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Elizabeth and Howe
Accounts of life with the Abenaki can be found in the captivity narratives written by women taken captive by the Abenaki from the early New England settlements: Hannah Duston ( 1702 ); Elizabeth Hanson ( 1728 ); Susannah Willard Johnson ( 1754 ); and Jemima Howe ( 1792 ).
Nicknamed " Stevie " by the family, he joined eight surviving brothers and sisters — Mary Helen, George Peck, Jonathan Townley, William Howe, Agnes Elizabeth, Edmund Byran, Wilbur Fiske, and Luther.
Elizabeth Howe has objected that the male disguise, when studied in relation to playtexts, prologues, and epilogues, comes out as " little more than yet another means of displaying the actress as a sexual object " to male patrons, by showing off her body, normally hidden by a skirt, outlined by the male outfit.
" Elizabeth Howe has argued that it was Barry's success in the role of Monimia that " clinched the movement away from heroic drama and started the establishment of ' she-tragedy ' as a popular genre.
* Howe, Elizabeth ( 1992 ).
Warrants were issued for 36 more people, with examinations continuing to take place in Salem Village: Sarah Dustin ( daughter of Lydia Dustin ), Ann Sears, Bethiah Carter Sr. and her daughter Bethiah Carter Jr., George Jacobs, Sr. and his granddaughter Margaret Jacobs, John Willard, Alice Parker, Ann Pudeator, Abigail Soames, George Jacobs, Jr. ( son of George Jacobs, Sr. and father of Margaret Jacobs ), Daniel Andrew, Rebecca Jacobs ( wife of George Jacobs, Jr. and sister of Daniel Andrew ), Sarah Buckley and her daughter Mary Witheridge, Elizabeth Colson, Elizabeth Hart, Thomas Farrar, Sr., Roger Toothaker, Sarah Proctor ( daughter of John and Elizabeth Proctor ), Sarah Bassett ( sister-in-law of Elizabeth Proctor ), Susannah Roots, Mary DeRich ( another sister-in-law of Elizabeth Proctor ), Sarah Pease, Elizabeth Cary, Martha Carrier, Elizabeth Fosdick, Wilmot Redd, Sarah Rice, Elizabeth Howe, Capt.
June 30 through early July, grand juries endorsed indictments against Sarah Good, Elizabeth Howe, Susannah Martin, Elizabeth Proctor, John Proctor, Martha Carrier, Sarah Wilds and Dorcas Hoar.
Only Sarah Good, Elizabeth Howe, Susannah Martin and Sarah Wildes, along with Rebecca Nurse, went on to trial at this time, where they were found guilty, and all five were executed by hanging on July 19, 1692.
There were four execution dates, with one person executed on June 10, 1692, five executed on July 19, 1692 ( Sarah Good, Rebecca Nurse, Susannah Martin, Elizabeth Howe & Sarah Wildes ), another five executed on August 19, 1692 ( Martha Carrier, John Willard, George Burroughs, George Jacobs, Sr. and John Proctor ), and eight on September 22, 1692 ( Mary Eastey, Martha Corey, Ann Pudeator, Samuel Wardwell, Mary Parker, Alice Parker, Wilmot Redd and Margaret Scott ).
Other instances appear in the records of the episode that demonstrated a continued belief by members of the community in this effluvia as legitimate evidence, including accounts in two statements against Elizabeth Howe that people had suggested cutting off and burning an ear of two different animals Howe was thought to have afflicted, to prove she was the one who had bewitched them to death.
* Howe, Elizabeth ( 1992 ).
He did, however, spend a fair amount of time at the gambling tables, and allegedly established a relationship with Elizabeth Lloyd Loring, the wife of Loyalist Joshua Loring, Jr. Loring apparently acquiesced to this arrangement, and was rewarded by Howe with the position of commissary of prisoners.
The couple had six children: Julia Romana Howe ( 1844 – 1886 ) married Michael Anagnos, a Greek scholar who succeeded Dr. Howe as director of the Perkins Institute ; Florence Marion Howe ( 1845 – 1922 ), an author, she wrote a well-known treatise on manners and was married to lawyer David Prescott Hall ; Henry Marion Howe ( 1848 – 1922 ), a metallurgist who lived in New York ; Laura Elizabeth Howe ( 1850 – 1943 ), a Pulitzer prize-winning author, she was married to Henry Richards and lived in Maine ; Maud Howe ( 1855 – 1948 ), a Pulitzer prize-winning author, she was married to an English muralist and illustrator, John Elliott ; Samuel Gridley Howe, Jr. ( 1858 – 1863 ).

Elizabeth and First
* Jeffreys, Elizabeth and Michael, and Moffatt, Ann, Byzantine Papers: Proceedings of the First Australian Byzantine Studies Conference, Canberra, 17 – 19 May 1978 ( Australian National University, Canberra, 1979 ).
In 1927, he met and married Elizabeth Carver, née Hobart, widow of Oswald Carver, Olympic rowing medalist who was killed in the First World War.
Elizabeth would marry in 1922, and Gerhard in 1923 ; Wolfgang, however, became a casualty of the First World War.
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson: England's First Woman Physician.
First tutored at home by his mother Elizabeth, between the ages of 11 and 16, the young Monroe studied at Campbelltown Academy, a school run by the Reverend Archibald Campbell of Washington Parish.
( 1972 ) Elizabeth the First.
* New Oxford American Dictionary, First Edition, Elizabeth J. Jewell and Frank R. Abate ( editors ), 2192 pages, September 2001, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-511227-X.
* 1830 – Elizabeth Monroe, American wife of James Monroe, 5th First Lady of the United States ( b. 1768 )
U. S. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt said that Elizabeth was " perfect as a Queen, gracious, informed, saying the right thing & kind but a little self-consciously regal ".
In April 2011, Queen Elizabeth II visited St John's College in order to inaugurate a new pathway in First Court, which passes close to the ruins of the Old Chapel.
* Barber, Elizabeth Wayland, Women's Work: The First 20, 000 Years: Women, Cloth, and Society in Early Times, W. W. Norton & Company, new edition, 1995 ( Barber 1995 )
The historical parallels in the succession of Richard II may not have been intended as political comment on the contemporary situation, with the weak Richard II analogous to Queen Elizabeth and an implicit argument in favour of her replacement by a monarch capable of creating a stable dynasty, but lawyers investigating John Hayward's historical work, The First Part of the Life and Raigne of King Henrie IV, a book partly derived from Shakespeare's Richard II, chose to make this connection.
* Elizabeth Patterson as First Aunt
Faye Emerson, known in the early 1950s as the " First Lady of Television ," was born in Elizabeth in 1917 and died in Majorca in 1983.
First called Sunday River Plantation, it was settled in 1781 by Benjamin Barker and his two brothers from Methuen, Massachusetts, together with Ithiel Smith of Cape Elizabeth.
First chapter of the American Red Cross at the corner of Elizabeth and Ossian Streets
His sister, Elizabeth Gorham, who married John Leighton, was the ancestor of Edith Kermit Carow Roosevelt the second wife of Theodore Roosevelt who served as First Lady of the United States during his presidency from 1901 to 1909.
** Elizabeth Choy ( Yong Su Moi ) 蔡楊素梅 / 蔡杨素梅 ( 1910-2006 ; born in Malaysia ), War heroine ; First and only woman to be on the Legislative Council of Singapore, 1951
Yeoman of the Guard of the reign of Elizabeth I of England | Queen Elizabeth the First.
According to interviews with Judge in the 1840s, the First Lady had promised the young woman as a wedding gift to her granddaughter Elizabeth Parke Custis in Virginia and Judge feared she would never gain freedom.
* Irene Elizabeth Stroud, former minister of First United Methodist Church of Germantown, her credentials revoked for lesbianism
* May 15, 2007: XM suspended Opie and Anthony for 30 days after a homeless man making a guest appearance described how he would like to have a threesome with the United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and First Lady Laura Bush, and abused Queen Elizabeth II.
# The Terrible Tudors: Bad Bess – ( Tudor and Elizabethan Queen Elizabeth the First )
Elizabeth Dole, who would have become First Lady had her husband won the election, received recognition for her speech at the 1996 Republican National Convention, during which she walked out into the audience while talking conversationally about her husband's qualities.

Elizabeth and English
* 1984 – Elizabeth Goudge, English writer ( b. 1900 )
Puttenham, in the time of Elizabeth I of England, wished to start from Elissabet Anglorum Regina ( Elizabeth Queen of the English ), to obtain Multa regnabis ense gloria ( By thy sword shalt thou reign in great renown ); he explains carefully that H is " a note of aspiration only and no letter ", and that Z in Greek or Hebrew is a mere SS.
* 1950 – Anne, Princess Royal, English daughter of Elizabeth II
* 1534 – Elizabeth Barton, English nun ( b. 1506 )
During the English Reformation the Church of England broke away from the authority of the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church, at first temporarily under Henry VIII and Edward VI and later permanently during the reign of Elizabeth I.
Arthur Phillip was born in 1738, the son of Jacob Phillip, a Frankfurt-born language teacher, and his English wife, Elizabeth Breach.
* 1900 – Elizabeth Goudge, English writer ( d. 1984 )
Translations into the vernacular were done by famous notables, including King Alfred ( Old English ), Jean de Meun ( Old French ), Geoffrey Chaucer ( Middle English ), Queen Elizabeth I ( Early Modern English ), and Notker Labeo ( Old High German ).
Matthew Gibson has shown that LeFanu used Dom Augustin Calmet's Treatise on Vampires and Revenants, translated into English in 1850 as The Phantom World, the Reverend Sabine Baring-Gould's The Book of Were-wolves ( 1863 ), and his account of Elizabeth Bathory, Coleridge's Christabel, and Captain Basil Hall's Schloss Hainfeld ; or a Winter in Lower Styria ( London and Edinburgh, 1836 ).
He is of English ( maternal ), Swiss and possibly Native American Modoc Tribe multi-ethnic ( paternal ) ancestry His father, Howard " Pete " Brubeck, was a cattle rancher, and his mother, Elizabeth ( née Ivey ), who had studied piano in England under Myra Hess and intended to become a concert pianist, taught piano for extra money.
* 1717 – Elizabeth Carter, English writer ( d. 1806 )
* 1917 – Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, English physician ( b. 1836 )
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, LSA, MD ( 9 June 1836 – 17 December 1917 ), was an English physician and feminist, the first Englishwoman to qualify as a physician and surgeon in Britain, the co-founder of the first hospital staffed by women, the first dean of a British medical school, the first woman M. D.
By the time William Grindal became her tutor in 1544, Elizabeth could write English, Latin, and Italian.
By the end of her life Elizabeth was also reputed to speak Welsh, Cornish, Scottish and Irish in addition to English.
Elizabeth therefore sought a Protestant solution that would not offend Catholics too greatly while addressing the desires of English Protestants ; she would not tolerate the more radical Puritans though, who were pushing for far-reaching reforms.
In 1581, to convert English subjects to Catholicism with " the intent " to withdraw them from their allegiance to Elizabeth was made a treasonable offence, carrying the death penalty.
After the occupation and loss of Le Havre in 1562 – 1563, Elizabeth avoided military expeditions on the continent until 1585, when she sent an English army to aid the Protestant Dutch rebels against Philip II.
Elizabeth established an English church that helped shape a national identity and remains in place today.
Priding herself on being " mere English ", Elizabeth trusted in God, honest advice, and the love of her subjects for the success of her rule.
The extensive list to discredit Oxford included atheism, lying, heresy, disobedience to the crown, treason, murder for hire, sexual perversion and pederasty with his English and Italian servants (' buggering a boy that is his cook and many other boys '), habitual drunkenness, vowing to murder various courtiers and declaring that Elizabeth had a bad singing voice.
In 1594, they were visited by English commander Richard Hawkins, who, combining his own name with that of Queen Elizabeth I, the " Virgin Queen ", gave the islands the name of " Hawkins ' Maidenland.

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