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nephew and Fausto
This brought him into contact with his young nephew Fausto.
The Inquisition had its eye on the family ; his brother Cornelio Sozzini was imprisoned at Rome ; his brothers Celso Sozzini and Camillo and his nephew Fausto were " reputati Luterani ," suspected of Lutheranism, and Camillo Sozzini had fled from Siena.
He was the son of Michele Veranzio, a Latin poet, and the nephew of Antonio (), archbishop of Esztergom ( 1504 – 1573 ), a diplomat and a civil servant, who was in touch with Erasmus ( 1465 – 1536 ), Philipp Melanchthon ( 1497 – 1560 ), and Nikola Šubić Zrinski ( 1508 – 1566 ), who took Fausto with him during some of his travels through Hungary and in the Republic of Venice.
She was forced to leave the convent at the age of seventeen, when she was discovered to have been a victim of seduction by army officer Fausto D ' Elhuyar, the nephew and son of Juan José and Fausto de Elhuyar y de Suvisa, who was one of the co-discoverers of tungsten.

nephew and published
Near the end of the 17th century, John Phillips, a nephew of poet John Milton, published what is considered by Putnam the worst English translated version.
While Pepys provides an account of the Plague through his diary, Henry Foe's nephew Daniel Defoe published A Journal of the Plague Year, a fictional account of the plague, in 1722, possibly based on Foe's journals.
Germain's nephew Armand-Jacques Lherbette, Marie-Madeline's son, published some of Germain's work after she died ( see Work in Philosophy ).
This was due in part to the efforts of Lherbette, her nephew, who collected her philosophical writings and published them.
After several other publications, some reflecting his interest in and knowledge of continental Europe, Bowdler's last work was an expurgated version of Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, published posthumously in 1826 under the supervision of his nephew and biographer, Thomas Bowdler the Younger.
In 1825 Bowdler's nephew, also called Thomas Bowdler, published his Memoir of the Late John Bowdler, Esq., to Which Is Added, Some Account of the Late Thomas Bowdler, Esq.
A collection of Durkheim's courses on the origins of socialism ( 1896 ), edited and published by his nephew, Marcel Mauss, in 1928.
Jacob Bernoulli is best known for the work Ars Conjectandi ( The Art of Conjecture ), published eight years after his death in 1713 by his nephew Nicholas.
In 1789, Antoine Laurent de Jussieu, nephew of Bernard de Jussieu, published that classification scheme.
Czerny maintained a relationship with Beethoven throughout his life, giving piano lessons to Beethoven's beloved nephew Carl, and proofreading many of Beethoven's works before they were published.
But as James Croft, who in 1825 first published the poems Cowper addressed to Theodora, wrote, " her father, from an idea that the union of persons so nearly related was improper, refused to accede to the wishes of his daughter and nephew.
His Commentarius de Capellorum gente, giving an account of the Cappel family to which he belonged, was published by his nephew James Cappel ( 1639 – 1722 ), who, at the age of eighteen, became professor of Hebrew at Saumur, but, on the revocation of the edict of Nantes, fled to England.
He was the son ( or nephew ) of the engraver George Bickham the Elder ( 1684 – 1758 ), who published the Universal Penman ( 1733 – 1741 ).
The first edition of Massillon's complete works was published by his nephew, also an Oratorian ( Paris, 1745 – 1748 ), and upon this, in the absence of manuscripts, succeeding reprints were based.
His Griechische Bilderchroniken was published after his death, by his nephew Adolf Michaelis, who has written an exhaustive biography in Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, xiii ..
Staley's mother owns the last known photo of Staley, taken on February 14, 2002, which features him holding his newborn nephew, Oscar, although the photo has never been published.
Twelve plays constitute the third part of his dramatic works which was published ( before the second ) in 1634, supposedly edited by the writer's nephew, " Francisco Lucas de Ávila ", possibly a cover identity for himself.
They were published by his nephew William Sharpe in 1859 as Recollections by Samuel Rogers ; Reminiscences and Table-Talk of Samuel Rogers, Banker, Poet, and Patron of the Arts, 1763 – 1855 ( 1903 ), by GH Powell, is an amalgamation of these two authorities.
Evidently Andrea Gabrieli was reluctant to publish much of his own music, and his nephew Giovanni Gabrieli published much of it after his uncle's death.
Unwin's son Rayner S. Unwin and nephew Philip helped run the company, which published the works of Bertrand Russell, Arthur Waley, Roald Dahl and Thor Heyerdal and became well known for publishing the popular children's fantasy novel The Hobbit written by Oxford University professor J. R. R. Tolkien in 1937 and his The Lord of the Rings trilogy of high fantasy in 1954-1955.
In 1957 his nephew Seamus de Burca ( or Jimmy Bourke son of Kearney's sister, Margaret ) published a biography of Kearney, The Soldier ’ s Song: The Story of Peadar Ó Cearnaigh.
When Benjamin Wilson retired in 1869 he left his The Gospel Banner to be merged with his nephew Thomas Wilson's Herald of the Coming Kingdom and Bible Instructor, which was renamed in The Restitution in 1871 and published by Thomas Wilson and W. D.
In 1813 Rittenhouse's nephew ( and American Philosophical Society member ) William Barton published a biography, Memoirs of the life of David Rittenhouse.
* Jacob Bernoulli's best known work, Ars Conjectandi ( The Art of Conjecture ), is published posthumously by his nephew.

nephew and own
-- and you fall for a pass by his own nephew!!
File: Kazimierz III sarcophagus figure. jpg | Effigy of Casimir from his own tomb erected by his nephew around 1371
The Cardinal nephew maintained that Clement X, within his own State, might make what rules he pleased.
Laennec often referred to the stethoscope as " the cylinder ," and as he neared death only a few years later, he bequeathed his own stethoscope to his nephew, referring to it as " the greatest legacy of my life.
Eight days later Richard's own nephew Henry II of Champagne was married to the widowed Isabella, although she was carrying Conrad's child.
His nephew, Philip III of France, was devoted to him ; and Pope Martin regarded the rebellion as an affront both to French interests and his own rights as suzerain of the Kingdom.
On his deathbed, in the presence of only two witnesses, his nephew Frederick Barbarossa and the Bishop of Bamberg, he allegedly designated Frederick his successor, rather than his own surviving six-year-old son Frederick.
After the death of her son, Anne effectively adopted Richard's & her nephew, Edward, Earl of Warwick, the nine-year-old son of George of Clarence ( who was also the son of her own sister Isabel ).
He does not realize that the killer is his own nephew, Jacen, who has now taken the Sith name Darth Caedus.
He even took part in the Diet held on 20 September 972, when he defended himself against the charge of nepotism in regard to his nephew Adalbero, whom he had appointed his coadjutor on account of his own illness and desire to retire to a Benedictine abbey.
Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, KG, ( c. 1500 – 22 January 1552 ) was Lord Protector of England during the minority of his nephew King Edward VI ( 1547 – 1553 ), in the period between the death of Henry VIII in 1547 and his own indictment in 1549.
Here, Scooby sends his own nephew to jail.
Lazarus assists Ira in the migration to Tertius ; settles the latter ; and attempts a trans-temporal journey to Earth, circa 1919-1929 ; but mistakenly arrives in 1916, there to insinuate himself into his parents ' family under the name of " Ted Bronson ", whom his grandfather Ira ( resembling " The Old Man " of Heinlein's earlier work The Puppet Masters ) suspects to be an illegitimate nephew or son of his own.
As a result, in inheritance, a man's nephew ( sister's son ) will have priority over his own son.
In 1253, upon being commanded to provide in his own diocese for a papal nephew, he wrote a letter of expostulation and refusal, not to the pope himself but to the commissioner, Master Innocent, through whom he received the mandate.
In 1756 ( when Henry Pelham had died without male issue and it was apparent that the Duke was to have no children of his own ) the Duke was also made Duke of Newcastle-under-Lyne, in the County of Stafford, with remainder to his nephew Henry Clinton, 9th Earl of Lincoln.
Likewise, an uncle without sons of his own was succeeded by his nephew, a son of his sister, even if the sister still lived.
later arrives to take Peter back to his own universe, as May decides that she had made the right choices concerning her nephew.
Basiliscus had in fact raised his own nephew Armatus, who was rumoured to be also the lover of Basiliscus ' wife, to the rank of magister militum, the same that Strabo held.
De Zúñiga regarded it as essential that the Sandovals be unable to gain an influence over the future king ; de Zúñiga first began to develop his own influence over Prince Philip, and then introduced his nephew, Olivares, to the prince, then aged ten ; At first, Philip did not particularly take to Olivares.
Following his death in 1871 his wife inherited the estate and considerably developed it until her own death in 1904 when it was left to her nephew Edward Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax.
That person turns out to be Napoleon III, the nephew of Hornblower's great nemesis and the future President ( and later Emperor in his own right ) of France.
A politique, Bohemond was resolved to engineer the enthusiasm of the crusaders to his own ends ; and when his nephew Tancred left the main army at Heraclea Cybistra, and attempted to establish a footing in Cilicia, the movement may have been already intended as a preparation for Bohemond's eastern principality.
After the assassination of Maio, the royal palace was stormed by two of the king's own relatives: Simon, his illegitimate half-brother, whom he had dispossessed of Taranto early in his reign, and Tancred, his bastard nephew, the count of Lecce.
During the 1970s, his nephew Billy Backus became world's welterweight champion after having a shaky start to his own boxing career, and Basilio declared on the day that Backus became champion, that to him, Billy winning the title was better than when he won it himself.

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