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Augusta and who
In " Castaway " by Augusta Webster, women who claim they are virtuous despite never having been tempted are referred to as " Dianas.
* 414 – Emperor Theodosius II, age 13, yields power to his older sister Aelia Pulcheria who reigns as regent and proclaimed herself empress ( Augusta ) of the Eastern Roman Empire.
The King's brother Prince William ( the future King and Emperor William I ) had fled to England, and Bismarck intrigued with William's wife Augusta to place their teenage son ( the future Frederick III ) on the Prussian throne in King Frederick William IV's place — Augusta would have none of it, and detested Bismarck thereafter, although Bismarck did later help to restore a working relationship between the King and his brother, who were on poor terms.
They were later submitted by the Romans ( c. 220 BC ), who founded several colonies there including Augusta Taurinorum ( Turin ) and Eporedia ( Ivrea ).
The Historia Augusta relates that he heard of a woman in Syria who had been foretold that she would marry a king, and therefore Severus sought her as his wife.
* July 4 – Emperor Theodosius II, age 13, yields power to his older sister Aelia Pulcheria who reigns as regent and proclaimed herself empress ( Augusta ) of the Eastern Roman Empire.
" The Historia Augusta also refers to an attack by Saraceni on Pescennius Niger's army in Egypt in 193 CE but provides little information on who they might have been.
* April – Roman usurper Maxentius banishes his father, Maximian, who flees to the court of Constantine the Great in Augusta Treverorum ( modern Trier ).
The algorithm was named after Nicholas Metropolis, who was an author along with Arianna W. Rosenbluth, Marshall N. Rosenbluth, Augusta H. Teller, and Edward Teller of the 1953 paper Equation of State Calculations by Fast Computing Machines which first proposed the algorithm for the specific case of the Boltzmann distribution ; and W. Keith Hastings, who extended it to the more general case in 1970.
His literary work was bequeathed to his niece, to two boys he had casually adopted, and to his sister Olive Augusta, who destroyed his manuscripts and his letters at his wish.
The basic structure of socionics was established in the 1960s and 1970s by Aušra Augusta ( formerly Augustinavičiūtė ), along with a group of enthusiasts who met in Vilnius, Lithuania.
One of the large exporters in the late nineteenth century was M. C. Davies who had mills in the Margaret River to Augusta region of the south west, and ports at Hamelin Bay and Flinders Bay.
Born in Colmar, in the Alsace region of France to Jean Charles Bartholdi ( 1791 – 1836 ) and Augusta Charlotte Bartholdi Beysser ( 1801 – 1891 ), Bartholdi was the youngest of their four children, and one of only two to survive infancy, along with the oldest brother, Jean-Charles, who became a lawyer and editor.
* Christopher Lekapenos, co-emperor from 921 to 931, who was married to the Augusta Sophia and was the father of Maria ( renamed Eirene ), who married Emperor Peter I of Bulgaria ; Christopher's son Michael Lekapenos may have been associated as co-emperor by his grandfather.
She was deified by Claudius who acknowledged her title of Augusta.
Her father, Walter Augustus de Havilland ( 31 August 1872 – 23 May 1968 ; aged 95 ), was a patent attorney with a practice in Japan, and her mother, Lilian Augusta ( née Ruse ; 11 June 1886 – 20 February 1975 ; aged 88 ) was a stage actress who had left her career after going to Tokyo with her husband – she would return to work after her daughters had already won fame in the 40s, with the stage name of Lillian Fontaine.
Upon being named Augusta, she succeeded her sister in law, Pulcheria who had been Augusta since 414.
The Hanoverians maintained the strongest links with Kew, in particular Princess Augusta who founded the botanic gardens and her husband Frederick, Prince of Wales who resided at the White House in Kew and commissioned the building of the first substantial greenhouse at Kew.
The county is named for Nicholas Ware, the mayor of Augusta, Georgia from ( 1819 – 1821 ) and United States Senator who represented Georgia from 1821 until his death in 1824.
Charles was known for his " harem " of mistresses, of which the most notable were Augusta von Fersen, Charlotte Eckerman, Charlotte Slottsberg, who also had influence over him, and Mariana Koskull.

Augusta and war
* Severus launches a campaign in Africa, Legio III Augusta under Quintus Anicius Faustus fights a guerrilla war against the Garamantes along the Limes Tripolitanus.
war: Condado han Augusta, Virginia
war: North Augusta, South Carolina
Deeply troubled by the conflict between his pacifism and his training for war, he spoke at length with his company commander, Captain Edward Courtney Bullock Danforth ( 1894 – 1973 ) of Augusta, Georgia and his battalion commander, Major Gonzalo Edward Buxton ( 1880 – 1949 ) of Providence, Rhode Island, a devout Christian himself.
" Pulcheria's time as Augusta was also marked with war and ongoing conflict with Persia.
* Lady Sarah Isabella Augusta Spencer-Churchill ( 1865 – 22 October 1929 ), a war correspondent during the Boer War ; married 21 November 1891 Lt. Col. Gordon Chesney Wilson ( son of Sir Samuel Wilson, MP )
* Lady Sarah Isabella Augusta Spencer-Churchill ( 1865 – 22 October 1929 ), a war correspondent during the Boer War ; married 21 November 1891 Lt. Col. Gordon Chesney Wilson ( son of Sir Samuel Wilson, MP )
Kilpatrick was ordered to make a feint toward Augusta before destroying the railroad bridge at Brier Creek and moving to liberate the Camp Lawton prisoner of war camp at Millen.
The city of Augusta changed hands three times during the war, finally returning to American possession in July 1781.
During the war, Jones permitted the U. S. Army to graze cattle on the grounds at Augusta National.
His researches continued until the children's wards in the Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem, where Majaj worked as head of the paediatrics department from 1950 to 1991, received a direct hit when the Israelis invaded the West Bank during the 1967 war.
Polk's funeral service at Saint Paul's Church in Augusta, Georgia, was one of the most elaborate during the war.
war: Category: Condado han Augusta, Virginia
After the war, in 1785, he moved first to Hallowell ( now Augusta ), Maine with his family, and then six years later they moved to Farmington, where Belcher remained until his death.
He joined his childhood friend in Augusta and fellow West Point of ' 42 classmate, Maj. Gen. James Longstreet's First Corps in the Army of Northern Virginia as 1st Division commander and stayed with Longstreet for most of the war.
Having supported emperor Vespasian in the civil war of 69, it was awarded of the cognomen Augusta.
After the war, on April 23, 1873, he married Helen Augusta Garrard ( 1850 – 1924 ) of Columbus, Georgia, where her father William Waters Garrard ( 18181866 ) practiced law.
However, the aftermath of the war left Wilhelm as German Emperor and Augusta as German Empress.

Augusta and founded
During the days of the Roman Empire, the settlement of Augusta Raurica was founded 10 or 20 kilometres upstream of present Basel, and a castle was built on the hill overlooking the river where the Basel Münster now stands.
He also began teaching at the Harlem Arts Workshop, founded by Augusta Savage in the basement of what is now the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.
* Augusta, Georgia, is founded.
* Augsburg is founded as Augusta Vindelicorum, and becomes the capital of Rhaetia Prima.
The Roman city was founded in 14 BC, being entitled by Emperor Octavian as Asturica Augusta.
In 1822 Augusta College was founded as the first Methodist College in the world.
Augusta was founded in 1832 by Joel Catlin and W. D.
The city was founded in 1817 and laid out by Andrew Campbell, who had moved there from Augusta County, Virginia.
Augusta was founded in 1836 and named after the wife of the founder Leonard Harrold.
The first industry in Tuxedo was the Augusta Forge at the falls on the Ramapo, founded by Solomon Townsend in 1783.
Avoiding the commercial pretensions of its predecessors, North Augusta was founded as a residential and resort town.
* The Irish Literary Theatre is founded by William Butler Yeats, Augusta, Lady Gregory, George Moore and Edward Martyn
Under the orders of their stepfather Emperor Augustus, they enslaved the Celts and Alp-dwellers and founded the military camp Augusta Vindelicum on the site of current-day Augsburg.
Georgia-Pacific was founded by Owen Robertson Cheatham in 1927 in Augusta, Georgia as the Georgia Hardwood Lumber Co. Over the years it expanded, adding sawmills and plywood lumber mills.
25 BC and founded Augusta Prætoria Salassorum ( modern-day Aosta ) to secure the strategic mountain passes, which they improved with bridges and roads.
They later submitted to the Romans ( c. 220 BC ), who founded several colonies there including Augusta Taurinorum ( Turin ) and Eporedia ( Ivrea ).
The campaign was led by Marcus Terentius Varro, who then founded the Roman colony of Augusta Praetoria Salassorum, housing 3, 000 retired veterans.
In 1827 Augusta allowed that a new village, founded on 3 May 1827 and to be settled in the course of the cultivation and colonisation of the moorlands in the south of Bremervörde, would bear her name.
On February 14, 1867, just two years after the American Civil War, the Augusta Institute was founded by William Jefferson White, an Atlanta Baptist minister and cabinetmaker, with the support of the Rev.
Cividale was founded as a Roman municipium by Julius Caesar in 50 BCE on the newly built Via Julia Augusta, with the name of Forum Iulii (" Julius ' Forum "; Fréjus had the same Roman name ).
After retiring from competitive golf in 1930, Jones founded and helped design the Augusta National Golf Club soon afterwards in 1933, and also co-founded the Masters Tournament, which has been annually staged by the club since 1934 ( except for 1943 – 45, when it was cancelled due to World War II ).
He founded the Masters Tournament, first played at Augusta in March 1934.
Caroline Augusta Foley Rhys Davids ( 1857 – 1942 ) was an English Pāli language scholar and translator, and from 1923-1942 president of the Pali Text Society which was founded by her husband T. W. Rhys Davids whom she married in 1894.

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