Herbal " ( 1551 1568 ), but not as a condiment.
On 6 July 1551, he married Anna van Egmond en Buren, the wealthy heir to the lands of her father, and William gained the titles Lord of Egmond and Count of Buren.
* William Camden ( 1551 1623 ), antiquary, historian, and Clarenceux King of Arms, lived in the house later known as Camden Place from c. 1609 until his death there in 1623.
William Camden ( 2 May 1551 9 November 1623 ) was an English antiquarian, historian, topographer, and officer of arms.
* William Camden ( 1551 1623 ), antiquarian and historian
When in 1551 the mismanagement of Sir William Dansell, king's merchant in the Low Countries, had brought the English government into great financial embarrassment, the authorities called in Gresham to give his advice, and then chose him to carry out his own proposals.
William Camden ( 1551 1623 ), author of the Britannia, wearing the tabard and chain of office of Clarenceux King of Arms.
" ( from Britannia by William Camden 1551 1623 )
In 1550 he was directed, together with the Earl of Warwick and Sir William Herbert, to examine the accounts of the King's mints, and in 1551 superintended the establishment of a new mint at York.
* William Turner, A New Herball ( 1551, 1562, 1568 )
He followed Sir William Camden ( 1551 1623, Clarenceux King of Arms ), who defined esquires as:
John Russell, a close advisor of Henry VIII and Edward VI, was granted the title of Earl of Bedford in 1551, and his descendant William, 5th Earl, was created Duke following the Glorious Revolution.
However, by the time Wilton Abbey was dissolved during the Dissolution of the Monasteries by King Henry VIII of England, its prosperity was already on the wane — following the seizure of the abbey, King Henry presented it and the estates to William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke ( in the 1551 creation ) in c. 1544.
The Tudor house built by William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke in 1551 was to last but eighty years.
" The historian William Camden ( 1551 1623 ) wrote
It was created in 1551 for the prominent statesman William Paulet, 1st Earl of Wiltshire.
Other early printed herbals include the Kreuterbuch of Hieronymus Tragus from Germany in 1539 and, in England, the New Herball of William Turner in 1551 were arranged, like the classical herbals, either alphabetically, according to their medicinal properties, or as " herbs, shrubs, trees ".
* William Camden ( 1551 1623 ) described Chatham dockyard as
William also writes in terms of friendship to William Cecil in 1551, from Ingatestone, regretting to hear that Cecil is ill, thanking him for a book he had sent, and saying his little ones when they are able shall send him some proof of their progress ; and writes again later to congratulate Cecil on his recovery.
Two of Britain's earliest antiquarians, John Aubrey ( 1626 97 ) and William Camden ( 1551 1623 ), visited Cumbria with an interest in studying the area's megalithic monuments.

0.876 seconds.