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Page "René of Anjou" ¶ 45
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appears and William
Ealdred was one of a few native Englishmen who William appears to have trusted, and his death led to fewer attempts to integrate Englishmen into the administration, although such efforts did not entirely stop.
Brooks appears in multiple supporting roles, including Governor William J.
* Constantinople appears as a city of wondrous majesty, beauty, remoteness, and nostalgia in William Butler Yeats ' 1928 poem " Sailing to Byzantium ".
William Forbes Skene reads the Chronicle as placing Causantín's death at Inverdovat ( by Newport-on-Tay ), which appears to match the Prophecy of Berchán.
Sir John Falstaff is a fictional character who appears in three plays by William Shakespeare.
Another account appears in a biography by William Rawley, Bacon's personal secretary and chaplain:
Hay appears as a prominent character in Gore Vidal's historical novels Lincoln and Empire and in William Safire's historical novel Freedom.
* Kim Philby appears as one of the central antagonists in William F. Buckley Jr's 2004 novel Last Call for Blackford Oakes.
Malcolm appears in William Shakespeare ’ s Macbeth.
Twenty world records have been set at the stadium, including John Landy's records on the 1, 500 m and the mile, Nurmi's record on the 3, 000 m and Zátopek's record on the 10, 000 m. In fiction, Nurmi appears in William Goldman's 1974 novel Marathon Man as the idol of the protagonist, who aims to become a greater runner than Nurmi.
* King Philip appears in William Shakespeare's historical play King John.
... how early this basic truth was recognized by the sages of India, since it appears as the fundamental tenet of the Vedânta philosophy ascribed to Vyasa, is proved by Sir William Jones in the last of his essays: " On the Philosophy of the Asiatics " ( Asiatic Researches, vol.
Also, on the cover of Axis Mutatis appears a representation of the tree of life by William Latham.
In Elizabethan English, the word " gambo " ( for gamba ) appears in many permutations ; e. g., " viola de gambo ", " gambo violl ", " viol de gambo ", or " viole de gambo ", used by such notables as Tobias Hume, John Dowland, and William Shakespeare in Twelfth Night.
Some sources give the name of William Wallace's father as Malcolm Wallace, however the seal attached to a letter sent to the Hanse city of Lübeck in 1297 appears to give his father's name as Alan.
Earlier dukes had been illegitimate, and William's association with his father on ducal charters appears to indicate that William was considered Robert's most likely heir.
Papal sanction of the marriage appears to have required the founding of two monasteries in Caen – one by William and one by Matilda.
In 1051 the childless King Edward of England appears to have chosen William as his successor to the English throne.
William's son Robert, still allied with the French King Philip I, appears to have been active in stirring up trouble, enough so that William led an expedition against the French Vexin in July 1087.
The claim that this is the location of King William II's death appears to date no earlier than a 17th century visit by Charles II to the forest.
At the time the most popular account of William II's death involved the fatal arrow deflecting off a tree and during Charles II's visit to the forest he appears to have been shown a suitable tree.
The use of " arabesque " as an English noun first appears, in relation to painting, in William Beckford's novel Vathek in 1786.
William Boyd appears in his usual guise of Hopalong Cassidy.
The claim for the women's vote appears to have been first made by Jeremy Bentham in 1817 when he published his Plan of Parliamentary Reform in the form of a Catechism and was taken up by William Thompson in 1825, when he published, with Anna Wheeler, An Appeal of One Half the Human Race, Women, Against the Pretensions of the Other Half, Men, to Retain Them in Political, and Thence in Civil and Domestic Slavery: In Reply to Mr. Mill's Celebrated Article on Government.
Mary P. Winsor, Ron Amundson and Staffan Müller-Wille have each argued that in fact the usual suspects ( such as Linnaeus and the Ideal Morphologists ) were very far from being essentialists, and it appears that the so-called " essentialism story " ( or " myth ") in biology is a result of conflating the views expressed by philosophers from Aristotle onwards through to John Stuart Mill and William Whewell in the immediately pre-Darwinian period, using biological examples, with the use of terms in biology like species.

appears and Shakespeare's
A fictionalized version of this Ahenobarbus appears in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra under the name of " Enobarbus "
* 1660 – A woman ( either Margaret Hughes or Anne Marshall ) appears on an English public stage for the first time, in the role of Desdemona in a production of Shakespeare's play Othello.
In Shakespeare's Pericles, Prince of Tyre Diana appears to Pericles in a vision, telling him to go to her temple and tell his story to her followers.
Shakespeare's Henry IV plays and Henry V adapted and developed the material in an earlier play called the Famous Victories of Henry V, in which Sir John " Jockey " Oldcastle appears as a dissolute companion of the young Henry.
Judging by the number of reprints, Hamlet appears to have been Shakespeare's fourth most popular play during his lifetime — only Henry IV Part 1, Richard III and Pericles eclipsed it.
It may be that the events of 1054 are responsible for the idea, which appears in Shakespeare's play, that Malcolm III was put in power by the English.
Although Shakespeare's Macbeth presents Malcolm as a grown man and his father as an old one, it appears that Duncan was still young in 1040, and Malcolm and his brother Donalbane ( Domnall Bán ) were children.
The duo appears on stage here when they are off-stage in Shakespeare's play, with the exception of a few short scenes in which the dramatic events of both plays coincide.
Anne appears in three scenes in William Shakespeare's Richard III, in the early scenes when Richard persuades her to marry him, in one brief scene just before Richard's coronation, and towards the end of the play as a ghost.
In Shakespeare's Macbeth, the Porter who appears in Act II, Scene 3, is also a type of " comic relief " drunk who serves to temporarily lighten the mood of the play right after a heinous regicide has taken place.
One prototype for this version of the town drunk is supplied by Shakespeare's Falstaff, who appears in both parts of Henry IV and in The Merry Wives of Windsor.
The moon was later named after the Puck who appears in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, a little sprite who travels around the globe at night with the fairies.
Discovered by William Herschel in 1787, Oberon is named after the mythical king of the fairies who appears as a character in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Shakespeare's play appears to have played a minor role in the events surrounding the final downfall of Essex.
* William appears ( named only as the Earl of Pembroke ) in William Shakespeare's historical play King John.
It was named after the Trojan daughter of Calchas, a tragic heroine who appears in William Shakespeare's play Troilus and Cressida ( as well as in tales by Geoffrey Chaucer and others ).
Ceres appears as a character in William Shakespeare's play The Tempest ( 1611 ).
The " Pyramus and Thisbe " plot appears twice in Shakespeare's works.
* Iris appears as a character in William Shakespeare's play The Tempest ( 1611 ).
Charles appears in Shakespeare's play Henry V as the " Duke of Orléans ".
Unlike the " King Duncan " of Shakespeare's Macbeth, the historical Duncan appears to have been a young man.
Juliet balconies are named after Shakespeare's Juliet, who, in traditional stagings of the play Romeo and Juliet, is courted by Romeo while she is on her balcony — though in fact the play itself, as written, makes no mention of a balcony, but only of a window at which Juliet appears.
One of the most famous uses of a balcony is in traditional stagings of the scene that has come to be known as the " balcony scene " in William Shakespeare's tragedy, Romeo and Juliet ( though in fact the scene makes no mention of a balcony, but only of a window at which Juliet appears ).

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