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James and Laidlaw
* Laidlaw, James: Riches and Renunciation.
* Dulac, Liliane, Anne Paupert, Christine Reno, and Bernard Ribémont, eds., Desireuse de plus avant enquerre ... Actes du VIe colloque international sur Christine de Pizan ( Paris juillet 2006 ): Volume en hommage à James Laidlaw ( Paris, Éditions Champion, 2008 ) ( Etudes Christinienne ).
* Macdougall, Norman, " L ' Écosse à la fin du XIIIe sieclè: un royaume menacé " in James Laidlaw ( ed.
* 1865-The China Inland Mission is founded by James Hudson Taylor ; James Laidlaw Maxwell plants first viable church in Taiwan.
* James Laidlaw Maxwell ( 1836 1921 ), missionary to Formosa
* James Laidlaw Maxwell, Junior ( 1876 1951 ), his son, English Presbyterian medical missionary to Taiwan and China
In 1790 he began ten years of service to James Laidlaw of Blackhouse in the Yarrow valley.
After consulting with Dr. James Laidlaw Maxwell Sr., a medical doctor serving as a Presbyterian Church of England missionary to southern Formosa ( 1865 ), Mackay arrived at Tamsui, northern Formosa in 1872, which remained his home until his death in 1901.
A Statue of James Laidlaw Maxwell.
James Laidlaw Maxwell Senior ( Pe ̍ h-ōe-jī: Má Ngá-kok ; ; born Scotland, 18 March 1836 ; died March 1921 ) was the first Presbyterian missionary to Taiwan ( Formosa ).
They had two sons, John Preston and James Laidlaw Jnr, both of whom later also became medical missionaries.
* entry of James Laidlaw Maxwell at Mundus
John Preston Maxwell ( 5 December 1871 25 July 1961 ), son of James Laidlaw Maxwell, was a Presbyterian obstetric missionary to China.
John Preston Maxwell was born on 5 December 1871 in Birmingham, where his father Dr James Laidlaw Maxwell, practised medicine.
The Presbyterian Church in Taiwan ( PCT ; ; ) was planted in Taiwan in the 19th century by Dr James Laidlaw Maxwell Snr of the Presbyterian Church of England and Dr George Leslie Mackay of the Presbyterian Church in Canada.
Another example of a non-reciprocal " free " gift is provided by British anthropologist James Laidlaw ( 2000 ).
Needing money to pay Greg's medical bills, James left Montgomery in 1960 to take a job as construction superintendent with Laidlaw Contracting Company, a road-paving company in Mobile, AL.
James Hogg, whose mother was his distant cousin, was employed at Blackhouse for ten years, and formed a lasting friendship with Laidlaw.
Roy James Laidlaw ( born 5 October 1953 ) is a Scottish rugby union footballer.
He was the son of James Laidlaw Maxwell, Senior.

James and Maxwell
The investigations of James Clerk Maxwell ( Phil. Mag., 1856 ; Quart.
The name " curl " was first suggested by James Clerk Maxwell in 1871.
This theory was originally supported by James Clerk Maxwell, who had predicted this force.
# The final piece of the puzzle, thermal transpiration, was theorized by Osborne Reynolds, but first published by James Clerk Maxwell in the last paper before his death in 1879.
Although control systems of various types date back to antiquity, a more formal analysis of the field began with a dynamics analysis of the centrifugal governor, conducted by the physicist James Clerk Maxwell in 1868 entitled On Governors.
In 1874, it was extended by the British physicists James Clerk Maxwell and William Thomson with a set of electromagnetic units.
James Clerk Maxwell played a major role in establishing modern use of dimensional analysis by distinguishing mass, length, and time as fundamental units, while referring to other units as derived.
James Clerk Maxwell first formally postulated electromagnetic waves.
Radio waves were not detected first from a natural source, but were rather produced deliberately an artificially by the German scientist Heinrich Hertz in 1887, using electrical circuits calculated to produce oscillations in the radio frequency range, following recipies suggested by the equations of James Clerk Maxwell.
James Clerk Maxwell and Thomas Huxley were special advisors on science.
Notable developments in this century include the work of Georg Ohm, who in 1827 quantified the relationship between the electric current and potential difference in a conductor, Michael Faraday, the discoverer of electromagnetic induction in 1831, and James Clerk Maxwell, who in 1873 published a unified theory of electricity and magnetism in his treatise Electricity and Magnetism.
James Clerk Maxwell
This unification, which was observed by Michael Faraday, extended by James Clerk Maxwell, and partially reformulated by Oliver Heaviside and Heinrich Hertz, is one of the key accomplishments of 19th century mathematical physics.
A theory of electromagnetism, known as classical electromagnetism, was developed by various physicists over the course of the 19th century, culminating in the work of James Clerk Maxwell, who unified the preceding developments into a single theory and discovered the electromagnetic nature of light.
Electricity and magnetism ( and light ) were definitively linked by James Clerk Maxwell, in particular in his " On Physical Lines of Force " in 1861 and 1862.
Electromagnetic waves were analysed theoretically by James Clerk Maxwell in 1864.
James Clerk Maxwell, the founder of the modern theory of electromagnetism, was born here and educated at the Edinburgh Academy and University of Edinburgh, as was the engineer and telephone pioneer Alexander Graham Bell.
James Clerk Maxwell was the first to obtain this relationship by his completion of Maxwell's equations with the addition of a displacement current term to Ampere's Circuital law.
While the Scottish Enlightenment is traditionally considered to have concluded toward the end of the 18th century, disproportionately large Scottish contributions to British science and letters continued for another 50 years or more, thanks to such figures as the mathematicians and physicists James Clerk Maxwell, Lord Kelvin, and the engineers and inventors James Watt and William Murdoch, whose work was critical to the technological developments of the Industrial Revolution throughout Britain.
* 1831 James Clerk Maxwell, Scottish physicist ( d. 1879 )
While his farming activities continued, in 1764 he went on a geological tour of the north of Scotland with George Maxwell-Clerk, ancestor of the famous James Clerk Maxwell.
) His own scientific research continued and he corresponded with James Clerk Maxwell at Cambridge University.
He was the second Cavendish Professor of Physics at the University of Cambridge ( following James Clerk Maxwell ), from 1879 to 1884.
Meanwhile, James Clerk Maxwell was working on Faraday's lines of force.

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