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Caius and with
There were four from St. John's and four from Christ's, three from Pembroke, and two from each of the colleges, Jesus, Peterhouse, Queens', and Trinity, with Caius, Clare, King's, Magdalene, and Sidney supplying one each in the ordo senioritatis.
He was educated at Caius College, Cambridge, and, after associating with the Puritan party in the Church, eventually joined the Separatists.
In summer 16 CE, Caius Silius marched against the Chatti with 33, 000 men.
According to legend, Caius baptized the men and women who had been converted by Saint Tiburtius ( who is venerated with St. Susanna ) and Saint Castulus.
St Caius is portrayed in art wearing the Papal Tiara with Saint Nereus.
The colony was established with Latin rights by the triumvirate of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica, Caius Flaminius, and Lucius Manlius Acidinus, two of whom were of consular and one of praetorian rank.
He went on to Cambridge University, where he studied law at Gonville and Caius College and graduated with a 2: 1 honours degree.
In 1557 Caius, at that time physician to Queen Mary, enlarged the foundation of his old college, changed the name from " Gonville Hall " to " Gonville and Caius College ," and endowed it with several considerable estates, adding an entire new court at the expense of £ 1, 834.
Caius ' Catholic religious convictions did not prevent his friendship with the Protestant Gesner ( indeed, the Historiae Animalium, to which Caius contributed, was under Pope Paul IV placed on the Roman Catholic Church's list of prohibited books ).
Caius arrives with similar news – however, he has actually married his boy!
Strauss found shelter, after some vicissitudes, in England, where in 1935 he gained temporary employment at University of Cambridge, with the help of his in-law, David Daube, who was affiliated with Gonville and Caius College.
To avoid religious persecution his parents came to England while he was a child, and for some years he studied at Caius College, Cambridge, after which he went to Leiden, where he graduated with an M. A.
* " The Comparison of Tiberius and Caius Gracchus with Agis and Cleomenes ", by Plutarch, translated by John Dryden
In late 67 or early 68, Caius Julius Vindex, governor of Gallia Lugdunensis, rebelled against Nero's tax policy, with the purpose of substituting Servius Sulpicius Galba, governor of Hispania Tarraconensis, for Nero.
His undergraduate degree at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, was interrupted by war service at the Royal Aircraft Establishment, and at the Telecommunications Research Establishment where he worked with Martin Ryle.
He graduated from Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge with the degree of BA in 1871, and is commemorated there by a stained glass window in the chapel.
The west side of the base displays a sculpture, by Caius Gabriel Cibber, in alto and bas relief, of the destruction of the City ; with Charles II and his brother, James, the Duke of York ( later James II ), surrounded by liberty, architecture, and science, giving directions for its restoration.
He subsequently won a place at Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge, where he graduated with a degree in English.
After passing his Oxford and Cambridge exams with honours in Science, in 1891 he went to Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge where he read Natural Sciences, obtaining a first class degree in 1894.
Sixteenth-century English physician John Caius wrote that the spaniels of the time were mostly white, marked with spots that are commonly red.

Caius and epitaph
In this there may have been some exaggeration ; but all have acknowledged the elevation of Linacre's character, and the fine moral qualities summed up in the epitaph written by John Caius: " Fraudes dolosque mire perosus ; idus amicis ; omnibus ordinibus juxta carus ".

Caius and was
In 1926 he was elected to a fellowship at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and a year later he received the degree of PhD from the University of Cambridge.
Pope Saint Caius or Gaius was Pope from 17 December 283 to 22 April 296.
Thus, sources state that Caius was the uncle of Saint Susanna.
St Caius may not have been martyred: Diocletian ’ s persecution of Christians began in 303 AD, after Caius ’ alleged death, and Diocletian was not immediately hostile to Christianity upon becoming emperor.
Pope Saint Marcellinus, according to the Liberian Catalogue, became bishop of Rome on 30 June 296 ; his predecessor was Pope St Caius
( It is important to emphasize that the name " Octavian " was never used by contemporaries: he was simply known as Caius Iulius Caesar ).
The college's chapel was built in 1763 and designed by Sir James Burrough, the Master of neighbouring Caius College.
A tribune known as Caius Licinius ( consul in 361 BC ) was supposed to have been the first to turn away from the Roman elite towards the people in the Forum, an act symbolically repeated two centuries later by Gaius Gracchus.
Stone from the abbey was used to build Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, King's College, Cambridge and Trinity College, Cambridge.
He was educated at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge: in 1793 William obtained a doctorate in medicine from Cambridge University and was a fellow of his college from 1787 to 1828.
Among his friends was John Caius, English court physician to the Tudors and second founder of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.
John Caius ( born John Kays ) (; 6 October 1510 – 29 July 1573 ), also known as Johannes Caius, was an English physician, and second founder of the present Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.
Caius was born in Norwich and in 1529 was admitted as a student at what was then Gonville Hall, Cambridge, founded by Edmund Gonville in 1348-where he seems to have mainly studied divinity.
Caius was a physician in London in 1547, and was admitted as a fellow of the College of Physicians, of which he was for many years president.

Caius and discovered
* Hippocrates de Medicamentis, first discovered and published by Dr Caius ; also De Ratsone Vicius ( Lov.
Pliny's Natural History affirmed that the " Imperial Porphyry " had been discovered at an isolated site in Egypt in AD 18, by a Roman legionary named Caius Cominius Leugas.

Caius and which
Then, in 1868, Grace received overtures from Caius College, Cambridge, which had a long medical tradition.
Harvey remained at the King's School for five years, after which he joined Caius College in Cambridge.
Little information on Caius is available except that given by the Liber Pontificalis, which relies on a legendary account of the martyrdom of St. Susanna for its information.
In his Life of Antony, Plutarch remarks that " judging by the proofs which she had had before this of the effect of her beauty upon Caius Caesar and Gnaeus the son of Pompey, she had hopes that she would more easily bring Antony to her feet.
Macleod showed no great academic talent but did develop an enduring love of literature, especially poetry, which he read and memorised in great quantity and his results were good enough for him in 1932 to go to Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he obtained a Lower Second in History three years later, in 1935.
He attended Bradford Grammar School for a short period of time, followed by City of Leicester Boys ' Grammar School and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he studied modern languages, French and German, for which he received an upper second ( 2: 1 ).
In order to ensure the safety of his collection Parker inserted into the terms of his endowment one which stated that if any more than a certain number of books were lost, the rest of the collection would pass first to Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge and then ( in the event of any more losses ) to Trinity Hall, Cambridge.
Shadwell was born at Stanton Hall, Norfolk, and educated at Bury St Edmunds School, and at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, which he entered in 1656.
However, his memorial at Trinity College, Dublin states that he died aged 70 ; also, he was recorded as being 17 upon matriculation at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge in August 1783, both of which imply a slightly later birth year.
At Gonville and Caius College the college's flag which Wilson took to the South Pole is preserved.
He was born at Norwich, the son of Robert Woodhouse, linen draper, and educated at Caius College, Cambridge, ( BA 1795 ) of which society he was subsequently a fellow.
Caius Julius Vercondaridubnus, a member of the Aedui tribe, was installed as the first priest of the new imperial cult sanctuary, which was subsequently known as the Junction Sanctuary or the Sanctuary of the Three Gauls.
The money from the sale has been used to endow four scholarships and an annual memorial lecture at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge at which Ackroyd received his medical training.
In the final stages, there was either general exhaustion and collapse, or an irresistible urge to sleep, which Caius thought to be fatal if the patient was permitted to give way to it.
The building, which is situated in the centre of the city between King's and Gonville and Caius Colleges, was designed by Sir James Burrell and built in 1722 – 1730 by architect James Gibbs in a neo-classical style using Portland stone.
During the night of June 7 – 8, 1958, a party of engineering students from Gonville & Caius College placed an Austin Seven van ( from which they had removed the engine and rear axle ) on the apex of the Senate House roof.
He studied Law in Budapest before embarking for England in 1934 to study Economics at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, from which he graduated in 1937.
Ridgeway was educated at Portarlington School and Trinity College, Dublin, after which he studied at Peterhouse, Cambridge then Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, completing the Classical tripos there in 1880.
At Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, the Precentor's main responsibility is as director of the College Choir, which provides music for services in Chapel at least three times per week.
Pairs of paintings he commissioned from from Nicolas Bernard Lépicié in 1775 ( an Interior of a Customs-house and a Interior of a Market ) and from Claude-Joseph Vernet in 1779, displayed a strong didactic bias reflecting Terray's concerns with the economics of commerce, rather than a choice by the artists From the history painter Nicolas-Guy Brenet he commissioned two subjects, equally referent to his official position ; one, Cincinnatus Made Dictator was a clear reference to the enlightened despotism under which he operated ; the other made a less open reference to his reputation as a speculator in grain: The Roman Farmer, in which Caius Furius Cressinus was wrongly accused of sorcery on account of the abundance of his crops: it had been exhibited at the Salon of 1775.

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