Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Alexander Dyce" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Dyce and was
William Dyce, who was the first to start fresco work in 1848, died in 1864, completing only five of seven commissioned works.
The Reverend Alexander Dyce was another benefactor of the library, leaving over 14, 000 books to the museum in 1869.
Alexander Dyce ( 30 June 1798 – 15 May 1869 ) was a Scottish dramatic editor and literary historian.
By the time of his death, Dyce had collected a valuable library, containing many rare Elizabethan books, and this collection was left to the South Kensington Museum ( Victoria and Albert Museum ).
While preserving all that was valuable in former editions, Dyce added much fresh matter.
Alexander Dyce, from the time of his first introduction to Rogers, was in the habit of writing down the anecdotes with which his conversation abounded.
An important earlier edition was prepared by Alexander Dyce ( 1834 ) for the Aldine Edition of the British Poets, and reprinted with small additions in subsequent issues of the series.
It was the site of the Dyce Sector Operations Room within No. 13 Group RAF.
The manuscript was first printed and published in 1844, two and a half centuries after it was written, by the Shakespeare Society, edited by Alexander Dyce ; and again in 1911 by the Malone Society, edited by W. W. Greg.
By 1936 the London / Yeadon / Newcastle / Edinburgh service was flying three times a week and also stopped at Doncaster and carried on to Aberdeen ( Dyce ).
The technique was developed using the same early model UHF-band Lichtenstein-equipped, Ju 88R-1 night fighter that had landed at RAF Dyce in April 1943 by its defecting crew.
His most important contribution to scholarship was his four-volume Complete Works of John Webster ( 1927 ), the first collected edition of the Jacobean dramatist since that of Hazlitt ( 1857 ), itself largely a copy of Dyce ( 1830 ).
The first method for producing creamed honey was patented by Elton J. Dyce in 1935 ().
Charles Andrew Dyce designed the steeple which was modelled on John Turnbull Thomson's design for the second Saint Andrew's Church.
William Dyce ( 19 September 1806, Aberdeen – 14 February 1864, London ) was a distinguished Scottish artist, who played a significant part in the formation of public art education in the United Kingdom, as perhaps the true parent of the South Kensington Schools system.
Later in his career, Dyce turned to fresco-painting, and was selected to execute a series of murals at the newly completed the Palace of Westminster.
Dyce was commissioned to decorate the Queen's Robing Room in Palace.
The Arthurian legend became popular later in the Victorian period, but when Dyce received the commission to decorate the room in 1847, it was still an obscure subject.
The producer Floyd Dyce was involved heavily in the rave scene and published his works under several different names such as The House Crew, DMS, and Xstatic.
Western Aberdeenshire was defined by the 1868 legislation as consisting of the parishes of Aboyne and Glentanner, Alford, Auchindoir and Kearn, Auchterless, Birse, Chapel of Garioch, Clatt, Cluny, Coull, Crathie and Braemar, Culsalmond, Drumblade, Dyce, Echt, Forgue, Glenbucket, Glenmuick, Tullich and Glengairn, Huntly, Insch, Inverurie, Keig, Kemnay, Kildrummy, Kincardine O ' Neil, Kinnellar, Kennethmont, Kintore, Leochel-Cushnie, Leslie, Logie-Coldstone, Lumphanan, Midmar, Monymusk, Newhills, Oyne, Peterculter, Premnay, Rayne, Rhynie, Skene, Strathdon, Tarland and Migvie, Tough, Towie, Tullynesle and Forbes, together with the part of the parish of Old Machar lying west of the River Don, and the parts of the parishes of Banchory-Devenick, Cabrach, Cairnie, Drumoak and Glass within the County of Aberdeen, and the parish of Gartly in Banffshire.

Dyce and with
The standard edition of Shirley's works is The Dramatic Works and Poems of James Shirley, with Notes by William Gifford, and Additional Notes, and some Account of Shirley and his Writings, by Alexander Dyce ( 6 vols., 1833 ).
The best edition of Akenside's Poetical Works is that prepared ( 1834 ) by Alexander Dyce for the Aldine Edition of the British Poets, and reprinted with small additions in subsequent issues of the series.
The city council overturned this ban, however, despite some Dyce residents ' objections, and the airport is now open 24 hours a day to fixed-wing aircraft with a quota count of QC4 or below, and the overnight restrictions still apply to helicopters.
Dyce is the site of an early medieval church dedicated to the 8th century missionary and bishop St. Fergus, otherwise associated with Glamis, Angus.
Dyce has one main shopping centre which is mainly an Asda store with a Boots chemist, a hairdresser, a pet shop, and a travel agent.
After initially experimenting with a narrative sequence in which the tale would unfold in the room's panels, Dyce abandoned this in favor of an allegorical approach.
In addition to linking the airport with Aberdeen, Dyce railway station also provides direct connections to Edinburgh, Glasgow and Inverness, as well as intermediate stations on those lines.
Meanwhile, Lanna and her parents at High Harbor have to deal with Dyce, who wants her people to supply lumber faster than they can with the tools they have and is desperate for knowledge of the whereabouts of Briac Roa.
At High Harbor, Lanna and her parents are continuing to deal with Dyce and his demands -- now he wants some wrecked aircraft that are on the island and some sassafras roots.
Lanna discovers that not only is Orlo trying to take over High Harbor, he's making deals with Dyce.

Dyce and undertook
On the death of his friend Alexander Dyce, Forster undertook the publication of his third edition of Shakespeare.

Dyce and for
King Neptune is shown symbolically passing his trident to Britannia in the 1847 fresco " Neptune Resigning to Britannia the Empire of the Sea " by William Dyce, a painting Victoria commissioned for her Osborne House on the Isle of Wight.
Dyce ’ s report to the Board of Trade on foreign schools of Design for Manufactures.
One RAF building still remains at East Fingask, where aircrews waiting for the " All Clear " before returning to Dyce airfield.
Dyce ( Aberdeen ) Amateur Swimming Club ( Est 1977 ), which runs its own Swim School for those wishing to learn to swim, is based at the Dyce Academy swimming pool.
At Hucknall, a Squadron Leader Boniface asked for his credentials, and von Werra claimed to be based at Dyce near Aberdeen.
Cove Boys Club have been known for letting players go to bigger juvenile sides such as Albion Boys club, Dyce Boys Club and Alc Lewis from where they will go through the ranks to the likes of Montose, Dyce Juniors or Lewis United.
Dyce began his career at the Royal Academy schools, and then traveled to Rome for the first time in 1825.
The legend soon became a major problem for Dyce, as it turns on the unfaithfulness of a queen, which causes the fall of a kingdom.
Meanwhile, a child has died from the illness at High Harbor, and Shann and Mazal agree to let Dyce have the aircraft in exchange for the medicine they need, although Shann thinks Dyce deliberately started the sickness as a bargaining chip.
She wishes she could see the ship for herself, because it might give her a better idea what to do, but she doesn't dare go there for fear of looking as if she were herself endorsing Dyce and his goods.
Teacher tells Dr. Manski about how Dyce had traded for the flying machines and their power cells for medicine to stop the sickness that had killed one child at High Harbor, and how he may in fact have spread the sickness in the first place.
Lanna and her parents learn that Orlo and Dyce have a plan to take over their house and move in, throwing Shann and Mazal out but keeping Lanna around, presumably as a plaything for Orlo.

0.358 seconds.