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Maud and by
The first was probably the cycle A Shropshire Lad set by Arthur Somervell in 1904, who had begun to develop the concept of the English song-cycle in his version of Tennyson's Maud a little previously.
Maud Montgomery took little active interest in the education of her young children other than to have them taught by tutors brought from England.
In 1909 he had a daughter, Anna-Jane, with the writer Amber Reeves, whose parents, William and Maud Pember Reeves, he had met through the Fabian Society ; and in 1914, a son, Anthony West ( 1914 – 1987 ), by the novelist and feminist Rebecca West, twenty-six years his junior.
John had a number of illegitimate children by various mistresses, including nine sons – Richard, Oliver, John, Geoffrey, Henry, Osbert Gifford, Eudes, Bartholomew and probably Philip – and three daughters – Joan, Maud and probably Isabel.
Influenced by the anthropologist Sir James George Frazer's The Golden Bough, several prominent writers and artists were involved in these organizations, including William Butler Yeats, Maud Gonne, Arthur Edward Waite, and Aleister Crowley.
Lady Audley's Secret is involved in a subplot of Betsy and Tacy Go Downtown, the fourth book in the Betsy-Tacy series by Maud Hart Lovelace.
Through Catherine's mother, Maud, she was also related to Henry by her ancestress Joan Wydville ( or Woodville ), sister of Richard Woodville, 1st Earl Rivers, father of King Edward IV consort, Elizabeth Woodville.
At the time of Maud Parr's pregnancy, she was at court attending the Queen, and by necessity the Parr family was living in their home at Blackfriars, London.
Research of documents ( including Maud Parr's Will ) conducted by Susan James and Linda Porter for their biographies on Catherine confirm that she married the 2nd Baron's grandson, also called Edward.
* Jane Shore ( 1915 ): Elizabeth was played by Maud Yates.
His head was sent to Wigmore Castle by Roger de Mortimer, 1st Baron Wigmore as a gift to his wife, Maud.
Territorial claims in Antarctica ( Queen Maud Land and Peter I Island ) are only recognized by Australia, France, New Zealand and the United Kingdom.
The work, like Q. E. D., is informed by Stein's growing involvement with a homosexual community, though it is based on lesbian partners Maud Hunt Squire and Ethel Mars.
It was founded by Henry I in 1121 " for the salvation of my soul, and the souls of King William, my father, and of King William, my brother, and Queen Maud, my wife, and all my ancestors and successors ".
Maud Foster Mill The seven-storeyed Maud Foster Tower Windmill, completed in 1819, by millwrights Norman & Smithson of Kingston upon Hull for Issac and Thomas Reckitt, is currently the tallest operating windmill in England ( 80 ft / 24. 4 metres to the top of the cap ), following extensive restoration during the 1980s and early 1990s and is now a working museum.
Other important portraits by Whistler include those of Thomas Carlyle ( historian, 1873 ), Maud Franklin ( his mistress, 1876 ), Cicely Alexander ( daughter of a London banker, 1873 ), Lady Meux ( socialite, 1882 ), and Théodore Duret ( critic, 1884 ).
* Google Docs Spreadsheet calculating max power transfer efficiencies by Sholto Maud and Dino Cevolatti.
* In The Bird of Shadows and the Sun-Bird, a fairy tale by Maud Margaret Key Statwell, a young girl wishes to become a nightingale.
In Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings he supported the suggestion made by Arlington Mallery that a part of the Piri Reis Map was a depiction of the area of Antarctica known as Queen Maud Land.
* 1917: Julia Ward Howe by Laura E. Richards and Maud Howe Elliott, assisted by Florence Howe Hall
The Maud field, discovered in 1927 by Amerada Petroleum, was the first discovery using reflection seismology.
Maud Green's arms are depicted in plasterwork from about 1592 at Powis Castle, owned by a kinsman of the earls.
During this time, Maud gave birth to a daughter, Dorothy, followed by three more sons, Arthur, Richard and George.

Maud and her
Bernard's mother, Maud, was the daughter of the well-known preacher Frederic William Farrar, and was eighteen years younger than her husband.
His mother, Maud Humphrey, was a commercial illustrator, who received her art training in New York and France, including study with James McNeill Whistler, and who later became artistic director of the fashion magazine The Delineator.
The author Lucy Maud Montgomery drew inspiration from the land during the late Victorian Era for the setting of her classic novel Anne of Green Gables ( 1908 ).
Maud made a series of allegations against her husband with Yeats as her main ' second ' though he did not attend court or travel to France.
According to Foster " when he duly asked Maud to marry him, and was duly refused, his thoughts shifted with surprising speed to her daughter.
When Maud told her that she was going to marry, Iseult cried and told her mother that she hated MacBride.
She was christened there on 23 September 1900, in the local parish church, All Saints, and her godparents included her paternal aunt Lady Maud Bowes-Lyon and cousin Mrs Arthur James.
In her will, dated May 1529, Maud Parr says she is ' indebted to Sir Thomas Borough, knight, for the marriage of my daughter '.
Finally, Alison Pill portrayed her in the 2010 TV miniseries The Pillars of the Earth, an adaptation of Follett's novel, although she is initially known in this as Princess Maud not Empress Matilda.
Her subjects included several ultimately famous personages, and her subjects provided a description of what she observed in her Saturday salons at 27 Rue de Fleurus: " Ada " ( Alice B. Toklas ), " Two Women " ( The Cone Sisters, Claribel Cone and Etta Cone ), Miss Furr and Miss Skeene ( Ethel Mars and Maud Hunt Squire ), " Men " ( Hutchins Hapgood, Peter David Edstrom, Maurice Sterne ), " Matisse " ( 1909, Henri Matisse ), " Picasso " ( 1909, Pablo Picasso ), " Portrait of Mabel Dodge at the Villa Curonia " ( 1911, Mabel Dodge Luhan ), and " Guillaume Apollinaire " ( 1913 ).
On March 2, 1957, the Camden attorney Maud Robinson Crawford ( born 1891 ) disappeared from the house that she shared with her husband, Clyde Falwell Crawford ( 1894 – 1969 ).
At her death, the trustee of her estate and brother, Adrian Honoré, sold her local land holdings to Burks Hamner, Longleaf Pine forest: 1921 Burgert Brothers photo of Temple Terrace pre-development Vance Helm, Maud Fowler, Cody Fowler, and D. Collins Gillett, who formed two development corporations — Temple Terrace Estates, Inc., which developed the golf course and residential areas ; and Temple Terraces, Inc., which developed of orange groves that originally surrounded the city to the west and north, the largest orange grove in the world in the 1920s.
The arms of Maud Green, Lady Parr, mother of Catherine Parr ( the last of the six wives of Henry VIII and stepmother to Elizabeth I ), were of three stags on an azure background, and this became one of the elements of the arms of Catherine Parr on her marriage.

Maud and husband
Gerald of Wales describes Maud as a ' prudent and chaste woman ' who bore her husband three sons William, Giles and Reginald de Braose.
Maud Gonne wrote to Yeats " No I dont like your poem, it isn't worthy of you & above all it isn't worthy of its subject ... As for my husband he has entered eternity by the great door of sacrifice ... so that praying for him I can also ask for his prayers ".
They had three children, the eldest of whom, Maud, brought the earldom of Huntingdon to her second husband, David I of Scotland, and another, Adelise, married the Anglo-Norman noble Raoul III of Tosny.
Queen Maud, together with her husband, Haakon VII of Norway, and their son Olav V of Norway | Crown Prince Olav.
Evidence suggests that by the fall of 1891, Maud was unable to perform with her husband due to injury, morphine addiction, the onset of schizophrenia, or a combination of these ills.
After Maud returned to America, her husband took up with Mrs King ; but the marriage of Cody and Lee was never legally dissolved.
Ealdgyth bore D ' Oyly no male heir so the D ' Oyly estates passed to their daughter Maud or Matilda, and then to her first husband Miles Crispin, who may have been the first castellan of Wallingford Castle.
The Minister for Enterprise and Energy and former Deputy Prime Minister of Sweden, Maud Olofsson, lives in Robertsfors, and when the two met in Sweden, it was revealed that Olofsson's husband is a relative of Granholm's.
He was the first husband of the daughter of Maud de Badlesmere and John de Vere, 7th Earl of Oxford, Lady Margaret de Vere ( died 15 June 1398 ), by whom he had issue.
Maud Angelica Behn ( born 29 April 2003 in Oslo ) is the first child of Princess Märtha Louise of Norway ( born 1971 ) and husband Ari Behn ( born 1972 ), and the eldest grandchild of King Harald V of Norway and Queen Sonja of Norway.
The first recorded Saer de Quincy ( known to historians as " Saer I ") was lord of the manor of Long Buckby in Northamptonshire in the earlier twelfth century, and second husband of Matilda of St Liz, stepdaughter of King David I of Scotland by Maud of Northumbria.
Her first husband died some time after 1111 and Maud next married David, the brother-in-law of Henry I of England, in 1113.
The earldom had been associated with their mother's Mandeville heritage, and the earldom was next granted to the son of their sister Maud and her husband Henry De Bohun instead of their half-brother John.
A number of books on the history of bunads recount the story of how once when on holiday in Hardanger with her Danish husband the British Princess Maud of Wales thought that the Hardanger bunads worn by the women in Hardanger were so beautiful that she had one made for her.
In 1938, two days after Queen Maud ’ s interment, her husband, King Haakon wrote to King George VI and informed him that the time had come to return Appleton House to the British Royal Family.
His widow Maud, who had the manor of Clare and the manor and castle of Usk and other lands for her dower, erected a splendid tomb for her late husband at Tewkesbury.
Upon Queen Eleanor's death in 1290, her husband, King Edward I, granted Maud ’ s marriage to his brother Edmund, Earl of Lancaster on 30 December 1292.
Blanche and Edmund had four children together, one of whom was Henry, who would later become 3rd Earl of Leicester and Maud Chaworth ’ s husband.
Maud is often described as the " Countess of Leicester " or " Countess of Lancaster ", but she never bore the titles as she died in 1322, before her husband received them.
It was bought by a wealthy Californian mining magnate William Bowers Bourn, as a wedding gift for his daughter Maud and her husband Arthur Rose Vincent.

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