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clergyman and at
This dinner was the start of a new blatancy in the relationship between the gangs and the politicians, which, prior to 1924, says Pasley, `` had been maintained with more or less stealth '', but which henceforth was marked by these ostentatious gatherings, denounced by a clergyman as `` Belshazzar feasts '', at which `` politicians fraternized cheek by jowl with gangsters, openly, in the big downtown hotels ''.
The daughter of a poor Irish clergyman in the Church of England, Anne Brontë lived most of her life with her family at the parish of Haworth on the Yorkshire moors.
* John James Maximilian Oertel ( 1811 – 1882 ), born in Ansbach, was a Lutheran clergyman who later converted to Roman Catholicism, became a professor of German at Fordham University in the United States, and later edited and founded several newspapers in the United States, including one that would become the leading German-language newspaper in the county, Baltimore's Kirchenzeitung.
In their 1972 study, The Unknown Orwell, the writers Peter Stansky and William Abrahams note that at Eton Blair displayed a " sceptical attitude " to Christian belief, and that: " Shaw's preface to his recently published Androcles and the Lion in which an account of the gospels is set forth, very different in tone from what one would be likely to hear from an Anglican clergyman " was " much more to Blair's own taste.
His parents were Heinrich Telemann, deacon at the Catholic Church of the Holy Spirit ( Heilige-Geist-Kirche ) in Magdeburg, and Maria Haltmeier, daughter of a clergyman from Regensburg.
He was raised in Warsaw, Illinois, and educated first at the private school of the Reverend Stephen Childs, an Episcopal clergyman.
Shortly after his arrival Lunar meetings moved from Sunday afternoons to Mondays to accommodate Priestley's duties as a clergyman, while the society's dependence on Matthew Boulton was lessened by holding meetings at other members ' houses in addition to Soho House.
Indeed, the tribal network with the Manga ' nja was very good so that when John Chilembwe, the revolutionary clergyman, ran foul with the British planters at Nguludi in Chiradzulu, he used this network to escape towards Mozambique.
William Cowper was the son of an Anglican clergyman and well-educated at Westminster School.
* February 4 – John Rogers, English clergyman ( burned at the stake ) ( b. c. 1500 )
* February 8 – Laurence Saunders, English clergyman ( burned at the stake )
** Hugh Latimer, English clergyman ( burned at the stake ) ( b. c. 1487 )
** Nicholas Ridley, English clergyman ( burned at the stake )
After the harsh meeting with Bell and other church leaders, and near the end of Tyndale's time at Little Sodbury, John Foxe describes an argument with a " learned " but " blasphemous " clergyman, who had asserted to Tyndale that, " We had better be without God's laws than the Pope's.
In the absence of a crown ( the crown had recently been lost with all the rest of his father's treasure in a wreck in East Anglia ) a simple golden band was placed on the young boy's head, not by the Archbishop of Canterbury ( who was at this time supporting Prince Louis " the Lion ", the future king of France ) but by another clergyman — either Peter des Roches, Bishop of Winchester, or Cardinal Guala Bicchieri, the Papal legate.
Overcoming opposition from his clergyman father, Waller became a professional pianist at 15, working in cabarets and theaters.
He spoke before the Evangelical Alliance and Episcopal convention, and was the means of having a new canon confirmed, to the effect that Protestant Episcopal clergyman should at least once a year preach a sermon on cruelty and mercy to animals.
Easily influenced by others at university, he starts out as an Evangelical Christian, and soon becomes a clergyman.
Thomas Lawrence was born at 6 Redcross Street, Bristol, the youngest surviving child of Thomas Lawrence, a supervisor of excise, and Lucy Read, the daughter of a clergyman.
" Sowing wild oats " is a phrase used since at least the 16th century ; it appears in a 1542 tract by Thomas Beccon, a Protestant clergyman from Norfolk.
As late as the 19th century the instrument was still commonly associated with the Anglo-Irish, e. g. the Anglican clergyman Canon James Goodman ( 1828 – 1896 ) from Kerry, who interestingly had his uilleann pipes buried with him at Creagh ( Church of Ireland ) cemetery near Baltimore, County Cork.
* William Dodd ( 1729-1777 ), writer and clergyman, was buried in Cowley after being hanged at Tyburn
However, another guest at the pension, an Anglican clergyman named Mr. Beebe, persuades the pair to accept the offer, assuring Miss Bartlett that Mr. Emerson only meant to be kind.
The parson asked Harman what could save them ; when the latter sarcastically replied that the good parson could always jump overboard, to his horror the panicked clergyman at once followed his advice together with a third of the crew.
* Homer Hailey ( 1903-2000 ), Church of Christ clergyman and professor at Abilene Christian University

clergyman and time
Lady Eleanor Butler ( a young widow, daughter of John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury ) and Edward were alleged to have been precontracted ; both parties were dead by this time, but a clergyman ( named only by Philippe de Commines as Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath and Wells ), claimed to have carried out the ceremony.
Around this time Bennett often found himself playing vicars and claims that as an adolescent he assumed he would grow up to be a Church of England clergyman, for no better reason than that he looked like one.
On his return, " distrust of his own resolutions and convictions " led him to abandon for the time his intention of being a clergyman, and he settled down to study law, though he did not lose interest in other subjects.
By the time the series finished, Nimmo was identified with the stereotype of a traditional British clergyman and he went on to play a bungling monk in another BBC clerical sitcom, Oh, Brother!
Of these Karl ( Charles ) and Theodor had careers in the German diplomatic service ; and Georg, who for some time was an active politician in Germany, eventually retired to live in London ; Henry, who was an English clergyman, became a naturalized Englishman, and Ernest, who in 1845 married an Englishwoman, Miss Gurney, subsequently resided and died in London.
His mother died in London, and as a loyalist clergyman he could not go within twenty miles of London, and unable to attend her deathbed ; John Thurloe asserted that Hammond went about at this time under the name of Westenbergh.
There were also some quite significant satellites such as liberal clergyman Arthur Stanley, the Dean of Westminster ; and guests such as Charles Darwin and Hermann von Helmholtz were entertained from time to time.
Despite being the son of a clergyman, Fowler had been an atheist for quite some time, though he rarely spoke of his beliefs in public.
His father, Ayatollah Hajj Seyyed Mostafavi Kashani (), was a noted clergyman of Shiism in his time.
His relationship with the clergyman who commissioned him to build the Humbert de Romans Concert Hall ( arguably the most complete expression of his Art Nouveau style ) became acrimonious by the time of its completion in 1901, and the clergyman left France.
Afterwards, for a short time he was under the care of a clergyman at Clapham, and was then sent to King William's College, in the Isle of Man.
He then ran as an " independent " candidate ( listing occupations as Administrator, ecomomist and clergyman ) in the same riding in the 1962 and 1963 elections, placing last each time.
During this time Evaristo Navo was the head clergyman in the area and is credited with a number of developments including a parish school, the installation of a church organ, with accompanying encouragement of musical training.
After considerable time, a young clergyman was found who would perform the funeral rites.
Forsskål was born in Helsinki in Finland ( then a part of Sweden ) where his father, Johannes Forsskål, served as a clergyman at the time, but came to mainland Sweden in 1741 when the father received the parish of Tegelsmora in Uppland ( and the archdiocese of Uppsala ).
During 1802 he was appointed as clergyman of Kenilworth, during 1807 to a prebendal stall in Lichfield Cathedral, and during 1822 to the archdeaconry of Derby ; all these appointments he had at the same time as his headmastership, but in 1836 he was promoted to the bishopric of Lichfield ( and Coventry, which was separated from his diocese during the same year ).
The chief clergyman, who carries out the cross, regardless of whether he is a priest or a bishop, vests in full vesture before the time for the bringing out of the cross.
But at the last moment, after the last pony and dog had been eaten, they were picked up at a fjord by the clergyman of Upernavik, who just happened to be visiting a remote congregation at the time.
At this time, he faked a marriage to a Hungarian woman in a sham ceremony conducted by one of Damm's friends posing as a clergyman.
By the time he left the university in 1774, he had abandoned all intention of becoming a clergyman, but he was not to enter any profession.
During his time in Oxford he had received tuition from John Henry Newman, through whose influence he not only became attached to the Tractarian movement, but abandoned his plan to study for the bar, and instead took orders as an Anglican clergyman.

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