Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Great and Little Kimble" ¶ 5
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Mawer and Stenton
* Mawer, A. and Stenton, F. M: The Place Names of Buckinghamshire ( Cambridge, 1925 )
In July 1942 Sir Allen Mawer died and Sir Frank Stenton became General Editor.
According to " The place-names of Devon ", by J E B Gover, A Mawer and F M Stenton, volume 1 page 321, the etymology is uncertain.

Mawer and published
Mawer underlines that, at the time Nägeli was writing to the friar from Moravia, Nägeli " must have been preparing his great work entitled A mechanico-physiological theory of organic evolution ( published in 1884, the year of Mendel's death ) in which he proposes the concept of the ' idioplasm ' as the hypothetical transmitter of inherited characters ".

Mawer and book
The writer Simon Mawer, in his book Gregor Mendel: planting the seeds of genetics ( 2006 ), gives us an interesting and detailed account of Nägeli's correspondence with Mendel.
Mawer notes that, in this Nägeli book, there is not a single mention of the work of Gregor Mendel.

Mawer and at
The headquarters of the Society were first at the University of Liverpool where Mawer was Professor of English Language.
In 1929 Professor Mawer was appointed Provost of University College, London and the Society moved there at the end of the year.

Mawer and by
It also appears in The Star of Kazan by Eva Ibbotson, Max Ophüls ' Letter from an Unknown Woman and its Generation X counterpart, Richard Linklater's Before Sunrise, and The Glass Room by Simon Mawer.
Sharon Mawer of Allmusic noted that despite the heavy electronic beats, lead singer Natalie Horler's vocals are never dominated by the music.

Mawer and .
Mathematics ( Sweller, J., Mawer, R. F., & Ward, M. R., 1983 ) and physics ( Chi, Feltovich, & Glaser, 1981 ) are common domains for these studies.
* Sukanen Ship Pioneer Village and Museum-former Victoria-McCabe moved from Mawer.
" ( Mawer 2006, p. 81 )
In 1922 Professor Allen Mawer read a paper to the British Academy about setting up an English place-name survey.
Mawer and Aileen Armstrong acted as General Editors for the annual volumes of county place-name surveys.
The 1881-82 team consited of: John Southby, C. Miller, H. R. Bellamy, John Searby, R. Driffield, H. Shaw, J. H. Barrat ( captain ), H. Robinson, B. Robinson, H. Allington, H. S. Mawer.

Stenton and who
In the main stream of historical thinking is a group of scholars, H.M. Chadwick, R.H. Hodgkin, Sir Frank Stenton et al. who are in varying degrees sceptical of the native traditions of the conquest but who defend the catastrophic type of invasion suggested by them.
The life of Oswald portrays Edward as an unstable young man who, according to Frank Stenton: " had offended many important persons by his intolerable violence of speech and behavior.
The 20th century historian Frank Stenton wrote that " the continuous history of Northumbria, and indeed of England, begins with the reign of Æthelfrith ", and that " he was the real founder of the historic Northumbrian kingdom, and he was remembered as the first great leader who had arisen among the northern Angles.
The name ' Pollock ' is Celtic from Pollog, " people who live by a pool ", and Robert de Steinton ( Stenton in East Lothian ) and his brother Peter appear to have been given land by the FitzAlan family in return for armed support, and perhaps changed their name and abode to Robert de Pollok, and Peter or Petrus de Pollok.

Stenton and published
The debate caught the imagination of the popular press when Professor Smyth's book was published, fuelled by the former University of Kent historian's claim that the Cambridge ASNAC department knew Asser's life was a fake, but that they were happy to keep the myth going in order to avoid discrediting previous eminent historians from their university such as Frank Stenton and Dorothy Whitelock.
His wife, Doris Mary Stenton, wrote a preface to the third edition of Anglo-Saxon England, published after his death, and edited Preparatory to Anglo-Saxon England Being the Collected Papers of Frank Merry Stenton, published in 1970.

Stenton and their
The halls of residence ( MacKinder, Windsor, Stenton, and Wessex ) are all along Whiteknights Road and Upper Redlands Road sides of the campus, with their own vehicular access off those roads and with only pedestrian access to the core of the campus.

Stenton and book
Stenton ( 1971, p. 191 ) describes the book as follows.

Stenton and on
Stenton regarded it as one of the " small class of books which transcend all but the most fundamental conditions of time and place ", and regarded its quality as dependent on Bede's " astonishing power of co-ordinating the fragments of information which came to him through tradition, the relation of friends, or documentary evidence ...
There came two eaorlmen to Britain, Cerdic and Cynric his son, with five ships, to a place called Cerdicesora, on the same day they fought the Welsh ", but the historian F. M. Stenton gave evidence of doubled entries in the Chronicle, which suggests an early 6th century date for the arrival of the ancestor of the Wessex ruling kinship.
R. L. Poole ( Studies in Chronology and History, 1934 ) put forward the theory that Bede began his year in September, and consequently November 655 would actually fall in 654 ; Frank Stenton also dated events accordingly in his Anglo-Saxon England ( 1943 ).< sup > 1 </ sup > Others have accepted Bede's given dates as meaning what they appear to mean, considering Bede's year to have begun on 25 December or 1 January ( see S. Wood, 1983: " Bede's Northumbrian dates again "
* on the northeast by Stenton Avenue ( a county line and city limit, beyond which lie Erdenheim and Wyndmoor, Springfield Township ); and
Frank Stenton argues that Bede began his years on 1 September ; thus the date of Honorius ' death should be considered 30 September 652 in modern reckoning.
This would make the year of death correct according to the eclipse, but still leave a discrepancy on the specific day of death, for which Stenton asserted the length calculations given by Bede were more correct than the actual death date given.
Thus Stenton concluded that Deusdedit died on 28 October 663.
In November 2008, it was announced that a new hall of residence to be constructed on that campus would be named Stenton Hall, in his honour.
This rests largely on a confused passage in Symeon of Durham's Historia Regum Anglorum, and it has more recently been suggested that the interpretation offered by Frank Stentonthat it is based on a textual error and that Óengus and Æthelbald were not associated in any sort of joint overlordship — is the correct one.
Julia Hamilton, daughter of Lt .- Col. Robert Edward Archibald Udney-Hamilton, 11th Lord Belhaven and Stenton and Kathleen Gonville Bromhead, on 9 April 1923.
He was raised to the peerage as Baron Dunedin, of Stenton in the County of Perth, on 9 March 1905.
In 1923, his firm started producing complete radio sets, using a facility on Stenton Avenue, introducing the Model 10 for Christmas that year.

Stenton and could
Frank Stenton describes this omission as " a scholar's dislike of the indefinite "; traditional material that could not be dated or used for the Bede's didactic purposes had no interest for him.

Stenton and have
To Frank Stenton, " Æthelwulf seems to have been a religious and unambitious man, for whom engagement in war and politics was an unwelcome consequence of rank.
Æthelfrith's victory at Chester has been seen as having great strategic importance, as it may have resulted in the separation of the Britons between those in Wales and those to the north ; however, Stenton noted that Bede was mainly concerned with the massacre of the monks and does not indicate that he regarded the battle as a historical " turning-point ".
Sir Frank Stenton considered that " Scuffanhalch ", along with " Costesford " ( Cosford ) and " Stretford ", formed part of a list of places which had once been connected with Medeshamstede ; and the charter purports to have been issued by King Æthelred of Mercia, during much of whose reign the bishop of Mercia was Sexwulf ( or " Saxwulf "), founder and first abbot of Medeshamstede.
Two previous halls of residence ( Childs and Bridges ) have recently closed, and been replaced by two newly built halls ( MacKinder and Stenton ).

0.704 seconds.