Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Bishop Barrow Trust" ¶ 0
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Bishop and Barrow
* Bishop Isaac Barrow founds the Bishop Barrow Trust to establish a university on the Isle of Man ( King William's College ).
The Bishop raised an endowment of £ 500 ( Irish currency ), half being funded by the Barrow Trustees, most of the balance being provided by the Bishop's Douglas relatives, the Murrey family.
* Isaac Barrow ( bishop ) ( 1613 – 1680 ), Bishop of Sodor and Man and of St Asaph ; Governor of the Isle of Man
Founded in 1668 with funds from the Bishop Barrow Trust, it opened in 1833 with 46 boys.
The establishment of the College was funded principally by the Bishop Barrow Trust, originally set up in 1668 to provide education in the Isle of Man.
The shield in the centre of the College's coat of arms is that of Bishop Isaac Barrow.
* Alf Bishop ( footballer born 1902 ), English footballer with Southampton and Barrow
Tommy Bishop ( born in St. Helens, Lancashire ) is an English rugby league footballer of the 1960s, and ' 70s, and coach of the 1970s and ' 80s, playing for Blackpool Borough, Barrow, and St. Helens in the English Rugby Football League Championship and the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks in the New South Wales Rugby League competition in Australia.
* Bishop Barrow Trust

Bishop and Trust
Bishop McTyeire was named chairman of the Board of Trust for life by Vanderbilt as a stipulation of his endowment.
August 9, 1997: The Star-Bulletin publishes the " Broken Trust " essay by five community leaders critical of Bishop Estate trustees.
Nature Reserves managed by the Trust include Bishop Middleham Quarry, Hawthorn Dene and Low Barns, and include a range of important habitats, such as magnesian limestone grasslands, upland hay meadows and coastal denes.
* Bishop: People Don't Trust De Castro
The Bishop, the Board of Management and the Christ College Trust entered an agreement whereby ownership and management of the College passed to the University of Tasmania.
Stepney Historical Trust presented the plaque at a ceremony attended by the Chief Rabbi, the Bishop of Stepney Richard Chartres, Professor Bill Fishman, Councillor Albert lilley and the Retired Boxers Federation.
In February 2009 the Specialist Schools and Academies Trust recognized Bishop Douglass ’ s consistent raising of results by awarding it Most Improved status.
It has since been refurbished and opened to visitors as of October 2000, and is owned by the Bishop Low Trust.
Bishop Middleham Quarry is managed as a Nature Reserve by the Durham Wildlife Trust.
The seven charities were: Oxfam, Christian Aid, War on Want, Catholic Fund for Overseas Development, Save the Children, Bishop Ambrose Reeves Trust and the International Defence and Aid Fund.
Local historical interest is concentrated on the 18th century Bishop of Derry's ruined palace, the Mussenden Temple on the clifftop, and the Black Glen set within the Downhill Estate, which is now owned by the National Trust.
* Essex Police Memorial Trust: Brian ' Bill ' Bishop

Bishop and was
In spite of the armistice negotiated by Amadee two years earlier, the war between Bishop Guillaume of Lausanne and Louis of Savoy was still going on, and although little is known about it, that little proves that it was yet another phase of the struggle against French expansion and was closely interwoven with the larger conflict.
there was much to grok, loose ends to puzzle over and fit into his growing -- all that he had seen and heard and been at the Archangel Foster Tabernacle ( not just cusp when he and Digby had come face to face alone ) why Bishop Senator Boone made him warily uneasy, how Miss Dawn Ardent tasted like a water brother when she was not, the smell of goodness he had incompletely grokked in the jumping up and down and wailing --
Errett Bishop argued that the axiom of choice was constructively acceptable, saying
Ambrose was the Governor of Aemilia-Liguria in northern Italy until 374 when he became the Bishop of Milan.
Ambrose was Bishop of Milan at the time of Augustine's conversion, and is mentioned in Augustine's Confessions.
Constance was a missionary bishopric in newly converted lands, and did not look back on late Roman church history ( unlike the Raetian bishopric of Chur, established 451 ) and Basel, which was an episcopal seat from 740, and which continued the line of Bishops of Augusta Raurica, see Bishop of Basel.
In 1899 he was made Cardinal Bishop of Albano.
Ealdred ( or Aldred ; died 11 September 1069 ) was Abbot of Tavistock, Bishop of Worcester, and Archbishop of York in Anglo-Saxon England.
His mother's chaplain and hagiographer Thurgot was named Bishop of Saint Andrews ( or Cell Rígmonaid ) in 1107, presumably by Alexander's order.
The translation was undertaken at Alfred's command by Werferth, Bishop of Worcester, with the king merely furnishing a preface.
Andrew also went on conspiring with some prelates against his brother, but King Emeric was informed as to Andrew's plans and he personally arrested Bishop Boleszlo of Vác, one of Andrew's main supporters, and he also deprived his brother's followers ( e. g., Palatine Mog ) of their privileges.
Absalon or Axel ( – 21 March 1201 ) was a Danish archbishop and statesman, who was the Bishop of Roskilde from 1158 to 1192 and Archbishop of Lund from 1178 until his death.
By a unique Papal dispensation, Absalon was allowed to simultaneously maintain his post as Bishop of Roskilde.
In 1192, Absalon made his nephew Peder Sunesen his successor as Bishop of Roskilde, while his other nephew Anders Sunesen was named the chancellor of Canute VI.
Saint Adalbert, Czech: ;, ( c. 956 – April 23, 997 ), Czech Roman Catholic saint, a Bishop of Prague and a missionary, was martyred in his efforts to convert the Baltic Prussians.
Ælfheah (, " elf-high "; 954 – 19 April 1012 ), officially remembered by the name Alphege within some churches, and also called Elphege, Alfege, or Godwine, was an Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Winchester, later Archbishop of Canterbury.
Probably due to the influence of Dunstan, the Archbishop of Canterbury ( 959 – 988 ), Ælfheah was elected Bishop of Winchester in 984, and was consecrated on 19 October that year.
Immediately prior to his appointment to Canterbury he was the Bishop of Monmouth in Wales.
The Bishop of Maidstone was previously a second actual suffragan bishop working in the diocese, until it was decided at the diocesan synod of November 2010 that a new bishop will not be appointed.

Bishop and founded
In 1225 – 1226 the Bridge over the Rhine was constructed by Bishop Heinrich von Thun and lesser Basel ( Kleinbasel ) founded as a bridgehead to protect the bridge.
In the aftermath of this battle, Philip Augustus founded between Senlis and the Bishop Mount, Abbey of Victoire-which will be integrated into the domain of the Bishop of Senlis in 1486.
Reference is made within the story to the York Minster, where the climactic wedding takes place, and to the Bishop of Sheffield, although the Diocese of Sheffield was not founded until 1914.
* 1915 – Charles Reed Bishop, American businessman, banker and philanthropist, founded the First Hawaiian Bank ( b. 1822 )
Bishop Albert of Riga ( Albert of Buxhoeveden ) founded the military order of the Livonian Brothers of the Sword (, ) in 1202 ; Pope Innocent III sanctioned the establishment in 1204.
* 1886 – The Anglo-Chinese School, Singapore is founded by Bishop William Oldham.
The characteristics they shared with many Merovingian female saints may be mentioned: Regenulfa of Incourt, a 7th-century virgin in French-speaking Brabant of the ancestral line of the dukes of Brabant fled from a proposal of marriage to live isolated in the forest, where a curative spring sprang forth at her touch ; Ermelindis of Meldert, a 6th-century virgin related to Pepin I, inhabited several isolated villas ; Begga of Andenne, the mother of Pepin II, founded seven churches in Andenne during her widowhood ; the purely legendary " Oda of Amay " was drawn into the Carolingian line by spurious genealogy in her 13th-century vita, which made her the mother of Arnulf, Bishop of Metz, but she has been identified with the historical Saint Chrodoara ; finally, the widely-venerated Gertrude of Nivelles, sister of Begga in the Carolingian ancestry, was abbess of a nunnery established by her mother.
Taking the advice of the first Bishop of Prussia, Christian of Oliva, Konrad founded the crusading Order of Dobrzyń ( or Dobrin ) in 1220.
In 1744 Bishop Francisco Javier de Luna Victoria y Castro established the College of San Ignacio de Loyola and on June 3, 1749 founded La Real y Pontificia Universidad de San Javier.
St. John Fisher College was founded as a men's college in 1948 by the Basilian Fathers and with the aid of Father James E. Kearney, then the Bishop of Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester.
* 1682 – Bishop Gore School, one of the oldest schools in Wales, is founded.
Bishop George Errington founded St Boniface's Catholic College, Plymouth in 1856.
It is the oldest college of the University, having been founded in 1284 by Hugo de Balsham, Bishop of Ely.
* 1284 — Peterhouse, Cambridge founded by Hugo de Balsham, the Bishop of Ely.
* August 12, 1822 – St David's College ( now the University of Wales, Lampeter ) is founded by Bishop Thomas Burgess.
* 1812 – The Bishop James Madison Society is founded at the College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia.
* The Bishop James Madison Society is founded at the College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia.
* December 9 – Bishop's University is founded as Bishop's College by Bishop George Jehoshaphat Mountain in Lennoxville, Quebec, for the education of members of the Church of England.
* August 12 – St David's College ( now the University of Wales, Lampeter ) is founded by Thomas Burgess, Bishop of St David's.
* September 1 – Seton Hall University is founded by Archdiocese of Newark Bishop James Roosevelt Bayley, a cousin of U. S. President Theodore Roosevelt and nephew of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton.
* The Collegium Melitense is founded by Bishop Garagallo.
* February – King's College, Aberdeen, predecessor of the University of Aberdeen in Scotland, is founded on the petition of William Elphinstone, Bishop of Aberdeen.
* Cirencester Grammar School is founded in south-west England by the Bishop of Durham.
* 1284 – Peterhouse, the oldest college at the University of Cambridge, is founded by Hugo de Balsham as The Scholars of the Bishop of Ely.

1.164 seconds.