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Browne and House
The original House was built by Colonel John Browne, a Jacobite, who was at the Siege of Limerick, and his wife Maude Bourke.
John Morris, alias Poyntz, complained of being swindled out of some properties by potent enemies, with the assistance of John Browne, late clerk to the House of Lords.
The architects Arthur Little and Herbert Browne of Boston designed Anderson House in the Beaux-Arts style.
At Arlington House, Rockwell worked as an editor on books by authors including Bill Rickenbacker, Harry Browne, George Roche, and Henry Hazlitt.
* Edmund Browne ( born 1948 ), member of the House of Lords and businessman
In 1994 he appeared in the film Man Of The House as Chet Bronski, the stepfather of Norman ( Zachary Browne ), and played on this stage with Chevy Chase, Jonathan Taylor Thomas and Farrah Fawcett.
Colonel John Browne's grandson John Browne represented Castlebar in the Irish House of Commons.
* John Browne, Chairman & CEO, BP ( formerly " British Petroleum "), Member of the House of Lords, knighted by the Queen
It was created in 1836 for Dominick Browne, who had earlier represented County Mayo in the House of Commons.
An amendment to the bill in the House of Lords submitted by Geoffrey Browne, 3rd Baron Oranmore and Browne added a Senate for Southern Ireland, intended to bolster representation of the southern Unionist and Protestant minorities.
In 1605 the owner of Cowdray House, Anthony-Maria Browne, 2nd Viscount Montagu, was briefly arrested in connection with the Gunpowder Plot.
Browne, a cross-bencher in the House of Lords and also known as Lord Browne of Madingley, was joined on his panel by David Eastwood, vice-chancellor of the University of Birmingham and Julia King, vice-chancellor of Aston University as well as a number of other professionals.
It was moved to its present site in the 1780s by the Browne family of Westport House, who also renamed it Westport.
The original House was built by Colonel John Browne, a Jacobite, who was at the Siege of Limerick, and his wife Maude Bourke.
Born in Basel, von Browne was the son of Count Ulysses von Browne ( b. Limerick, Ireland ; 1659 d. Frankfurt am Main 1731 ) by his wife Annabella Fitzgerald, a daughter of the House of Desmond.
Browne was the son of Dominick Browne, 4th Baron Oranmore and Browne, a member of the House of Lords since 1927 who later became famous for having served in that house longer than any other peer, finally being evicted during government reforms in 1999 ; and Oonagh Guinness, heiress to the Guinness fortune and the youngest of the three " Golden Guinness Girls ".
In April 2007, after a court case lasting over four weeks, Browne appealed to the Judicial Committee of the House of Lords, who ruled that he could not prevent Associated Newspapers from printing allegations about his romantic life and alleged misuse of company funds.
In 1998, he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II and in 2001 named by the House of Lords Appointments Commission as one of the " people's peers " taking the title Baron Browne of Madingley, of Cambridge in the County of Cambridgeshire, and becoming a crossbencher in the House of Lords.

Browne and built
Browne Willis built a mansion in 1711, but this was pulled down by Thomas Harrison, who had acquired the property in 1793.
With the momentum built up from Legends success, Poco played their new hit " Heart of the Night " on the live album No Nukes in support of nuclear-free energy, which featured several other big artists such as Bruce Springsteen and Jackson Browne.
It was built and is still privately owned by the Browne family, who are direct descendants of the 16th century pirate, Gráinne Ní Mháille, Queen of Umaill.
The lifeboat was the Solomon Browne, a wooden boat built in 1960 and capable of.
Downe is the location of Buckston Browne Farm, built in 1931 as a surgical research centre by the Royal College of Surgeons ( RCS ).
Between 1724 and 1730, Browne Willis built St. Martin's Church on the site of the old Chantry Chapel of St. Margaret and St. Catherine at Fenny Stratford.
In 1704 Robert Browne built Frampton Court in the vicinity of the village.
It was the last folly to be built in 1865 by John Browne, Baron of Kilmaine in honour of his first title Lord Mount Temple.
It was built by the Browne family in the 18th Century, on the site of an O ' Malley castle whose dungeons are still present today.
Colonel John Browne ( 1638-1711 ) who built the original Westport House married Gráinne O ' Malley ’ s great great granddaughter, Maude Burke.
It was built and is still privately owned by the Browne family, who are direct descendants of the 16th-century Pirate Queen Gráinne O ' Malley.
The original House was built by Colonel John Browne, a Jacobite, who was at the Siege of Limerick, and his wife Maude Bourke.
The New York World Building was a skyscraper in New York City designed by early skyscraper specialist George Browne Post and built in 1890 to house the now-defunct newspaper, The New York World.
Enmore was named after Enmore House, built in 1835 by Captain Sylvester Browne, a master mariner with the British East India Company.

Browne and ca
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ca: Cinturó Sam Browne
ca: William Browne
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Browne and .
They were strays of every kind -- university students and journalists, Village hangers-on and barflies, taxi drivers and editors and unknown poets, as well as friends like Elinor Wylie and William Rose Benet, the Van Dorens and Nathan, Rebecca West and Hugh Walpole and Osbert Sitwell, Laurence Stallings, Lewis Browne, William Seabrook, Arthur Hopkins, the Woodwards.
* 1826 – Thomas Alexander Browne, Australian writer ( d. 1915 )
* Edward G. Browne, Islamic Medicine, 2002, Goodword Pub., ISBN 81-87570-19-9
* 1931 – Malcolm Browne, American journalist and photographer ( d. 2012 )
Another instrumental called " Brother " was used as the theme to the BBC Radio 1 Top 20 / 40 when Tom Browne / Simon Bates presented the programme in the 1970s.
Years later in 1890 Edward Granville Browne described how ` Abdu ' l-Bahá was " one more eloquent of speech, more ready of argument, more apt of illustration, more intimately acquainted with the sacred books of the Jews, the Christians, and the Muhammadans ... scarcely be found even amongst the eloquent.
The amphisbaena has been referred to by the poets, such as Nicander, John Milton, Alexander Pope, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, and A. E. Housman, and the amphisbaena as a mythological and legendary creature has been referenced by Lucan, Pliny the Elder, Isidore of Seville, and Thomas Browne, the last of whom debunked its existence.
His reputation among Protestants was at the time so bad that he was charged by Thomas Browne in 1643 with the authorship of the legendary-apocryphal heretical treatise De tribus Impostoribus, as well as with having carried his alleged approval of polygamy into practice.
* A Sam Browne belt is a modern invention similar in function to the baldric.
Listen to Me: Buddy Holly is being produced by Peter Asher and includes contributions from Stevie Nicks, The Fray, Cobra Starship, Jeff Lynne, Train's Pat Monahan, Patrick Stump, Jackson Browne, Chris Isaak, Natalie Merchant, Imelda May, Ringo Starr, Lyle Lovett, Zooey Deschanel, Brian Wilson and more.
Charles Farrar Browne ( April 26, 1834 – March 6, 1867 ) was a United States humor writer, better known under his nom de plume, Artemus Ward.
Browne was born in Waterford, Maine.
In most common-law countries, cross-examiners are expected the well-established rule in Browne v. Dunn.
The English physician and philosopher, Sir Thomas Browne, specifically employed the word encyclopaedia for the first time in English as early as 1646 in the preface to the reader to describe his Pseudodoxia Epidemica or Vulgar Errors, a series of refutations of common errors of his age.
Browne structured his encyclopaedia upon the time-honoured schemata of the Renaissance, the so-called ' scale of creation ' which ascends a hierarchical ladder via the mineral, vegetable, animal, human, planetary and cosmological worlds.
1849 printing of Pelham with Hablot K. Browne ( Phiz ) frontispiece: Pelham's electioneering visit to the Revd.
Bacon's ideas were influential in the 1630s and 1650s among scholars, in particular Sir Thomas Browne, who in his encyclopaedia Pseudodoxia Epidemica ( 1646 – 1672 ) frequently adheres to a Baconian approach to his scientific enquiries.
After leaving school Fawkes entered the service of Anthony Browne, 1st Viscount Montagu.
Past concerts have featured such notable artists as Sneaky Pete Kleinow, Chris Ethridge, Spooner Oldham, John Molo, Jack Royerton, Gib Guilbeau, Counting Crows, Bob Warford, Rosie Flores, David Lowery, Barry & Holly Tashian, George Tomsco, Jann Browne, Lucinda Williams, Polly Parsons, The " Road Mangler "- Phil Kaufman, Ben Fong-Torres, Victoria Williams & Mark Olson, Sid Griffin, as well as a variety of many other bands that had played over the 2 or 3 day event.
Dozens of other cultural and popular icons got their start in the Village's nightclub, theater, and coffeehouse scene during the 1950s, 1960s, and early 1970s, notably besides Bob Dylan, there were Jimi Hendrix, Barbra Streisand, Peter, Paul, and Mary, Bette Midler, The Lovin ' Spoonful, Simon & Garfunkel, Liza Minnelli, Jackson Browne, James Taylor, Eric Andersen, Joan Baez, The Velvet Underground, The Kingston Trio, Carly Simon, Richie Havens, Maria Muldaur, Tom Paxton, Janis Ian, Phil Ochs, Joni Mitchell, Laura Nyro, and Nina Simone among others.

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