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Samuel and Pepys
The architect was Samuel Pepys Cockerell.
Early collections of English ballads were made by Samuel Pepys ( 1633 – 1703 ) and in the Roxburghe Ballads collected by Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Mortimer ( 1661 – 1724 ).
* Black-letter Broadside Ballads Of The years 1595-1639 From the Collection of Samuel Pepys
This is mentioned in Samuel Pepys ' diary entry for 19 December 1663.
* 1633 – Samuel Pepys, English naval administrator and man of letters, posthumously famous as a diarist ( d. 1703 )
Among the people who chose to stay were Samuel Pepys, the diarist, and Henry Foe, a saddler who lived in East London.
The famous diarist Samuel Pepys was the Member of Parliament for Harwich.
The English diarist Samuel Pepys makes mention of his " tryangle " several times.
" Samuel Pepys used it in his diary entry of 28 February 1660 " Up in the morning, and had some red herrings to our breakfast, while my boot-heel was a-mending, by the same token the boy left the hole as big as it was before.
Similarly, Samuel Pepys in his diary entry for 15 August 1665 records a dream " that I had my Lady Castlemayne in my arms and was admitted to use all the dalliance I desired with her, and then dreamt that this could not be awake, but that it was only a dream ".
In an 19 April 1667, entry in his Diary, Samuel Pepys called Davenant's MacBeth " one of the best plays for a stage, and variety of dancing and music, that ever I saw.
* 1703 – Samuel Pepys, English naval administrator and civil servant ( b. 1633 )
Curiously, this particular story seems to have been first recorded by Samuel Pepys as early as 1667, long before the French Revolution.
The diarist Samuel Pepys observed a marionette show featuring an early version of the Punch character in Covent Garden in London.
# REDIRECT Samuel Pepys
The writings of Samuel Pepys describe the pub as the heart of England.
Samuel Pepys is also associated with the Prospect of Whitby and the Cock Tavern.
One early purchaser of the first two parts was Samuel Pepys.
Samuel Pepys FRS, MP, JP, (; 23 February 1633 – 26 May 1703 ) was an English naval administrator and Member of Parliament who is now most famous for the diary he kept for a decade while still a relatively young man.
Samuel Pepys was the fifth in a line of eleven children, but child mortality was high and he was soon the oldest survivor.
Samuel Pepys ' bookplate.
A short letter from Samuel Pepys to John Evelyn at the latter's home in Deptford, written by Pepys on 16 October 1665 and referring to ' prisoners ' and ' sick men ' during the Second Dutch War
The system of odd numbered rounds is said to have been originated by Samuel Pepys, Secretary to the Navy in the Restoration, as a way of economising on the use of powder, the rule until that time having been that all guns had to be fired.
This claim was put forth in The Ill-Framed Knight: A Skeptical Inquiry Into the Identity of Sir Thomas Malory, written by the aforementioned William Matthews, a British professor who taught at UCLA ( and is most famous for his transcription of the Diary of Samuel Pepys ).

Samuel and whose
There is plenty more to recommend Gorton, the facts of whose life are given in The Life And Times Of Samuel Gorton, by Adelos Gorton.
Born in New York City, he was the son of Edith Adelson Lerner and Joseph Jay Lerner, whose brother, Samuel Alexander Lerner, was founder and owner of the Lerner Stores, a chain of dress shops.
His mother was Matilda Beatrice DeMille ( née Samuel ), whose parents were both of German Jewish heritage.
Danny and Sylvia discovered that the dentist whose office he had been hired to watch was Sylvia's father, Samuel Fine.
While Jane remained a devout Presbyterian her entire life, Samuel ( whose father, Ezekiel Polk, was a deist ) rejected dogmatic Presbyterianism.
An example of such intellectual catholicity was set by Anatoli himself ; for, in the course of his " Malmad ," he not only cites incidentally allegoric suggestions made to him by Frederick II., but several times — Güdemann has counted seventeen — he offers the exegetic remarks of a certain Christian savant of whose association he speaks most reverently, and whom, furthermore, he names as his second master besides Samuel ibn Tibbon.
According to the Talmud there were also seven women who are counted as prophets whose message bears relevance for all generations: Sarah, Miriam, Devorah, Hannah ( mother of the prophet Samuel ), Abigail ( a wife of King David ), Huldah ( from the time of Jeremiah ), and Esther.
* Samuel Webster's, a former brewer in Yorkshire, England whose brand continues under Heineken ownership
* Samuel Pepys, whose diary is one of the primary historical sources for this period
By 1819, twenty-five camellias had bloomed in England ; that year the first monograph appeared, Samuel Curtis's, A Monograph on the Genus Camellia, whose five handsome folio colored illustrations have usually been removed from the slender text and framed.
Samuel Bernard, who was very rich, was also the father of Madame Dupin, whose grace and intelligence are underlined in her portrait by Nattier.
From 1805 to 1810 settlements developed along such streams as St. Francois River, Doe Run Creek, and Flat River which are familiar to locals today ; by such personages as Squire Eleazer Clay, John Robinson, Isaac and John Burnham, Lemuel Halsted, Samuel Rhoades, Solomon Jones and Mark Dent, many of whose descendants still reside in the county.
' Root was employed by Samuel W. Collins whose Collins and Company was the largest manufacturer of axes in the nineteenth century.
In 1827, Lathrop Minor Taylor established a post for Samuel Hanna and Company, in whose records the name St. Joseph's, Indiana was used.
According to one of several legends, the town was given its name by Colonel Samuel Chapman, whose family owned of land in Southern Maryland, including what would become the areas of La Plata and Port Tobacco.
It was settled in 1624 by Samuel Maverick, whose palisaded trading post is considered the first permanent settlement at Boston Harbor.
Other social leaders who came from Leicester include Charles Adams, military officer and foreign minister, born in town ; Emory Washburn, governor of Massachusetts from 1854 – 1855 ; and Samuel May, a pastor and active abolitionist in the 1860s, whose house was a stop on the Underground Railroad.
When the Ann Arbor Railroad was built through here in about 1872, it was given a station named after Samuel and Mary Weeks, whose home was a gathering place.
An original grantee was General Israel Morey, whose son Samuel Morey discovered a way to separate hydrogen from oxygen in water, making possible the first marine steam engine.
The Friends Meeting, whose first meetings were held at the home of William Biles on Biles Island, found a site for a brick meeting house, built about 1690 in Fallsington on of land that had been donated by Samuel Burges.
Subsequently, in 1783, he worked with Samuel Weiser ( son of Conrad Weiser, the famous Native Americans liaison who died in 1760, and with whose family Derr's own paternal family had been friends ) to layout his combined land tracts, and create Derrstown.
" My Country, ' Tis of Thee ," also known as " America ," is an American patriotic song, whose lyrics were written by Samuel Francis Smith.
He gave the first of his many concerts in the United States in 1948 with Bernac, and met soprano Leontyne Price who sang his chansons, and composer Samuel Barber whose Mélodies passagères were created in Paris by their dedicatees, Bernac and Poulenc, in February 1952.
Notable residents have included Mary Fitton, perhaps the " Dark Lady " of Shakespeare's sonnets, and Samuel " Maggoty " Johnson, a playwright described as the last professional jester in England, whose grave is in the grounds.
The printer Joseph ben Samuel claimed the work was copied by a scribe named Jacob the son of Atyah from an ancient manuscript whose letters could hardly be made out.

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