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Cheke and fell
Here he fell under the influence of Sir John Cheke, who was admitted a fellow in Ascham's first year, and Sir Thomas Smith.

Cheke and from
The original notebooks passed from Henry Cheke to Humphrey Purefoy, and so ( following his death in 1598 ) to Humphrey's son Thomas, who divided many of them between his two cousins John Hales and the antiquary, William Burton.
In June 1555, he was staying with Sir John Cheke at Padua, and went on from there to visit Sir John Masone, the English ambassador at Antwerp.
Lord Burghley was succeeded by his son from his first marriage to Mary Cheke, Thomas, the second Baron.
* Cheke, Anthony S. ( 2005 ): Naming segregates from the Columba – Streptopelia pigeons following DNA studies on phylogeny.

Cheke and on
Years afterwards, he pretended that he had only signed the devise as a witness, but in his apology to Queen Mary I, he did not venture to allege so flimsy an excuse ; he preferred to lay stress on the extent to which he succeeded in shifting the responsibility on to the shoulders of his brother-in-law, Sir John Cheke, and other friends, and on his intrigues to frustrate the Queen to whom he had sworn allegiance.
On learning about the custom of presenting a memorandum to the king every new year, he worked on a major treatise which he gave as a draft to his friend John Cheke on 21 October 1550.
Cheke then procured him a position as secretary to Sir Richard Morrison ( Moryson ), appointed ambassador to Charles V. It was on his way to join Morrison that he paid his celebrated morning call on Lady Jane Grey at Bradgate, where he found her reading Plato's Phaedo, while every one else was out hunting.
* Life of the learned Sir John Cheke, with his Treatise on Superstition ( 1705 )
According to Julian Hume and Anthony Cheke, it appears that all depictions of white Dodos were based on a single painting or copies of it, showing a whitish specimen, made by Roelant Savery in ca.

Cheke and Mary
The precaution proved useless and four months later Cecil committed one of the rare rash acts of his life in marrying Mary Cheke.
Amongst his pupils at St John's were William Cecil, later Lord Burghley, who married Cheke's sister Mary, and Roger Ascham, who in The Scholemaster gives Cheke the highest praise for scholarship and character.
About 1547 Cheke married Mary, daughter of Richard Hill, sergeant of the wine-cellar to Henry VIII, and by her he had three sons.
On 11 May his stepdaughter Mary Hill married the king's tutor John Cheke.

Cheke and for
Following Leland's death or ( more probably ) his descent into madness, King Edward VI arranged for Leland's library ( including many medieval manuscripts ) to be placed in the custody of Sir John Cheke.
Cheke was active in public life ; he sat, as member for Bletchingley, for the parliaments of 1547 and 1552-1553 ; he was made provost of King's College, Cambridge ( 1 April 1548 ), was one of the commissioners for visiting that university as well as the University of Oxford and Eton College, and was appointed with seven divines to draw up a body of laws for the governance of the church.

Cheke and 1557
* 1514 – John Cheke, English scholar ( d. 1557 )
* June 16 – John Cheke, English classical scholar and statesman ( d. 1557 )
Sir John Cheke ( 16 June 1514 – 13 September 1557 ) was an English classical scholar and statesman, notable as the first Regius Professor of Greek at Cambridge University.

Cheke and was
Meanwhile, Edward was brought up a strict and devout Protestant by numerous tutors, including Bishop Richard Cox, John Belmain, and Sir John Cheke.
Many wealthy Protestants, such as John Foxe and John Cheke, fled England, and Walsingham was among them.
In May 1535, at the age of fourteen, he went up to St John's College, Cambridge, where he was brought into contact with the foremost educators of the time, Roger Ascham and John Cheke, and acquired an unusual knowledge of Greek.
To what extent Edward's document — especially this last change — was influenced by Northumberland, his confidant John Gates, or still other members of the Privy Chamber like Edward's tutor John Cheke or Secretary William Petre, is unclear.
John Cheke in turn was friendly with Anthony Denny, who was brother-in-law to Kat Ashley, governess to the Lady Elizabeth.
The son of Peter Cheke, esquire-bedell of Cambridge University, he was educated at St John's College, Cambridge, where he became a fellow in 1529.
It was strenuously opposed in the University, where the continental method prevailed, and Bishop Gardiner, as chancellor, issued a decree against it ( June 1542 ); but Cheke ultimately triumphed.
Although a scholar of Greek, Cheke was against the over-borrowing of Greek words into English and supported English linguistic purism.
Cheke was visited by two priests and by Dr John Feckenham, dean of St Paul's, whom he had formerly tried to convert to Protestantism, and, terrified by the prospect of being burned at the stake, he agreed to be received into the Church of Rome by Cardinal Pole.
Anthony Cheke suggested to one of the authors, Francois Moutou, that the fossils may have been of the Réunion Solitaire, and this suggestion was published in 1995.

Cheke and .
Wendy Strahm and Anthony Cheke, two experts in Mascarene ecology, claim that while a rare tree, it has germinated since the demise of the Dodo and numbers a few hundred, not 13.
* Witmer, M. C. & Cheke, A. S. ( 1991 ): The dodo and the tambalacoque tree: an obligate mutualism reconsidered.
* September 13 – John Cheke, English classical scholar and statesman ( b. 1514 )
* September 13-John Cheke, English classical scholar and statesman ( b. 1514 )
He and his friend, Sir John Cheke, were the great classical scholars of the time in England.

fell and from
They were dirty, their clothes were torn, and the girl was so exhausted that she fell when she was still twenty feet from the front door.
the Safavids fell from power ; ;
In any case, Miss Millay's sweet-throated bitterness, her variations on the theme that the world was not only well lost for love but even well lost for lost love, her constant and wonderfully tragic posture, so unlike that of Fitzgerald since it required no scenery or props, drew from the me that I was when I fell upon her verses an overwhelming yea.
his dinner fell anywhere from nine to noon ; ;
The figure leapt from the box, almost lost its balance, the flag draped there tore in the air, the figure landed on its left leg, fell on its hands, and pressed itself up.
The name fell with lazy affectionate remembrance from her lips.
There was a sound like the one you produce by flicking a watermelon with your finger, only louder, and Pops fell forward from the waist and then over sidewise.
In August while stopping in Greenock, Scotland, three members of the crew on liberty rendered first aid to a girl who fell from a train.
A crack corps of 50 pilots was formed from the ranks of volunteers, but the project was halted before the end of the war, and the missiles later fell into Allied hands.
He beat the air with his stick, and it fell from his claws and clattered on the stones.
In 1992-93, GDP fell nearly 60 % from its 1989 level.
" In his later years, Alcott related a story from his boyhood: during a total solar eclipse, he threw rocks at the sky until he fell and dislocated his shoulder.
) when he says that ... Ammonius fell from a life of piety into heathen customs.
Hume was disappointed with the reception of the Treatise, which " fell stillborn from the press ," as he put it, and so tried again to disseminate his more developed ideas to the public by writing a shorter and more polemical work.
It is most usual to date Athenian democracy from Cleisthenes, since Solon's constitution fell and was replaced by the tyranny of Peisistratus, whereas Ephialtes revised Cleisthenes ' constitution relatively peacefully.
On the way back after giving up the siege he fell ill from dysentery, which was ameliorated by doctors but turned into a fever in Jerusalem.
In Damascus, St. Ananias cured his blindness, " something like scales " fell from his eyes, and baptized him ().
Additionally, the claimants to this ancestry also claim descendancy from Sargon of Akkad ( whose dynasty died out over 1500 years before the Assyrian dynasty fell ), and from Nabopolassar, who was a Chaldean, politically and militarily opposed to Assyria, and not in fact an Assyrian.
Moreover, despite a positive equity as a separate company (€ 105, 142, 589 ), the AS Roma Group had a negative equity on consolidated balance sheet, fell from +€ 8. 8million to negative € 13. 2 million.
In January 894 Bergamo fell, and Count Ambrose, Guy ’ s representative in the city, was hung from a tree by the city ’ s gate.
( born 1844 died 1919 ) ( Died early, fell from horse )
Lumberjacks suffering from cold weather on the job could nail its carcass or skin to a tree to keep warm, while in the process allowing the tree to fell easier.
In 1989, with the end of the Cold War and pressure from the East German population, the Berlin Wall fell on 9 November 1989 and was subsequently mostly demolished, with little of its physical structure remaining today ; the East Side Gallery in Friedrichshain near the Oberbaumbrücke over the Spree preserves a portion of the Wall.
Since 1996 estimates, there has been a significant reduction in the total length of unpaved highway in Botswana-between 1996 and 1999 total length of unpaved highway fell from 14, 139 km to 4, 597 km.

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