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Page "Frederick Denison Maurice" ¶ 23
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Aubrey and de
* Notable draftsmen of the 19th century include Paul Cézanne, Aubrey Beardsley, Jacques Louis David, Pierre-Paul Prud ' hon, Edgar Degas, Théodore Géricault, Francisco Goya, Jean Ingres, Odilon Redon, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Honoré Daumier, and Vincent van Gogh.
Alberic, or Aubrey de Vere, sided with William the Conqueror, and after 1066 was rewarded with many estates, as well as being made hereditary Lord Great Chamberlain of England, one of the six Great Officers of State.
* Livy The War with Hannibal translated by Aubrey de Selincourt 1974, Penguin Books, London, England.
* Herodotus, The Histories, Newly translated and with an introduction by Aubrey de Sélincourt, Harmondsworth, England, Penguin Books, 1965.
Stephen sent Aubrey de Vere as his spokesman to the council, who argued that Roger of Salisbury had been arrested not as a bishop, but rather in his role as a baron who had been preparing to change his support to the Empress Matilda.
* Aubrey de Vere, Lord Great Chamberlain of England ( b. 1062 )
There is substantial evidence to state with reasonable confidence, as Ward, Aubrey, Waller and others all do, that Hooke developed the balance spring independently of and some fifteen years before Huygens, who published his own work in Journal de Scavans in February 1675.
He in turn granted the tenancy of Kensington to his vassal Aubrey de Vere I, who was holding the manor in 1086, according to Domesday Book.
Aubrey de Vere I had his tenure converted to a tenancy in-chief, holding Kensington after 1095 directly of the crown.
These include Viscount Gilbert de Varèze ( Ruggles ), who owes Maurice a large amount of money for tailoring work ; Gilbert's uncle Duke d ' Artelines ( C. Aubrey Smith ), the family patriarch ; d ' Artelines ' man-hungry niece Valentine ( Loy ); and his other 22-year-old niece, Princess Jeanette ( MacDonald ), who has been a widow for three years.
In the Domesday Book three lords were associated with Swaffham: Walter Giffard, with the largest manor ; his tenant Hugh Bolebec, who held all of the Giffard land there ; and Aubrey de Vere I, who held a smaller manor at Swaffham which the Domesday jurors said Aubrey had seized without the king's permission.
* Arrian, The Campaigns of Alexander, translated by Aubrey de Sélincourt, Penguin Classics, 1958 and numerous subsequent editions.
* Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri, ( section 4. 18. 4-19. 6 ), Sogdian Rock, translated by Aubrey de Sélincourt
Aubrey de Sélincourt ) ( 1965 ).
* Aubrey de Sélincourt and A. R. Burn.
People mentioned: Abbey of St Mary of Winchcombe ; Aelfgifu ; Alnoth ; Alric ; Alwine ; Azur ; Bondi ; Brian ; Cynewig ; Earl Tosti ; Earl Aubrey de Coucy of Northumbria ; Edwin the sheriff ; Henry de Ferrers ; Hugh ; Hugh d ' Ivry ; Hugh de Bolbec ; Queen Edith ; Ralph ; Robert ; Roger ; Rolf ; Swein ; Turold ; Walter ; Walter Giffard ; William Peverel ; William de Warenne ; William fitzAnsculf.
* Mabel FitzRobert: married Aubrey de Vere
However, it has not been shown that the goal of indefinite human lifespans itself is necessarily unfeasible ; some animals such as lobsters and certain jellyfish do not die of old age, and an award was offered to anyone who could prove life extensionist Aubrey de Grey's hopes were ' unworthy of learned debate '; nobody won the prize.
Aubrey de Grey, a theoretical gerontologist, has proposed that the damage called aging can be reversed by SENS ( Strategies for Engineered Negligible Senescence ).
* Aubrey de Grey

Aubrey and Vere
Married first Aubrey de Vere, son of John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford.
* Aubrey de Vere, 1st Earl of Oxford ( c. 1115 – 1194 )
* Aubrey de Vere, 2nd Earl of Oxford ( c. 1164 – 1214 )
* Aubrey de Vere, 10th Earl of Oxford ( 1340 – 1400 ) ( restored 1393 )
* Aubrey de Vere, 20th Earl of Oxford ( 1627 – 1703 ) ( dormant 1703 )
After Ireland's death, his uncle Sir Aubrey de Vere, was restored to the family titles and estates, becoming 10th Earl of Oxford.
In February 1462 the 12th Earl, his eldest son, Aubrey de Vere, and Sir Thomas Tuddenham, the 12th Earl's former political opponent in Norfolk and now a fellow Lancastrian loyalist, were convicted of high treason before John Tiptoft, 1st Earl of Worcester, Constable of England, for plotting against King Edward IV.
She was the daughter of Aubrey de Vere II and Adeliza de Clare, the daughter of Gilbert Fitz Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Clare.
Many historians, including Marc Morris have speculated that the couple had a third daughter, Alice, who married Aubrey de Vere IV, Earl of Oxford as his second wife.
Geoffrey married Rohese de Vere ( c. 1110-1167 or after ), daughter of Aubrey de Vere II and sister of the first earl of Oxford.
In 1133, however, King Henry I declared Malet's estates and titles forfeit, and awarded the office of Lord Great Chamberlain to Aubrey de Vere, whose son was created Earl of Oxford.
For over 500 years the land, part of the ancient manor of Kensington, was under the lordship of the Vere family, the Earls of Oxford and descendants of Aubrey de Vere I, who held the manor of Geoffrey de Montbray, bishop of Coutances, in Domesday Book in 1086.
His only married sister, Mary, was the mother of the Catholic converts Aubrey Thomas de Vere, poet, and the Liberal Member of Parliament, Sir Stephen de Vere, 4th Baronet.

Aubrey and was
The well-connected antiquary John Aubrey noted in his Brief Lives concerning Bacon, " He was a Pederast.
In his 17th-century work Monumenta Britannica, English antiquarian John Aubrey ascribes the Uffington White Horse hill figure to Hengist and Horsa, stating that " the White Horse was their Standard at the Conquest of Britain.
Her father was Dr. Aubrey Bourke of Ballina, County Mayo, while her mother was from Donegal, Dr. Tessa Bourke ( née O ' Donnell ) of Carndonagh, Inishowen.
Within the outer edge of the enclosed area is a circle of 56 pits ( 13 ), each about a metre ( 3 ' 3 ") in diameter, known as the Aubrey holes after John Aubrey, the 17th-century antiquarian who was thought to have first identified them.
John Aubrey was one of the first to examine the site with a scientific eye in 1666, and recorded in his plan of the monument the pits that now bear his name.
Aubrey threatened that Stephen would complain to the pope that he was being harassed by the English church, and the council let the matter rest following an unsuccessful appeal to Rome.
Aubrey Beardsley started to write an erotic treatment of the legend which was never to be finished due to his illness ; the first parts of it were published in The Savoy and later issued in book form by Leonard Smithers with the title Under the Hill.
She was portrayed in the 2002 television film Bertie and Elizabeth by Juliet Aubrey, the 2006 film The Queen by Sylvia Syms and in the 2010 film The King's Speech by Helena Bonham Carter, who was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress and won a BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for her portrayal.
Within the walls of Verulam, which he took for the name of his Barony, the essayist and statesman Sir Francis Bacon built a refined small house that was thoroughly described by the 17th century diarist John Aubrey.
During this march he was shot by Aubrey James Norvell.
William Dobson ( 24 February 1611 ( baptised ) – 28 October 1646 ( buried )) was a portraitist and one of the first notable English painters, praised by his contemporary John Aubrey as " the most excellent painter that England has yet bred ".
The film was shot completely in black and white, matching the illustrations done by Aubrey Beardsley in the printed edition of Wilde's play.
Aubrey initially began collecting biographical material to assist the Oxford scholar Anthony Wood, who was working on his own collection of biographies.
Aubrey was careful, wherever possible, to seek out and talk with those who had been acquainted with his subjects.
He was the youngest of his parents three children, and the only surviving son after his brother Aubrey died when Scott was six.
The Bibliotheca (, Bibliothēkē, " library "), in three books, provides a comprehensive summary of traditional Greek mythology and heroic legends, " the most valuable mythographical work that has come down from ancient times ," Aubrey Diller observed, whose " stultifying purpose " was neatly expressed in the epigram noted by Patriarch Photius I of Constantinople:
The theatre was designed by Cecil Aubrey Masey and Roy Young ( possibly following a 1908 design by Frank H Jones ).
Reginald Aubrey Fessenden ( October 6, 1866 – July 22, 1932 ), a naturalized American citizen born in Quebec, Canada, was an inventor who performed pioneering experiments in radio, including early — and possibly the first — radio transmissions of voice and music.
Reginald Aubrey Fessenden was born October 6, 1866, in East-Bolton, Quebec, Canada, the eldest of the Reverend Joseph Elisha Fessenden and Clementina Trenholme Fessenden's four children.

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