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Page "History of Hertfordshire" ¶ 42
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Richard and Wallingford
Richard of Wallingford, a local landowner, who had presented demands to Richard II on behalf of Wat Tyler in London, brought news of this to St Albans and argued with the abbot over the charter.
** Richard of Wallingford, mathematician ( b. 1292 )
On 14 June, the rebels are reputed to have been met by the young king himself, and, led by Richard of Wallingford, to have presented him with a series of demands, including the dismissal of some of his more unpopular ministers and the effective abolition of serfdom.
Richard of Wallingford, abbot from 1297 to 1336 and a mathematician and astronomer, designed a celebrated clock, which was completed by William of Walsham after his death, but apparently destroyed during the reformation.
* John David North ( 2005 ), God's Clockmaker: Richard of Wallingford and the Invention of Time, Continuum International Publishing Group, ISBN 978-1-85285-451-5
Wallingford flourished as a trading centre throughout most of the Middle Ages, and Wallingford Priory produced two of the greatest minds of the age, the mathematician Richard of Wallingford and the chronicler John of Wallingford.
* Richard of Wallingford, mathematician and clockmaker
* Richard of Wallingford, organiser in the Peasants ' Revolt
He had been created a viscount on 4 January 1483, and while still Lord Protector Richard made him Chief Butler and constable of Wallingford Castle.
On Oliver Cromwell's death in 1658, Owen joined the Wallingford House party, and though he denied any share in the deposition of Richard Cromwell, he preferred the idea of a simple republic to that of a protectorate.
Richard of Wallingford, an English abbot of St Albans monastery is credited for reinventing epicyclic gearing for an astronomical clock in the 14th century.
* Richard of Wallingford, United Kingdom
Richard of Wallingford is shown measuring with a pair of compasses in this 14th-century miniature.
Astrology and astronomy | Astrologer-astronomer Richard of Wallingford is shown measuring an equatorium with a pair of compasses in this 14th-century work
Astrologer – astronomer Richard of Wallingford is shown measuring an equatorium with a pair of compasses in this 14th-century work.
( Perhaps confusingly, another man called Richard of Wallingford was one of revolt leader Wat Tyler's principal allies.
The astronomical clock designed by Richard of Wallingford in 1327 and built around 1354, also struck 24 hours.
* Richard of Wallingford
* Richard of Wallingford ( 1292-1336 ) Englishmathematician who made major contributions to astronomy / astrology and horology
* Richard of Wallingford ( late 14th century ) a leader in St Albans of the Peasants ' Revolt of 1381.

Richard and mathematician
* 1883 – Richard von Mises, Austrian mathematician ( d. 1953 )
* 1888 – Richard Courant, German-American mathematician ( d. 1972 )
William Everdell, for example, has argued that modernism began in the 1870s, when metaphorical ( or ontological ) continuity began to yield to the discrete with mathematician Richard Dedekind's ( 1831 – 1916 ) Dedekind cut, and Ludwig Boltzmann's ( 1844 – 1906 ) statistical thermodynamics.
However, the foundation of memetics in full modern incarnation originates in the publication in 1996 of two books by authors outside the academic mainstream: Virus of the Mind: The New Science of the Meme by former Microsoft executive turned motivational speaker and professional poker player, Richard Brodie, and Thought Contagion: How Belief Spreads Through Society by Aaron Lynch, a mathematician and philosopher who worked for many years as an engineer at Fermilab.
* 1831 – Richard Dedekind, German mathematician ( d. 1916 )
* 1951 – Richard D. Gill, English-Dutch mathematician
* February 12 – Richard Dedekind, German mathematician ( b. 1831 )
* October 6 – Richard Dedekind, German mathematician ( d. 1916 )
His most important work in potential theory is summarised in his 1911 book Researches in Potential Theory ( Potentialtheoretische Untersuchungen ), which received the Jablonowski Society award in Leipzig ( 1500 marks ), and the Richard Lieben award from the University of Vienna ( 2000 crowns ) for the most outstanding work in the field of pure and applied mathematics written by any kind of ' Austrian ' mathematician in the previous three years.
The American mathematician Richard Hamming pioneered this field in the 1940s and invented the first error-correcting code in 1950: the Hamming ( 7, 4 ) code.
In 2004, Princeton University mathematician Edward Belbruno and astrophysicist J. Richard Gott III proposed that Theia coalesced at the or Lagrangian point relative to Earth ( in about the same orbit and about 60 ° ahead or behind ), similar to a trojan asteroid.
* Richard R. Weber ( born 1953 ), mathematician
* Richard Balam, mathematician
* Richard Norwood, British mathematician, diver, and surveyor
Jules Richard ( born 12 August 1862 in Blet, Département Cher, died 14 October 1956 in Châteauroux, Département Indre ) was a French mathematician.
In logic, Richard's paradox is a semantical antinomy in set theory and natural language first described by the French mathematician Jules Richard in 1905.
* Richard Dedekind ( 1831 – 1916 ), German mathematician
* Thomas Bayes ( 1702 – 1761 ), mathematician, clergyman, and friend of Richard Price
Richard Hamming, an applied mathematician and a founder of computer science, reflected on and extended Wigner's Unreasonable Effectiveness in 1980, mulling over four " partial explanations " for it.
He includes famous late-talkers such as physicists Albert Einstein, Edward Teller and Richard Feynman ; mathematician Julia Robinson ; and musicians Arthur Rubenstein and Clara Schumann.
* Richard Hamilton ( mathematician ) ( born 1943 ), American mathematician

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