Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Cecil B. DeMille" ¶ 11
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Richard and Cromwell
Under the rule of Oliver Cromwell and his son and successor Richard.
The government during 1653 to 1659 is properly called The Protectorate, and took the form of direct personal rule by Oliver Cromwell and, after his death, his son Richard, as Lord Protector.
On the death of Oliver Cromwell in 1658, his son, Richard Cromwell, inherited the title Lord Protector, but internal divisions among the republican party lead to his resignation, the end of the Protectorate and a second period of Commonwealth government by a Council of State and Parliament.
The Commonwealth ( 1649 – 53 ) was founded on the execution of Charles I in 1649, and was followed by the two Protectorates of Oliver Cromwell ( 1653 – 58 ), and his son Richard Cromwell the first ( 1658 – 59 ).
Regular attendees at his famed soirées included Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, Joan Crawford and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart, Claudette Colbert, Marlene Dietrich, Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh, actor Richard Cromwell, Stanley Holloway, Judy Garland, Gene Tierney, Noël Coward, Cole Porter, director James Whale, costume designer Edith Head, and Norma Shearer, especially after the death of her first husband, Irving Thalberg.
The seven hundred Quakers who had been imprisoned under Richard Cromwell were released, though the government remained uncertain about the group's links with other, more violent, movements.
A head of state can be empowered to designate his successor, such as Lord Protector of the Commonwealth Oliver Cromwell, who was succeeded by his son Richard.
After he died in 1658, his son Richard Cromwell succeeded him in the office but he was forced to abdicate within a year.
It was also used on the Commonwealth Jack of Oliver Cromwell, issued in 1649 and on the Protectorate Jack issued in 1658 as well as on the Lord Protector's Standard issued on the succession of Richard Cromwell in 1658.
After Richard Cromwell, who had succeeded his father Oliver as Lord Protector in 1658, was effectively deposed by an officers ' coup in April, 1659, the officers re-summoned the Rump Parliament to sit.
One could bear a little with Oliver Cromwell, though, contrary to his oath of fidelity to Parliament, contrary to his duty to the public ,... But as for Richard Cromwell, his son, who is he?
* 1659 – Richard Cromwell resigns as Lord Protector of England following the restoration of the Long Parliament, beginning a second brief period of the republican government called the Commonwealth of England.
* 1659 – English Restoration: A faction of the British Army removes Richard Cromwell as Lord Protector of the Commonwealth and reinstalls the Rump Parliament.
* 1626 – Richard Cromwell, Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland ( d. 1712 )
* 1658 – Richard Cromwell becomes Lord Protector of England
Thomas Cromwell, at the time the most powerful of the King's advisors, brought forth the Solicitor General, Richard Rich, to testify that More had, in his presence, denied that the King was the legitimate head of the church.
Lilburne, John Wildman and Richard Baxter later thought that Oliver Cromwell and Henry Ireton had applied the term to Lilburne's group during the Putney Debates of late 1647.
* October 4 – Richard Cromwell, Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland ( d. 1712 )
* October 11 – Richard Cromwell, American actor ( b. 1910 )
* September 3 – Oliver Cromwell dies and his son Richard assumes his father's former position as Lord Protector of England, Scotland and Ireland.

Richard and owed
" The historian Richard Southern says that Peckham's disputes with his suffragan bishops were " conducted in an atmosphere of bitterness and perpetual ill-will ", which probably owed something to a " petulant strain in Peckham's character ".
It owed its origins to the decision of a Leinster dynast, Diarmait Mac Murchada ( Diarmuid MacMorrough ), to bring in a Norman knight based in Wales, Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke ( alias ' Strongbow '), to aid him in his battle to regain his throne, after being overthrown by a confederation led by the new Irish High King ( the previous incumbent had protected MacMurrough ).
Richard de Malbis, who owed money to the powerful Jewish merchant Aaron of Lincoln, exploited an accidental house fire to incite a local mob to attack the home and family of a recently deceased Jewish employee of Aaron in York.
The company was founded in 1983 by brothers Richard Garriott and Robert Garriott, their father Owen, and Chuck Bueche because of the trouble they had collecting money owed to Richard for his games released by other companies.
The importance which he owed to his hereditary influence and possessions, and especially to his descent from Edward III, was immensely increased when Richard II publicly acknowledged him as heir presumptive to the crown in 1385.
Most of them claimed that they owed nothing to the proprietors because they received land from Richard Nicolls, Governor of New York.
English speaking colonists in the area were more inclined towards the Calvert proprietorship, albeit Penn's religion and one of these men was the Irish Quaker forefather ( James Nixon, 1731 arrival ) of future President Richard Nixon, while House Minority Leader, and presidential successor, Gerald Ford owed his roots to a forefather not so distant, from Philadelphia, of the Devonshire King family.
Of Longchamp's brothers, Osbert remained a layman, and owed much of his advancement to William ; Stephen served King Richard I on crusade ; Henry, another layman, became a sheriff along with Osbert ; and Robert became a monk.
Krueger was part of the large " Watergate Class " of 1974, many of whom were Democrats who owed their election to the scandal that brought the resignation of President Richard Nixon three months before the election.
Rhydyfelin owed its growth from a rural hamlet to a thriving village in the C19th, due to its geographic location along the Glamorganshire Canal which was used to convey iron from Merthyr Tydfil to the city of Cardiff, and linking to this Dr. Richard Griffiths ' famous canal and tramway which was used to convey coal from the Rhondda Valleys.

Richard and 1930s
During the 1930s other ideas were proposed as non-standard cosmologies to explain Hubble's observations, including the Milne model, the oscillatory Universe ( originally suggested by Friedmann, but advocated by Albert Einstein and Richard Tolman ) and Fritz Zwicky's tired light hypothesis.
* Richard B. Wright's Clara Callan ( 2001 ) uses letters and journal entries to weave the story of a middle-aged woman in the 1930s.
Also notable are the 1995 film version starring Sir Ian McKellen, set in a fictional 1930s fascist England, and Looking for Richard, a 1996 documentary film directed by Al Pacino, who plays the title character as well as himself.
Fleischer, considered Disney's main rival in the 1930s, was also the father of Richard Fleischer, whom Disney would later hire to direct his 1954 film 20, 000 Leagues Under the Sea.
After George Washington Slept Here ( 1940 ), Kaufman and Hart called it quits, although throughout the 1930s, Hart worked both with and without Kaufman on several musicals and revues, including: Face the Music ( 1932 ); As Thousands Cheer ( 1933 ), with songs by Irving Berlin ; Jubilee ( musical ) ( 1935 ), with songs by Cole Porter ; and I'd Rather Be Right ( 1937 ), with songs by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart.
* Richard Whitney, who stole from the New York Stock Exchange Gratuity Fund in the 1930s.
It was discovered by Karl Richard Lepsius in the 19th century and excavated during the 1930s by Gustave Jéquier.
* It serves as the seaside retreat of King Edward in the 1995 version of Richard III, set in a dystopian 1930s Britain.
Gerry Max, in recording the life of one of the community's most famous early members, travel writer Richard Halliburton ( 1900 – 1939 ), has called Laguna a " weary rover's dream ", and in Horizon Chasers offers a sense of Laguna Beach in the 1920s and 1930s.
In the 1920s and 1930s Richard W. Schabacker published several books which continued the work of Charles Dow and William Peter Hamilton in their books Stock Market Theory and Practice and Technical Market Analysis.
These 1930s regulations stayed largely in place until Richard Nixon's Administration.
Guest conducting the BBC SO in the 1930s: from top left, clockwise, Thomas Beecham | Beecham, Serge Koussevitzky | Koussevitzky, Willem Mengelberg | Mengelberg, Richard Strauss, Arturo Toscanini | Toscanini, Bruno Walter | Walter, Anton Webern | Webern, Felix Weingartner | Weingartner
88 and 104, and Richard Strauss ' Ein Heldenleben, all NBC Symphony broadcasts dating from the late 1930s or early 1940s.
In the early 1930s Gurdjieff publicly ridiculed one of his pupils, Alfred Richard Orage.
The boogie-woogie fad lasted from the late 1930s into the early 1950s, and made a major contribution to the development of jump blues and ultimately to rock and roll, epitomized by Little Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis.
Richard Loncraine's 1995 film, starring Ian McKellen, is set in a fictional fascist England in the 1930s, and based on an earlier highly successful stage production.
Between his ballet activities in the 1930s and 1940s, Balanchine choreographed for musical theater with such notables as Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart and Vernon Duke.
Broadway theatre contributed some of the most popular standards of the 1930s, including George and Ira Gershwin's " Summertime " ( 1935 ), Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart's " My Funny Valentine " ( 1937 ) and Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II's " All the Things You Are " ( 1939 ).
One way of describing the divergences was discovered in the 1930s by Ernst Stueckelberg, in the 1940s by Julian Schwinger, Richard Feynman, and Shin ' ichiro Tomonaga, and systematized by Freeman Dyson.
Richard L. Riedel, a Senate press gallery attendant in the 1920s and 1930s, recalled, " When would go into one of his rages, it took little imagination to see fire and smoke rolling out of his mouth like some fierce dragon.
Lectures and other programs were held at Orchestra Hall in the 1920s and 1930s, with speakers including Harry Houdini, Richard E. Byrd, Amelia Earhart, Bertrand Russell and Orson Welles.
In the 1930s, Richard Warren at IBM experimented with optical mark sense systems for test scoring, as documented in US Patents 2, 150, 256 ( filed in 1932, granted in 1939 ) and 2, 010, 653 ( filed in 1933, granted in 1935 ).
Radical Beginnings: Richard Hofstadter and the 1930s ( 1985 )
The television film Goodnight, My Love ( 1972 ) with Richard Boone and two short-lived TV series, Banyon ( 1972 – 73 ) and City of Angels ( 1976 ) were also set in the 1930s and pay tribute to the Sam Spade / Philip Marlowe model.

0.859 seconds.