Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Alphonse, Count of Poitiers" ¶ 10
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Joan and was
to Joan Sheldon the conditional bequest of ten thousand to be paid to her in the event that she was still in Mrs. Meeker's employ at the time of the latter's death.
Miss Joan Frances Baker, a graduate of SMU, was married Saturday to Elvis Leonard Mason, an honor graduate of Lamar State College of Technology, in the chapel of the First Presbyterian Church of Houston.
Miss Shirley Joan Meredith, a former student of North Texas State University, was married Saturday to Larry W. Mills, who has attended Arlington State College.
allied to them was Gerry, devoting much time to swaying her father, and Joan dismissed all thought of the project and William was unwilling to interfere further.
In the 1940s, Joan appeared on-stage in an Agatha Christie play, Appointment with Death, which was seen by Christie who wrote in a note to her, " I hope one day you will play my dear Miss Marple ".
Originally called Rijndael, the cipher was developed by two Belgian cryptographers, Joan Daemen and Vincent Rijmen, who submitted to the AES selection process.
According to fellow folk singer Joan Baez, it was one of the most requested songs from her audiences, but she never realized its origin as a hymn ; by the time she was singing it in the 1960s she said it had " developed a life of its own ".
Joan of England, ( 22 July 1210 – 4 March 1238 ), was the eldest legitimate daughter and third child of John of England and Isabella of Angoulême.
Joan was 11.
Joan died in Essex in 1238, and was buried at Tarant Crawford Abbey in Dorset.
But her paternity was questioned, as rumour said the king was impotent and the queen, Joan of Portugal, had an amorous affair with a nobleman named Beltrán de La Cueva.
This marriage was an attempt to inherit the throne of Castile as Joan was the sole daughter of Henry IV.
Joan II and Louis III again took possession of the realm, although the true power was in the hands of Gianni Caracciolo.
It stipulated that a brother of King Louis was to marry Joan of Toulouse, daughter of Raymond VII of Toulouse, and so in 1237 Alphonse married her.
The title of Baron Abergavenny, in the Nevill family, dates from Edward Nevill, 3rd Baron Bergavenny ( d. 1476 ), who was the youngest son of Ralph de Neville, 1st Earl of Westmorland by his second wife Joan Beaufort, daughter of John of Gaunt, first Duke of Lancaster.
On the other hand Liberace was " cut to the quick " over Loverboynik, according to Capp, and even threatened legal action — as would Joan Baez later, over " Joanie Phoanie " in 1967.
The 1960 Hollywood film version of the story, Esther and the King, was directed by Raoul Walsh and starred Joan Collins and Richard Egan.
In 1942, Chaplin had a brief affair with Joan Barry, whom he was considering for a starring role in a proposed film.
Joan Baez, who was also of Mexican-American descent, included Hispanic themes in some of her protest folk songs.
Gerald Vaughan, a government minister, tried to halve government funding for the Citizens Advice Bureau, apparently because Joan Ruddock, CND's chair, was employed part-time at his local bureau.

Joan and only
Besides its literary qualities, this poem is important to historians because it is the only record of Joan of Arc outside the documents of her trial.
They released only one album, 1979's ( GI ) ( produced by Joan Jett ) and were featured the following year in Penelope Spheeris ' documentary film The Decline of Western Civilization, which chronicled the Los Angeles punk movement.
As well as promising a large sum of money, the ailing William agreed to his elder daughters marrying English nobles and, when the treaty was renewed in 1212, John apparently gained the hand of William's only surviving legitimate son, and heir, Alexander, for his eldest daughter, Joan.
In 1969 Joan Garrity, identifying herself only as " J.
It was three squares containing the letters " FBC " standing for " Fox Broadcasting Company "; however that logo only lasted for six months and was primarily featured at the beginning of The Late Show with Joan Rivers.
She was the youngest surviving child and only surviving daughter of Philip IV of France and Joan I of Navarre.
In the 1939 movie The Women, Joan Crawford could only allude to the word: " And by the way, there's a name for you ladies, but it isn't used in high society-outside of a kennel.
Her two albums of live material, Joan Baez in Concert, Part 1 and its second counterpart, were unique in that, unlike most live albums, they contained only new songs, rather than established favorites.
In 1994, at the age of 60, she launched her only exercise video, titled Joan Collins Personal Workout.
) However, Joan and Eunice decide that this possible explanation is irrelevant, and near the end of the book, a third personality, that of Joan's new husband, joins them by means that can only be explained via delusion, religion or mysticism, not science.
The film was Hitchcock's second Hollywood production since leaving the United Kingdom in 1939 ( the first was Rebecca ) and had an unusually large number of writers: Robert Benchley, Charles Bennett, Harold Clurman, Joan Harrison, Ben Hecht, James Hilton, John Howard Lawson, John Lee Mahin, Richard Maibaum, and Budd Schulberg, with Bennett, Benchley, Harrison, and Hilton the only writers credited in the finished film.
In 1928, just 20 years old, she married her uncle Joan Gurguí, 14 years her senior, and in 1929 she had her only child, Jordi.
Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmorland ( c. 1379 – 13 November 1440 ) was the third or fourth child ( and only daughter ) of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster and his mistress, later wife, Katherine Swynford ; and, in her widowhood, a powerful landowner in the North of England.
The city's inhabitants have continued to remain faithful and grateful to her to this day, calling her " la pucelle d ' Orléans " ( the maid of Orléans ), offering her a middle-class house in the city, and contributing to her ransom when she was taken prisoner ( though this ransom was sequestered by Charles VII and Joan was only 19 when she was burned at the stake on 30 May 1431 in the city of Rouen ).
Since his father was first cousin to King Philip VI of France and his mother Joan II of Navarre was the only child of King Louis X, Charles of Navarre was ' born of the fleur de lys on both sides ', as he liked to point out, but he succeeded to a shrunken inheritance as far as his French lands were concerned.
Philip went to great lengths not only to endow Joan with lands and money but to try to ensure that these gifts were irrevocable in the event of his early death.
Edmund was executed after Edward II's deposition, and Joan's mother, along with her children, was placed under house arrest in Arundel Castle when Joan was only two years old.
As potential cinemagoers had been associating Cain with hard-boiled crime fiction only, this trick — exploited in advertisements and trailers — in combination with the casting of then Hollywood star Joan Crawford in the title role made sure that the film was going to be a box office hit even before it was released.
With Paramount on Parade, True to the Navy, Love Among the Millionaires, and Her Wedding Night, Bow was second at the box-office only to her chum, Joan Crawford, in 1930.
In Protestant post-reformation countries, Tarot cards in particular used images of the legendary Pope Joan, linking in to the mythology of how Joan, disguised as a man, was elected to the papacy and was only supposedly discovered to be a woman when she gave birth.
It also stars Robert Prosky, Lois Chiles, Joan Cusack, and Jack Nicholson ( billed only in the end credits ) as the evening news anchor.
He was thus succeeded by his only legitimate child, a one-year-old daughter named Joan, under the regency of her mother Blanche.
She appeared only sporadically in films after 1950, one of her last roles being that of Joan of Arc in Irwin Allen's critically panned epic The Story of Mankind ( 1957 ).

0.233 seconds.