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Richard and Steigmann-Gall
" The historian Richard Steigmann-Gall quotes from Eckart's book:
* Steigmann-Gall, Richard: The Holy Reich: Nazi Conceptions of Christianity, 1919 – 1945.
Richard Steigmann-Gall, in The Holy Reich: Nazi Conceptions of Christianity, is another historian contending Hitler speaks an overall fake.
The authenticity of the book is controversial and is claimed by some historian such as Wolfgang Hänel to be a fabrication, while others such as Richard Steigmann-Gall, Ian Kershaw and Hugh Trevor-Roper have avoided using it as a reference due to its questionable authenticity.

Richard and says
Richard Zacks in the biography The Pirate Hunter ( 2002 ) says Kidd came from Dundee.
Chandler proposes to Monica, who says yes even though her ex-boyfriend Richard confesses his love for her.
Richard Dawkins has rejected the charge of " fundamentalism ," arguing that critics mistake his " passion "— which he says may match that of evangelical Christians — for an inability to change his mind.
" Historian Richard Ellis ( 1998 ) says that the SDS's search for their own identity " increasingly meant rejecting, even demonizing, liberalism.
Richard Ellmann says that The Importance of Being Earnest touched on many themes Wilde had been building since the 1880s – the languor of aesthetic poses was well established and Wilde takes it as a starting point for the two protagonists.
Critic Richard Lehan says that " Balzac was the bridge between the comic realism of Dickens and the naturalism of Zola.
Legend says that when the one year had passed, Ní Mháille and her followers locked themselves in Rockfleet Castle and Gráinne called out a window to Burke, " Richard Burke, I dismiss you.
Richard Trachsler says thatthe concept of courtly literature is linked to the idea of the existence of courtly texts, texts produced and read by men and women sharing some kind of elaborate culture they all have in common .” He argues that many of the texts that scholars claim to be courtly also include “ uncourtly ” texts, and argues that there is no clear way to determine “ where courtliness ends and uncourtliness starts ” since readers would enjoy texts which were supposed to be entirely courtly without realizing they were also enjoying texts which were uncourtly.
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy says the following about Operationalism stored at http :// plato. stanford. edu / entries / scientific-realism / and written by Richard Boyd:
In his summary of the events of 1483, Commines says quite categorically that Richard was responsible for the murder of the princes, but of course Commines had been present at the meeting of the Estates-General of France in January 1484, when the statement was taken at face value.
Richard North says that the description of a raven flying over the Egyptian army ( glossed as wonn wælceaseg ) may have been directly influenced by the Old Norse concept of Valhalla, the usage of wælcyrge in De laudibus virginitatis may represent a loan or loan-translation of Old Norse valkyrja, but the Cotton Cleopatra A. iii and the Corpus Glossary instances " appear to show an Anglo-Saxon conception of wælcyrge that was independent of contemporary Scandinavian influence ".
Richard North says that " though it is not clear what the poet takes these women to be, their female sex, riding in flight and throwing spears suggest that they were imagined in England as a female being analogous to the later Norse valkyrjur.
" After this, he says, for several seasons the orchestra employed guest conductors, including Victor Herbert, Édouard Colonne, Willem Mengelberg, Fritz Steinbach, Richard Strauss, Felix Weingartner, and Henry Wood.
Thus, Richard says, the real number r will not be included as any r < sub > n </ sub >, because the definition of r does not meet the criteria for being included in the sequence of definitions used to construct the sequence r < sub > n </ sub >.
Dugdale ( 1656 ) says that a window with representations of Leofric and Godiva was placed in Trinity Church, Coventry, about the time of Richard II.
Near the tree, at the right, tradition says the Tory Captain Richard Miller fell from his horse in 1776.
* 1638-Official ban of Christianity in Japan with death penalty ; The Fountain Opened, a posthumous work of the influential Puritan writer Richard Sibbes is published, in which he says that the gospel must continue its journey " til it have gone over the whole world.
" 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 ".
In Paris ( 1899 ), the orchestration owes a debt to Richard Strauss ; its passages of quiet beauty, says Payne, nevertheless lack the deep personal involvement of the later works.
Walter was not a holy man, although he was, as John Gillingham, a historian and biographer of Richard I, says, " one of the most outstanding government ministers in English History ".
It has been rumored that on April 8, 1933, Wyman married Ernest Eugene Wyman ( or Weymann ) ( 1906 – 1970 ), a salesman ; the marriage was mentioned in Dutch, the authorized biography of Ronald Reagan by Edmund Morris, who says that the marriage certificate is on file with the State of California, with the bride giving her name as Jane Fulks, daughter of Richard D. and Emma Reise Fulks.
Richard Saul Wurman says of the term information architect " used in the words architect of foreign policy.
* Richard Butler says that the agreement UN General Secretary Kofi Annan made with the Iraqis has increased Iraqi cooperation with inspectors.
Benjamin Balint says it was the " Contentious Magazine That Transformed the Jewish Left Into the Neoconservative Right " Historian Richard Pells concludes that " no other journal of the past half century has been so consistently influential, or so central to the major debates that have transformed the political and intellectual life of the United States.

Richard and legend
The two young princes were not seen in public after August and there arose subsequently a number of accusations that the boys had been murdered by Richard, giving rise to the legend of the Princes in the Tower.
The legend was made famous in modern times through Richard Wagner's three-act opera Tannhäuser, completed in 1845.
The existence of the lake is disputed by creek geologists Janet Sowers and Christopher Richard, who propose the legend to be a result of misunderstanding of the 1776 writings of Juan Bautista de Anza.
The legend about Merovech's conception was adapted in 1982 by authors Henry Lincoln and Richard Leigh in their book Holy Blood Holy Grail, as the seed of a new idea.
" According to the biographer Richard Beeman, the legend of this speech grew more dramatic over the years.
In music, the German composer Richard Strauss composed a one-act opera about the legend based on accounts by both Ovid and Euripides.
* Cynthia, with certain Sonnets, and the legend of Cassandra, panegyric by Richard Barnfield ( 1574 – 1620 )
The libretto drew on the legend of Myrrha while the music was inspired by Claude Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande ( 1902 ) as well as Richard Strauss ' Elektra ( 1909 ).
* Richard Wagner: Tristan und Isolde based on the legend of Tristan and Iseult ( F )
The old castle has a massive tower, the Schwanenturm high, that is associated in legend with the Knight of the Swan, immortalized in Richard Wagner's Lohengrin.
Obverse legend: ( Richard by the grace of God King of England and France Lord of Ireland and Aquitaine ).
Doherty denies any historical value of the Acts of the Apostles, and refers to works by John Knox, Joseph B. Tyson, J. C. O ' Neill, Burton L. Mack and Richard Pervo in dating Acts into the 2nd century and regarding it as largely based on legend.
Some of the Turpin legend can be sourced directly to Richard Bayes ' The Genuine History of the Life of Richard Turpin ( 1739 ), a mixture of fact and fiction hurriedly put together in the wake of the trial, to satisfy a gullible public.
Together with Richard Lester's offbeat 1976 film Robin and Marian, Robin of Sherwood is one of the most influential treatments of the core Robin Hood legend since The Adventures of Robin Hood, featuring a realistic period setting and introducing the character of a Saracen outlaw.
* Richard Valentine Pitchford ( aka Cardini ), Master Magician and sleight-of-hand legend, was born in Mumbles in 1895.
Local legend has it that after rescuing a Native American Chief's kidnapped daughter, Richard Smith was told that the Chief would grant title to all of the land Smith could encircle in one day-on a bull.
An urban legend had circulated at the time that Richard Sanders ( who had comparable vocal characteristics to Carlisle ) had actually recorded the song.
Possibly the most adept at musical depiction in his program music was the German composer Richard Strauss, whose symphonic poems include Death and Transfiguration ( portraying a dying man and his entry into heaven ), Don Juan ( based on the ancient legend of Don Juan ), Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks ( based on episodes in the career of the legendary German figure Till Eulenspiegel ), Don Quixote ( portraying episodes in the life of Miguel de Cervantes ' character, Don Quixote ), A Hero's Life ( which depicts episodes in the life of an unnamed hero often taken to be Strauss himself ) and Symphonia Domestica ( which portrays episodes in the composer's own married life, including putting the baby to bed ).
A legend of old Chertsey Church " was published by Albert Richard Smith in 1843, and formed a basis for the poem " Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight ".
A local legend in Shropshire, England, concerns the grave of Richard Munslow, who died in 1906, said to be the last sin-eater of the area:
According to legend, the body of King Richard III of England was thrown into the Soar after his death.
Recent speakers include academic Richard Dawkins, former British Prime Minister John Major, former President of Pakistan Pervez Musharraf, comedian Dara Ó Briain, civil rights leader Jesse Jackson, Olympic legend Lord Coe, violinist and songwriter Diana Yukawa, actor Sir Ian McKellen and Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.
Derek Davies, editor during those glory years, and Richard Hughes, the Australian doyen of the Foreign Correspondents Club, were part of the Review legend.

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