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Canon Robert Newman Milford ( 1829 – 1913 ), Rector of East Knoyle, Wiltshire ( 1865 – 1912 ) and Canon of Salisbury Cathedral, Wiltshire ( 1896 – 1912 ); their son Humphrey Sumner Milford was highly influential in early 20th century music and literature as Publisher to the University of Oxford.
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Canon and Robert
* The Codex and Canon Consciousness – Draft paper by Robert Kraft on the change from scroll to codex
* Critics of sedevacantism argue that this also means that the theory advanced by the seventeenth-century theologian and Doctor of the Church Robert Bellarmine that a pope who fell into heresy would automatically forfeit his office and could be formally deposed has been overruled by Church authority by Benedict XIV in " De Synodo Dioecesano " ( 10, 1, 5 ) and by the 1917 Code of Canon Law, Can.
* January 21 – The National Trust is founded in Britain by Octavia Hill, Robert Hunter and Canon Hardwicke Rawnsley.
But Rouen did not go quietly: Alain Blanchard hung English prisoners from the walls, for which he was summarily executed ; Canon and Vicar General of Rouen Robert de Livet became a hero for excommunicating the English king, resulting in de Livet's imprisonment for five years in England.
* The earliest recorded performance was on 9 December 1595, when Sir Robert Cecil watched it at Sir Edward Hoby's house in Canon Row.
Quite possibly a confederate in this project, Robert Crowley, Salesbury's former printer, was at this time a Canon of Hereford, having been instituted to the stall or prebend of " Pratum majus " in the cathedral of Hereford c. 1560-63.
* December 9-Shakespeare's Richard II is possibly acted at a private performance at the Canon Row house of Sir Edward Hoby ; Sir Robert Cecil attends.
* Ted Joans and the ( B ) reach of the African American Literary Canon by Robert Elliot Fox, in MELUS, Volume 29 Numbers 3 / 4 ( Fall / Winter 2004 )
: First recorded performance: possible performance on 9 December 1595 at Sir Edward Hoby's house in Canon Row, watched by Sir Robert Cecil ; earliest definite recorded performance at the Globe Theatre on 7 February 7 1601.
* Izbicki, Thomas M. " Review of Prefaces to Canon Law Books in Latin Christianity: Selected Translations, 500-1247. by Robert Somerville ; Bruce Brasington.
John Baillie ( 1810 – 1888 ), Canon Residentiary of York, who the great-grandfather of John Robert Edward Baillie, a Brigadier in the Royal Engineers.
Canon Robert Lennox is the current Chaplain and though an Anglican chapel, many other faiths ' religious texts and teachings are incorporated in the spirit of inclusiveness and religious education.
The campaign was led by Canon Hardwicke Rawnsley, who secured the support of Ruskin, Hill, and Sir Robert Hunter, solicitor to the Commons Preservation Society.
In the National Portrait Gallery are portraits by him of Lord Sidmouth ( watercolour ); Lord-chancellors Cranworth and Hatherley, Baron Cleasby and Lord Cardwell ( oil paintings ); Samuel Rogers, the poet, and John Keble ( crayon drawings ), both bequeathed by the painter ; besides drawings, purchased in July 1896, of Earl Canning, Viscount Hill, Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Canon Liddon, Archbishop Longley, Sir Charles Lyell, Cardinal Newman, Dr. Pusey, Sir Gilbert Scott, Sir Robert Harry Inglis, and Bishop Wilberforce.
The Reverend Canon Arthur Robert Peacocke MBE ( 29 November 1924 – 21 October 2006 ) was a British theologian and biochemist.
Canon and Newman
In the early 19th century, the reforming zeal of Provosts John Eveleigh and Edward Copleston gained Oriel the reputation of being the most brilliant college of the day and the centre of the " Oriel Noetics " — clerical liberals such as Richard Whately and Thomas Arnold were Fellows, and the during the 1830s, two intellectually eminent Fellows of Oriel, John Keble and The Blessed John Henry Newman, supported by Canon Pusey ( also an Oriel fellow initially, later at Christ Church ) and others, formed a group known as the Oxford Movement, alternatively as the Tractarians, or familiarly as the Puseyites.
Canon and Milford
Canon and 1829
Born Edith Agnes Kathleen Bruce at Carlton in Lindrick, Bassetlaw, Nottinghamshire, she was the youngest of eleven children of Canon Lloyd Stuart Bruce ( 1829 – 1886 ) and Jane Skene ( d. 1880 ).
Canon and –
Douglas Hamilton-Gordon ( 1824 – 1901 ), third son of the second marriage of the fourth Earl, was Chaplain-in-Ordinary to Queen Victoria and Canon of Salisbury.
Though his absence from the 1958 conclave did not make him ineligible – under Canon Law any Catholic male may be elected – the College of Cardinals usually chose the new Pope from among themselves.
Prior to his short papacy, he had been a Canon Lawyer, diplomat, and chief administrator during the reign of Pope Gregory XIV ( 1590 – 1591 ).
* 1025 – Avicenna of Persia publishes his influential treatise, The Canon of Medicine, which remains the most influential medical text in both Islamic and Christian lands for over six centuries, and The Book of Healing, a scientific encyclopedia.
* December 10 – Martin Luther burns a copy of The Book of Canon Law ( see Canon Law ) and his copy of the Papal bull Exsurge Domine.
* February 12 – First complete printed edition of Avicenna's The Canon of Medicine ( in Latin translation ) published in Milan.
* 1281 – Kublai Khan orders the burning of sacred Taoist texts, resulting in the reduction in number of volumes of the Dao Zheng ( Taoist Canon ) from 4, 565 to 1, 120.
* 1031 – Abū Rayhān al-Bīrūnī calculates the distance between the Earth and the Sun in his Canon Mas ’ udicus
* c. 1030 – Avicenna The Canon of Medicine The Canon remains a standard textbook in Muslim and European universities until the 18th century.
He returned to London for the 1933 – 34 Old Vic Season and was engaged in four Shakespeare roles ( as Macbeth and Henry VIII, Angelo in Measure for Measure and Prospero in The Tempest ) and also as Lopakhin in The Cherry Orchard, Canon Chasuble in The Importance of Being Earnest, and Tattle in Love for Love.
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.
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