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Frater and Achad
* Jones, Charles Stansfeld, as " Frater Achad ".
Yet it seems that he must have been to some extent correctly led, on account of his having made the appointments of yourself and Frater Achad ( Charles Stansfeld Jones ), and designating me in his last letter as his successor.

Frater and called
On 5 April 1904 England competed against a team called " Other Nationalities ", who were made up of ten Welshman and two Scotsman, including George Frater, who captained the side.
Known in Latin as Frater Martinus Ordinis Praedicatorum ( Brother Martin of the Dominican order ), he is believed to have been born, at an unknown date, in the Silesian town of Opava ( German: Troppau ), thus sometimes called Martinus Oppaviensis, or also Martinus Polonus.
This was a fight that Kierkegaard, to a certain degree, started himself when he under the pseudonym Frater Taciturnus in a five page article called The Work of a Travelling Aesthete ( En omreisende Æsthetikers Virksomhed ) in The Fatherland ( Fædrelandet ) on the 27.

Frater and Body
Based on the Paracelsian concept of three essentials, Body, Soul and Spirit, Frater Albertus developed a system of teaching alchemical concepts using the spagyric technique of separation and cohobation.

Frater and has
The Mozarabic has for 29 December " Sanctus Jacobus Frater Domini ", but that is the other St. James ); Holy Innocents ; Circumcision ; St. Genevieve ( Luxeuil Lectionary only.
Julianus barát ( Frater Julian ) has been translated into Italian, and some of his short stories were published in English, French, German, Italian, and Serbian.

Frater and written
It was written by Crowley and Allan Bennet ( Frater I. A.
Bersirc was originally written in Delphi by Jamie Frater in 1999 as a Windows-only IRC client, comparable to HydraIRC and Klient.
It is typically only learned by finding a copy of Ye Olde Book of Black Magick, written by Frater Pephedro, presumably a black wizard from ages long past.

Frater and book
The book Beyond the Blue Horizon by travel correspondent Alexander Frater documents the author's attempt to fly all the sectors on the original 1935 Imperial / Qantas London-Brisbane route in 1984.

Frater and .
In his later work, Quaestio disputata antequam erat Frater 46, he finally rejects the plurality of divine ideas, and this theme continues through the rest of his works.
Frater I. C. L.
* Frater T. S.
Later in 1916, Westcott claimed that Mathers also constructed these rituals from materials he received from Frater Lux ex Tenebris, a purported Continental Adept.
* Alamantra, Frater.
For instance Alphonse Louis Constant wrote under the name Eliphas Levi, William Wynn Westcott wrote under Frater Sapere Aude, and Aleister Crowley wrote under the name Frater Perdurabo.
The Fama Fraternitatis presented the legend of a German doctor and mystic philosopher referred to as " Frater C. R. C.
Frater C. R. C.
Morrow also was a sprinter at Abilene Christian University and a member of the men's club Frater Sodalis.
Numerous synonyms were used to make oblique reference to the stone, such as " white stone " ( calculus albus, identified with the calculus candidus of Revelation 2: 17 which was taken as a symbol of the glory of heaven ), vitriol ( as expressed in the backronym Visita Interiora Terrae Rectificando Invenies Occultum Lapidem ), also lapis noster, lapis occultus, in water at the box, and numerous oblique, mystical or mythological references such as Adam, Aer, Animal, Alkahest, Antidotus, Antimonium, Aqua benedicta, Aqua volans per aeram, Arcanum, Atramentum, Autumnus, Basilicus, Brutorum cor, Bufo, Capillus, Capistrum auri, Carbones, Cerberus, Chaos, Cinis cineris, Crocus, Dominus philosophorum, Divine quintessence, Draco elixir, Filius ignis, Fimus, Folium, Frater, Granum, Granum frumenti, Haematites, Hepar, Herba, Herbalis, Lac, Melancholia, Ovum philosophorum, Panacea salutifera, Pandora, Phoenix, Philosophic mercury, Pyrites, Radices arboris solares, Regina, Rex regum, Sal metallorum, Salvator terrenus, Talcum, Thesaurus, Ventus hermetis.
It was not until 1969 that Grady McMurtry invoked emergency authorization from Crowley and became the Frater Superior of O. T. O.
In 2005, Frater Hyperion X ° was appointed the National G. M. G.
Frater Shiva X ° was appointed the G. M. G.

Achad and called
390, explains in Hebrew Questions on Genesis that after Nimrod reigned in Babel, " he also reigned in Arach, that is, in Edissa ; and in Achad, which is now called Nisibis ; and in Chalanne, which was later called Seleucia after King Seleucus when its name had been changed, and which is now in actual fact called Ctesiphon.
According to the Vita tripartita, Lugaid was killed by a bolt from the heavens when he mocked Patrick at a place later called Achad Forchai.

Achad and .
The first recorded historical reference to the town dates to the sixth century when the townland was known as Achad Dorbchon, and held within the kingdom of Muscraighe Mitine.
The tribe of Uí Floinn was most prominent local clan, and at some time in their reign a castle was built in Achad Dorbchon to replace Raithleann as the capital of Muskerry.
By the fourteenth century Achad Dorbchon was accepted to be the capital of the Barony of Muskerry, and was seen as a growing centre for trade, burial and religious worship.
Traditional history credits this to the Three Collas, three great great great grandsons of Conn, who defeated the Ulaid king Fergus Foga at Achad Lethderg in County Monaghan, seized all Ulaid territory west of the Newry River and Lough Neagh, and burned Emain Macha.
* AI1044. 6 Repose of Maenach Muccruma in Achad Deó.

magnum and opus
Ramstedt's two-volume magnum opus, Einführung in die altaische Sprachwissenschaft (' Introduction to Altaic Linguistics ') was published in 1952 – 1957.
In 1827 Ampère published his magnum opus, Mémoire sur la théorie mathématique des phénomènes électrodynamiques uniquement déduite de l ’ experience ( Memoir on the Mathematical Theory of Electrodynamic Phenomena, Uniquely Deduced from Experience ), the work that coined the name of his new science, electrodynamics, and became known ever after as its founding treatise.
From 1850 onwards he became well known as a critic and essay-writer, and in 1860 he began working on his magnum opus, his History of Music, which was published at intervals from 1862 in five volumes, the last two ( 1878, 1882 ) being edited and completed by Otto Kade and Wilhelm Langhans.
The Mahāyānist Nāgārjuna, one of the most influential Buddhist thinkers, promoted classical Buddhist emphasis on phenomena and attacked Sarvāstivāda realism and Sautrāntika nominalism in his magnum opus, The Fundamental Verses on the Middle Way ( Mūlamadhyamakakārikā ).
His widow published his magnum opus on the philosophy of war in 1832, on which he had started working in 1816, but had not completed.
He completed Disquisitiones Arithmeticae, his magnum opus, in 1798 at the age of 21, though it was not published until 1801.
His magnum opus was the " Critical Edition of the New Testament.
After a long list of works written earlier in his career, including Troilus and Criseyde, House of Fame, and Parliament of Fowls, the Canterbury Tales was Chaucer's magnum opus.
McLean's magnum opus, " American Pie ", is a sprawling, impressionistic ballad inspired partly by the deaths of Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J. P. Richardson ( The Big Bopper ) in a plane crash on 3 February 1959.
Heidegger's magnum opus Being and Time was dedicated to Husserl.
In the 290s, Eusebius began work on his magnum opus, the Ecclesiastical History, a narrative history of the Church and Christian community from the Apostolic Age to Eusebius ' own time.
Lang's magnum opus, M — released in 1931, two years before his departure from Germany — is among the first major crime films of the sound era to join a characteristically noirish visual style with a noir-type plot, one in which the protagonist is a criminal ( as are his most successful pursuers ).
Their magnum opus, a book claiming a complete and detailed proof ( with a microfiche supplement of over 400 pages ), appeared in 1989 and explained Schmidt's discovery and several further errors found by others.
The shock of this event reverberated from Britain to Jerusalem, and inspired Augustine to write his magnum opus, The City of God.
Often called " the first modern historian ", the English scholar Edward Gibbon wrote his magnum opus, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire ( 1776 – 1788 ).
Titled, A Pictorial Sequence Painted by R. H. Ives Gammell Based on The Hound of Heaven, it is considered Gammell's magnum opus.
Calvin developed his theology in his biblical commentaries as well as his sermons and treatises, but the most concise expression of his views is found in his magnum opus, the Institutes of the Christian Religion.
Title page from the final edition of Calvin's magnum opus, Institutio Christiane Religionis, which summarises his theology.
Audubon returned to America in 1829 to complete more drawings for his magnum opus.
Black Square, the fourth version of his magnum opus painted in the 1920s was discovered in 1993 in Samara and purchased by Inkombank for $ 250, 000.
Pike's approach to the study of language put him outside the circle of the " generative " movement begun by Noam Chomsky, a dominant linguist, since Pike believed that the structure of language should be studied in context, not just single sentences, as seen in the title of his magnum opus " Language in relation to a unified theory of the structure of human behavior " ( 1967 ).
At the time of his death, Weber had not finished writing his magnum opus on sociological theory: Economy and Society.
In his magnum opus, Economy and Society, Weber distinguished three ideal types of religious attitudes: world-flying mysticism, world-rejecting asceticism, and inner-worldly asceticism.
In March and April 1959, Davis re-entered the studio with his working sextet to record what is widely considered his magnum opus, Kind of Blue.
Given that premise, the notion of absolute knowledge ( as described by Plato and the rationalists ) is seen as mere illusion, and this is what he set out to demonstrate in the first part of his magnum opus " The Critique of Pure Reason " ( 1781 ).

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