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Eras and had
It gave us all a pang not to have him rest quietly by Eras – ; but William felt strongly, and on reflection I did also, that his gracious & grateful nature would have wished to accept the acknowledgement of what he had done ".
As had been planned previously, in September 1818 Charles joined his older brother Erasmus Alvey Darwin ( nicknamed " Eras ") in staying as a boarder at the Shrewsbury School, where he loathed the required rote learning, and would try to visit home when he could.

Eras and including
Zhengzhou's most notable cultural institution is the Henan Museum ( 河南省博物院 ), one of China's most important museums which includes exhibits from prehistoric times, including dinosaur fossils, prehistoric human remains, up through the Modern Eras.
In the vicinity of Aderet are a vineyard and number of archeological sites from the Roman and Byzantine Eras, including the Atari and Midras ruins.

Eras and with
The end of the Cretaceous is defined by the K – Pg boundary, a geologic signature associated with the mass extinction which lies between the Mesozoic and Cenozoic Eras.
The stylistic development of Classical Chinese poetry consists of both literary and oral cultural processes, which may be and usually are divided into certain standard periods or eras, in terms both of specific poems as well as styles characteristic of those eras, generally corresponding with Chinese Dynastic Eras, which were the traditional chronological process for Chinese historical events.
However, only the Imron grey, red and yellow were actually recycled while using a completely redesigned logo with a coupled variation font of ITC Eras Demi.
At first Darwin stayed with Eras, in his journal written up later he put his date of moving as 6 March 1837.
Eras took an interest in chemistry and Charles became his assistant, with the two using a garden shed at their home fitted out as a laboratory and extending their interests to crystallography.
Eras became bored with the classical curriculum and took an interest in chemistry, with Charles as his assistant.
Eras was " very agreeable " to retiring at the age of 26 and planned to live in London with " an air cushion in his rooms " to allow a visiting Charles to stay with him.

Eras and Charles
When Eras went on to a medical course at the University of Cambridge, Charles continued to rush home to the shed on weekends, and for this received the nickname " Gas ".
Eras returned from Edinburgh ready to sit his Bachelor of Medicine exam, and in the new year he and Charles set out together for Cambridge.
Erasmus Alvey Darwin ( 29 December 1804 – 26 August 1881 ), nicknamed Eras or Ras, was the older brother of Charles Darwin, born five years earlier, and also brought up at the family home, The Mount House, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England.
That Christmas Charles visited Eras in London for three weeks, making use of the air-bed, then again at Easter 1831 before " geologising " in Wales, but as Erasmus was out of town when the opportunity to join the Voyage of the Beagle came up, Charles took lodgings in London to make his arrangements.

Eras and Thomas
" A Man for All Eras: Recent Books on Thomas More " Political Science Reviewer, 2004, Vol.

Eras and .
The period from 700-1130 CE ( Pueblo I and II Eras ) saw a rapid increase in population due to consistent and regular rainfall patterns.
Tale of Tales ( 1979 ) by Yuriy Norshteyn was twice given the title of " Best Animated Film of All Eras and Nations " by animation professionals from around the world, in 1984 and 2002.
Generally, his research centers around rabbinic Judaism of the Mishnaic and Talmudic Eras.
By dividing the Tertiary Period into two periods instead of five epochs, the periods are more closely comparable to the duration of ' periods ' in the Mesozoic and Paleozoic Eras.
* Since 2001, Triangle Vintage Dance has offered classes focusing on dances from the Victorian and Ragtime Eras for the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill area.
* Eras merged as Meitoku 3 replaced Genchū 9 as Go-Kameyama abdicated.
Two terms are employed for the periodization of the IVC: Phases and Eras.
The Second and later Ages, during the Years of the Sun, correspond more to the earlier Valian Eras than to their Ages.
* Eras merged as Meitoku 3 replaced Genchū 9 as Go-Kameyama abdicated.
The Saguna School of the Bhakti Yug split into two schools ( Rama bhakti and Krishna bhakti ) somewhere in the interregnum of the Bhakti and the Reeti Eras.
There are also musicians in Ukraine ( Kostyantyn Chechenya, Vadym Borysenko ) and in diaspora ( Volodymyr Smishkevych, Julian Kytasty, Roman Turovsky ) who have been preserving Ukrainian music of the Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque Eras.
During the Age of Enlightenment, political entities expanded from basic systems of self-governance and monarchy to the complex democratic and communist systems that exist in the Industrialized and the Modern Eras.
* Yoram Tsafrir and Gideon Foerster: " From Scythopolis to Baisān: Changes in the perception of the city of Bet Shean during the Byzantine and Arab Eras ", Cathedra.
He also supported inner-party democracy and opposed the reestablishment of the one-man rule as seen during the Stalin and Khrushchev Eras.
Straight from the Edo and Meiji Eras, Udatsu Townscape is a symbol of Wakimachi ’ s old days.
* Brady, David, and Joseph Stewart, Jr. " Congressional Party Realignment and Transformations of Public Policy in Three Realignment Eras ", American Journal of Political Science, Vol.
" in American Eras, Volume 2: The Colonial Era, 1600-1754.
* Ronald Genini & Richard Hitchman, Romualdo Pacheco: A Californio in Two Eras, The Book Club of California: 1985.
* Classical Masterpieces-Famous classical works from the great classical composers, particularly from the Classical and Romantic Eras ( e. g., Beethoven, Chopin, Mozart, Saint-Saëns )
These volcanic islands like some of the high mountains in the north of Madagascar were formed in the Tertiary and Quaternary Eras.

had and cosmopolitan
Thus, Cyril followed his uncle in a position that had become powerful and influential, rivalling that of the prefect in a time of turmoil and frequently violent conflict between the cosmopolitan city's Pagan, Jewish, and Christian inhabitants.
Before becoming Pope, he spent time at the then very liberal and cosmopolitan University of Padua, which maintained considerable independence from the Church and had a very international character.
She was a sculptor, socialite and cosmopolitan who had studied under Auguste Rodin and whose circle included Isadora Duncan, Pablo Picasso and Aleister Crowley.
Though the first Christians in the West used Greek ( such as Clement of Rome ), by the fourth century Latin had superseded it even in the cosmopolitan city of Rome, while there is evidence of a Latin translation of the Bible in the 2nd century ( see also Vetus Latina ) in southern Gaul and the Roman province of Africa.
Mozambique was cosmopolitan as it had around Indian, Chinese, Greek and Anglophone communities living there too ( over 25, 000 Indians and 5, 000 Chinese by the early 1970s ).
Over two thousand years ago the Romans had arrived, initially allied with Berber kingdoms ; their cosmopolitan Empire long governed this Africa region as part of an integrated Mediterranean world.
It was the biggest, most cosmopolitan city he had ever visited ( its population was about 200, 000 ).
But by and large those who were Greek and freeborn had at least chosen to come to Athens, attracted by the prosperity of the large, dynamic, cosmopolitan city and the opportunities not available to them in their place of origin.
He followed William Powell and Basil Rathbone portraying the series detective Philo Vance, a cosmopolitan New Yorker, once in 1935 in The Casino Murder Case, but his major role came in 1943's Watch on the Rhine, when he played a man working against the Nazis ( he had played the same role on Broadway in 1941 ).
A constantly repeated theme in the book's background are the social, cultural and physical differences between these two locations: Norrland is more sedate, conservative and slow-moving in comparison with the cosmopolitan Stockholm ; a Stockholmer having to live for an extended period in Norrland feels " exiled to the back of beyond "; Norrland is also colder and a Stockholmer coming there must urgently buy warmer clothes ; Norrlanders often speak regional dialects which Stockholm people find nearly incomprehensible ; Stockholm people look down their noses at " a working class boy from Norrland " even when he had lived many years in Stockholm.
His knowledge of foreign affairs and of foreign languages, gained during his residence abroad, was considerable, but long absence from England had also taught him a cosmopolitan indifference to constitutions and religions, and a careless disregard for English public opinion and the prudential interests of the country.
Preparations for a show trial started in Budapest in 1953 to prove that Raoul Wallenberg had not been dragged off in 1945 to the Soviet Union but was the victim of cosmopolitan Zionists.
After leaving Rome, where he had become intimate with all that was most interesting in the cosmopolitan society of the papal capital, Bunsen went to England, where, except for a short term as Prussian ambassador to Switzerland ( 1839 – 1841 ), he was destined to pass the rest of his official life.
Because of the gauge, unusual for the British Isles, locomotives and rolling stock to supplement the originals have had to be obtained from a cosmopolitan variety of sources including the Zillertalbahn in Austria.
" Although Socrates had previously identified himself as belonging to the world, rather than a city, Diogenes is credited with the first known use of the word " cosmopolitan ".
Third were the Whites in the boroughs outside Manhattan who had a similar educational background and " cosmopolitan " attitude, namely residents of solidly middle-class neighborhoods, including Forest Hills and Kew Gardens in Queens and Brooklyn Heights.
Interestingly, at this time the Jewish population in Prussian Poland tended to identify with and want to belong to Germany, insofar as the latter, like the Jews themselves, had a more urbanized, cosmopolitan outlook.
However, the ADQ has always had more difficulty breaking through in Gaspésie – Îles-de-la-Madeleine, Outaouais and the more cosmopolitan urban districts of the Montreal area.
The growth of the London conurbation had reached Deptford by the end of the eighteenth century but it had been a large industrial town well before this time: the Royal Docks and the Victualling Yard, which provisioned the Navy, and the various private dockyards, meant it was a prosperous and cosmopolitan town.
Trading along the Silk Road of various products increased cultural diversity in cosmopolitan Chinese cities, such as Chang ' an, had a marked influence on the Chinese arts of the Tang Dynasty.
This mixing, instead of producing cultural homogenization, instead resulted in many shades of grey as the traditional Muslim cultures of Anatolia collided with ( or had imposed upon them ) the cosmopolitan modernity of Istanbul and the wider West.
In the Roman period it had become a cosmopolitan centre of the eastern Mediterranean whilst, according to Christian tradition, it was also the place of Saint Andrew's martyrdom.
Its architecture is Romanesque and demonstrates that the Norsemen, best known for their Viking raids, also had a cosmopolitan cultural influence.
Shanghai was a diverse cosmopolitan city and had investments and assets from most major international powers, such as the United States, the United Kingdom, and France.

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