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Page "J. M. W. Turner" ¶ 27
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Chichester and Canal
Turner was also a frequent guest of George O ' Brien Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont at Petworth House in West Sussex and painted scenes that Egremont funded taken from the grounds of the house and of the Sussex countryside, including a view of the Chichester Canal.
It has been theorised that it was this that gave rise to the yellow tinge that is predominant in his paintings such as Chichester Canal circa 1828.
Chichester Canal circa 1828 by J. M. W. Turner According to historian L. D.
* Chichester Canal
Between 1825 and 1828 the architect and civil engineer Nicholas Wilcox Cundy proposed a Grand Imperial Ship Canal from Deptford to Chichester passing through the Mole Gap, however he was unable to attract sufficient financial interest in his scheme.
The Chichester Canal is a navigable canal in England.
Chichester Canal circa 1828 | Chichester Canal by J. M. W.
The section of the canal that would become the Chichester Canal was formally opened on the 9 April 1822
The section below Cutfield Bridge continued to be leased to the Chichester Yacht Company while the upper part of the canal was leased to Chichester Canal Angling Association.
* The website of the Chichester Ship Canal Trust
An historic causeway to Hayling Island exists, however it is now completely impassible, having been cut in two by a deep channel for the Portsmouth and Chichester Canal in the 1820s, the same company having subsequently funded the road bridge.
The western boundary with Langstone Harbour is defined by an historic causeway known as the wade way, once the principle access from Hayling Island to the mainland, but since bisected by a deep channel for the Portsmouth and Chichester Canal in the 1820s, and no longer safely traversable.
J. M. W. Turner | Turner – Chichester Canal ( painting ) | Chichester Canal
* J. M. W. Turner – Chichester Canal

Chichester and painting
There is additional information about Sir Morris Finer in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography and a painting of him by his cousin, Stephen Finer, is in the collection of Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, Sussex.

Chichester and |
File: EmsworthWater. JPG | Emsworth Channel, Chichester Harbour from Emsworth
File: Gravestone of William Huskisson, Chichester Cathedral ( closeup ). JPG | Inscription on the Chichester Cathedral statue
Image: Chichester_Cross, _c. 1831. png | Chichester
File: Market Cross and Dolphin Hotel-geograph. org. uk-227811. jpg | West Street, Chichester
Arms of Chichester of Eggesford: Chequy or and gules, a chief vair a crescent sable for Difference ( heraldry ) | difference
Arms of Chichester of Eggesford: Chequy or and gules, a chief vair a crescent sable for Difference ( heraldry ) | difference
The Achievement ( heraldry ) | heraldic achievement above shows an escutcheon of Chichester impaling Copleston, with the Supporter ( heraldry ) | supporters of Chichester, two wolves and the Chichester Crest ( heraldry ) | crest of a heron rising with an eel in her beak proper.
Heraldic Escutcheon ( heraldry ) | escutcheon from monument to Edward Chichester, 1st Viscount Chichester ( 1568-1648 ) and his wife Anne Copleston ( 1588-1616 ), Eggesford Church, Devon.
Arms of Chichester Impalement ( heraldry ) | impaling Copleston: Baron: Chequy or and gules, a chief vair a crescent sable for Difference ( heraldry ) | difference ( Chichester ); Feme: Argent, a chevron engrailed gules between three lion's faces azure ( Copleston ), surmounted by the Coronet | coronet of a viscount showing 9 of its 16 pearls.

Chichester and s
There is also a Roman Catholic school, St Richard ’ s Primary School, and a Sure Start Children's Centre, Chichester Nursery School, Children and Family Centre.
Its most prestigious cultural location is the Chichester Festival Theatre, one of the United Kingdom ’ s flagship theatres, whose annual summer season attracts actors, writers and directors from the West End theatre.
Since 1969 worked in family business Francis Chichester Ltd ( publishers of maps, guides and educational wallcharts ), founded by his father Sir Francis Chichester KBE, and still lives in the family home at 9 St James ’ s Place, London SW1.
During the next ten years he concentrated on further translations, including Henrik Ibsen ’ s Peer Gynt and Edmond Rostand ’ s Cyrano de Bergerac which were produced at the Chichester Festival Theatre.
West went on to produce The Lady ’ s Not For Burning at Chichester Festival Theatre's Minerva Theatre in 2002 with Nancy Carroll and Benjamin Whitrow.
Tynan had been highly dismissive of Olivier ’ s achievements as artistic director of the Chichester Festival Theatre, which had opened in 1962, but he recommended himself for the role of literary manager.
Other highlights of Alsop ’ s recording collaboration with Naxos include a Brahms symphony cycle with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and an ongoing series of Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra recordings, which include Bartók ’ s Miraculous Mandarin, Bernstein ’ s Chichester Psalms and the symphonies of Kurt Weill.
The absence of early Anglo-Saxon burial grounds in the Chichester area suggests that they did not arrive there until more than a hundred years after Ælle ’ s time ; Some have suggested that Chichester had an independent region of Britons ( known as Sub-Roman ) in the late fifth century, however there is also no archaeology or placename evidence to support that hypothesis either.
The earliest Anglo-Saxon object in the area is a brooch found in the Roman cemetery, in the St. Pancras area of Chichester, that dates to the time of Ælle ’ s grandchildren.

Chichester and may
Two other members of this branch of the Chichester family may also be mentioned.
( This may have been a mis-diagnosis ; Dr. David Lewis, a London physician who competed against Chichester in the first solo trans-Atlantic race reviewed the case and called Chichester's abnormality a " lung abscess.
According to the inscription upon it, this cross was built by Edward Story, Bishop of Chichester from 1477 to 1503 ; but little is known for certain and the style and ornaments of the building suggest that it may date from the reign of Edward IV.
Chichester Fortescue may refer to:
An inscription by Cogidubnus found in Chichester may mention a " Pudens ", although the inscription is damaged so this is not certain, and the way the name is written makes it unlikely that person referred to was a Roman citizen.
Chichester is not called Elchester from Ælle, but bears the name of one of his three ‘ sons ’, it may have been named after Cissa just as Lancing has been thought to derive from Wlencing.
The organization of the Chichester diocese into prebends may have begun under Stigand.

Chichester and have
Two inscriptions recording the presence of Lucullus have been found in nearby Chichester and the redating, by Miles Russell, of the palace to the early AD 90s, would fit far more securely with such an interpretation.
Human activity in Morden dates back to the prehistoric period when Celtic tribes are known to have occupied areas around Wimbledon, but the first significant development in Morden was the construction of the Roman road called Stane Street from Chichester to London.
Relations at this time between Theobald and Stephen seem to have been good, but when Eugene summoned the English bishops to the Council of Rheims in April 1148 the king forbade all of them to attend except for three he nominated: Chichester, Hereford and Norwich.
He seems to have worked well with Lord-deputy Chichester, who praised his conduct in the marshal court.
Carew's house, named Chichester House after its later owner Sir Arthur Chichester, was already a building of sufficient importance to have become a temporary home of the Kingdom of Ireland's law courts during the Michaelmas law term in 1605.
In the United Kingdom, cathedrals generally only have one aisle on each side, with Chichester Cathedral and Elgin Cathedral being the only two exceptions.
The area around Chichester is believed to have played significant part during the Roman Invasion of A. D 43, as confirmed by evidence of military storage structures in the area of the nearby Fishbourne Roman Palace.
However, when the mayor restricted the vote to only Freemen in the election of 1660 for the Convention Parliament that organised the restoration of the monarchy, the House of Commons noted that " for One-and-twenty Parliaments, the Commonalty, as well as the Citizens, had had Voice in the electing of Members to serve in Parliament ; and that thereupon the Committee were of Opinion, that the Commonalty of the said Borough, together with the free Citizens, have Right of Election " and overturned the election, seating instead the candidate elected by the more-inclusive Commonality of Chichester, and jailing the mayor for two weeks for contempt because of his wilful denial of the ancient rights.
Several other members of the Chichester family have also gained distinction.
The SER would have free use of the New Cross to Croydon line, and receive revenues from passengers at intermediate stations, but would not make or work competing lines to Brighton, Horsham, Chichester or Portsmouth.
East Hampshire District Council area and Chichester District each have around 30, 000 residents in the area and Lewes District 22, 000.
Chichester and the nearby Roman villa at Fishbourne, believed by some to have been Cogidubnus ' palace, were probably part of the territory of the Atrebates tribe before the Roman conquest of Britain in AD 43.
As the Chichester inscription supports Tacitus, Cunliffe's interpretation would appear to imply an error in Dio's Roman History or in its transmission, and some, including John Hind, have argued that Dio misinterpreted his sources as reading that Togodumnus had died when he had merely been defeated.
Westhampnett Rural District Council wanted to replace them with fixed bridges ( which would have blocked the canal ) but the Corporation of Chichester wanted to keep the canal open to traffic.
It is one of several higher education institutions which have religious foundations ; others include Canterbury Christ Church University, Liverpool Hope University, St. Mary's University College ( Twickenham ), University of Chester, University of Chichester, University of Cumbria, University of Derby, University of Gloucestershire, University of Winchester, and Bishop Grosseteste University College Lincoln.
However, there have been various reillustrated versions of it over the years, done by Michael Simeon for the first British edition, Emma Chichester Clark, Lane Smith and Quentin Blake.
He founded the Prebendal School in Chichester, and he is reputed to have had the Chichester Cross erected.
Forasmuch as we have lately been informed that in our cathedral church of Chichester there hath been used long heretofore, and yet at this day is used, much superstition and a certain kind of idolatry about the shrine and bones of a certain bishop of the same, whom they call Saint Richard, and a certain resort there of common people, which being men of simplicity are seduced by the instigation of some of the clergy, who take advantage of their credulity to ascribe miracles of healing and other virtues to the said bones, that God only hath authority to grant.
The Lady Chapel not only contains the Saxon Cross but also an ancient broken marble slab engraved with a Bishop's pastoral staff and a Greek cross believed to have come from a reliquary containing the relics of St. Richard of Chichester, a 13th century bishop who often visited West Wittering.
Many of his anthems are verse anthems, which would have suited the small forces he was writing for at Chichester Cathedral.

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