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Sandys and also
Richard Lovelace's mother was also the daughter of Anne Sandys and the granddaughter of Cicely Wilford and the Most Reverend Dr. Edwin Sandys, an Anglican church leader who successively held the posts of the Bishop of Worcester ( 1559 – 1570 ), Bishop of London ( 1570 – 1576 ), and the Archbishop of York ( 1576 – 1588 ).
He was also the great nephew of both George Sandys ( 2 March 1577 – March 1644 ), an English traveller, colonist and poet ; and of Sir Edwin Sandys ( 9 December 1561 – October 1629 ), an English statesman and one of the founders of the London Company.
See notices in the Academy, 16 March 1907 ( JP Mahaffy ); Classical Review, May 1907 ( JE Sandys ), which contains also a review of Die Rhythmen der asianischen und römischen Kunstprosa.
See also John Edwin Sandys, Hist.
A. Fabricii Commentarius, by his son-in-law, H. S. Reimarus, the well-known editor of Dio Cassius, published at Hamburg, 1737 ; see also C. F. Bähr in Ersch and Gruber's Allgemeine Encyclopaedie, and J. E. Sandys, Hist.
also J. E. Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship i. ( 1906 ).
See also J. E. Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship, ii.
Translations of classical poetry also became more widespread, with the versions of Ovid's Metamorphoses by Arthur Golding ( 1565 – 67 ) and George Sandys ( 1626 ), and Chapman's translations of Homer's Iliad ( 1611 ) and Odyssey ( c. 1615 ), among the outstanding examples.
( 1885 ) also Sandys, Hist.
Aug. Lobeck und K. Lehrs ( 1894 ); also JE Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship ( 1st ed.
Sandys also strongly supported the headright system, for his goal was a permanent colony which would enlarge English territory, relieve the nation's overpopulation, and expand the market for English goods.
A selection from his Essays and Addresses, and a subsequent volume, Life and Letters of Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb ( with critical introduction by A. W. Verrall ) were published by his widow in 1907 ; see also an appreciative notice by J. E. Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship, iii.
William Sandys who between 1636 and 1639 made the Avon ) navigable from Tewkesbury to Stratford-upon-Avon was at the same time also authorised to improve the Teme between Worcester and Ludlow.
* The Washington coat of arms can also be seen in stone in the parish church of St John in Wickhamford, Worcestershire, whose main landowning family, the Sandys family, married into the Washington family.
( 1882 ); see also Wilhelm Nitsche, Der Rhetor M. und die Scholien zu Demosthenes ; JE Sandys, Hist.
A variant of its parent tune " Greensleeves ", the earliest printed version of " I Saw Three Ships " is from the 17th century, possibly Derbyshire, and was also published by William B. Sandys in 1833.

Sandys and worked
Ferrar entered the Parliament of England and worked with Sir Edwin Sandys.
He was part of a faction within the company with Sir Edwin Sandys, who eventually became the Treasurer, and worked tirelessly to support the struggling venture.
The same team of Pat Sandys, Tony Wharmby and Jack Williams worked on the production which again starred John Gielgud and James Warwick.
The pair would have two children: Marion Frances DeVeber, who married shipbuilder Francis Dunn and moved to England, and Leverett Sandys DeVeber, who worked in Toronto for the Bank of Montreal.

Sandys and with
A valkyrie speaks with a raven ( 1862 ) by Anthony Frederick Augustus Sandys
The navigation works on the Avon were originally authorised by an Order in Council and Letters Patent of Charles I in 1635, which named William Sandys as the grantee, with powers to improve both this river and the River Teme.
According to William Hutchinson a commission, had been issued in 1576 or 1577 to examine matters of complaint against him, but had proved ineffectual because the Earl of Huntingdon and Matthew Hutton sided with the dean against the third commissioner, Sandys.
In conjunction with John Edwin Sandys, Nettleship revised and edited Oskar Seyffert's Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, and he contributed to a volume entitled Essays on the Endowment of Research an article on " The Present Relations between Classical Research and Classical Education in England ," in which he pointed out the great value of the professorial lecture in Germany.
Sandys continued as a minister at the Commonwealth Relations Office, later combining it with the Colonies Office, until the Conservative government fell from power in 1964.
Sandys had been connected with the East India Company before 1614, and took an active part in its affairs until 1629.
Sandys is buried in Northbourne Church in Kent with his last wife Katherine, the daughter of Sir Richard Bulkeley of Anglesey.
George Sandys stated that the Sphinx was a harlot ; Balthasar de Monconys interpreted the headdress as a kind of hairnet, while François de La Boullaye-Le Gouz's Sphinx had a rounded hairdo with bulky collar.
It was improved from there to a short distance below Hereford by Sir William Sandys in the early 1660s with locks to enable vessels to pass weirs.
Brian Annesley was an elderly former follower of Queen Elizabeth, a wealthy Kentishman with three daughters: Grace ( married to Sir John Wildgose ), Christian ( the wife of William Sandys, 3rd Baron Sandys ), and the youngest, the unmarried Cordell.
A valkyrie speaks with a raven in a 19th century illustration of the Old Norse poem Hrafnsmál (" raven song ") by Anthony Frederick Augustus Sandys
In the General election of 6 May 2010, Ladyman once again stood as the Labour Party candidate for Thanet South, however he was defeated by Conservative candidate Laura Sandys who took the seat with a majority of over 7, 600.
The manor was anciently in the families of Bussel and Zouche: in 1490 it was granted to Sir Reginald Bray, from whom it descended, by a female heir, to the family of Sandys: in 1729, it was purchased with the manor of Leadbourne, by Lord Viscount Limerick, of a Mr. Legoe, who inherited them from the family of Wigg.
He always wrote with a remarkable smoothness, which marks him, with Edmund Waller and George Sandys, as one of the pioneers of the classic reformation of English verse.
Richard Hooper's edition, with memoir, of The Poetical Works of George Sandys.
But on 4 May he sent the matter to the House of Lords, troublesome timing because ( as Sandys had already argued ) the upper house was preoccupied, with efforts to undermine George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham.
In its current form it is of Cornish origin, and it was first published in Carols Ancient and Modern ( 1823 ) and Gilbert and Sandys Carols ( 1833 ), both of which were edited by William B. Sandys and arranged, edited and with extra lyrics written by Davies Gilbert Hymns and Carols of God.
He was the author of An Introduction to Aristotle's Rhetoric ( 1867 ), a standard work ; The Rhetoric of Aristotle, with a commentary, revised and edited by JE Sandys ( 1877 ); translations of Plato's Gorgias ( 2nd ed., 1884 ) and Phaedo ( revised by H Jackson, 1875 ).

Sandys and new
In 1577, however, he incurred the enmity of Edwin Sandys, the new archbishop of York, by resisting his claim to visit Durham Cathedral.
Edwin Sandys was one of the men instrumental in establishing the first representative assembly in the new world at Jamestown by issuing a new charter calling for its establishment.
Sandys instead turned the church nave into the main body of the new mansion, building additional wings on either side.

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