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foundation and charter
His academic reputation spread so quickly that on the foundation in 1571 of Jesus College, Oxford he was named in the charter as one of the founding scholars " without his privity " ( Isaacson, 1650 ); his connection with the college seems to have been purely notional, however.
Its foundation dates from 1144 when Alphonse Jourdain, count of Toulouse, granted it a liberal charter.
* The foundation of Oriel College, Oxford, the University of Oxford's fifth oldest college, is confirmed by royal charter.
* June 15 – The city of Bilbao receives a royal foundation charter.
A royal charter of foundation was issued on 12 May 1364, and a simultaneous document was issued by the City Council granting privileges to the Studium Generale.
On the September 29, 1621, a charter for the foundation of a New World Scottish colony was granted by James VI of Scotland to Sir William Alexander.
In the decades after its foundation the abbey was the recipient of considerable endowments, as seen from the dedication of 26 altars donated by individual benefactors and guilds and it was an important centre of pilgrimage after Dunfermline became a centre for the cult of St Margaret ( Malcolm's wife and David's mother ), from whom the monastery later claimed foundation and for which an earlier foundation charter was fabricated.
The foundation of the minster at Pershore is alluded to in a spurious charter of King Æthelred of Mercia ( r. 675-704 ).
Historian H. P. R. Finberg suggests that the foundation charter may have been drafted in the 9th century, based on some authentic material.
Oswald's foundation of a monastery at Pershore is not stated explicitly in the charter, but the Worcester chronicle Cronica de Anglia, written c. 1150, reports it under the annal for 683, and John Leland, consulting the now lost Annals of Pershore, places the event around 689.
The monks claimed that Roger's body, along with those of his family and successors, was due to them as part of the foundation charter of the priory ( as was common practice at the time ).
The foundation charter named a Principal ( David Lewis ), eight Fellows, eight Scholars, and eight Commissioners to draw up the statutes for the college.
De Brome's foundation was confirmed in a charter of 21 January 1326, in which the Crown, represented by the Lord Chancellor, was to exercise the rights of Visitor ; a further charter drawn up in May of that year gave the rights of Visitor to Henry Burghersh, Bishop of Lincoln, Oxford at that time being part of the diocese of Lincoln.
The foundation charter specified that the college should " make provision for those who intend to serve as missionaries overseas and ... educate the sons of clergymen ".
Walter's gratitude towards his aunt and uncle is shown in the foundation charter of Walter's monastery in Dereham, where he asks the foundation to pray for the " souls of Ranulf Glanvill and Bertha his wife, who nourished us ".
The term minster is first found in royal foundation charters of the 7th century ; and, although it corresponds to the Latin monasterium or monastery, it then designated any settlement of clergy living a communal life and endowed by charter with the obligation of maintaining the daily office of prayer.
When ordered to produce the foundation charter of his abbey the abbot refused, apparently because that document would be fatal to his case, and instead played a winning card.
In 1387 Richard II gave a charter for the foundation of the gild of St Mary and St John the Baptist ; this gild functioned as the local government, until its dissolution by Edward VI, who incorporated the town in 1548.
The most important service Linacre conferred upon his own profession and science was the foundation by royal charter of the College of Physicians in London, and he was the first president of the new college, which he further aided by bequeathing to it his own house and library.
Chelmsford is also home to part of the Anglia Ruskin University ( formerly called Anglia Polytechnic ) and to the grammar schools of Chelmsford County High School and King Edward VI Grammar School, founded in 1551 by charter of King Edward VI on the site of an earlier educational foundation ( although evidence suggests it could have been around as early as 1292 ).

foundation and was
That development, in turn, formed the foundation of still more significant expansions in later years -- in gear cutting, in circular graduating, in index drilling, and in many other fields where accuracy was a paramount requirement.
The gruesome humor of the Nazis was not forgotten -- the gas chamber with a sign on it with the name of a Jewish foundation and bearing a copper Star of David -- nor the gratuitous sadism of SS officers.
Similarly in St Peter: " Christ .. Who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you " ( 1 Peter 1: 20 ), and " But the end of all things is at hand " ( 1 Peter 4: 7 ).
The legend connected with its foundation is given by Peter Damiani in his Life of St Odilo: a pilgrim returning from the Holy Land was cast by a storm on a desolate island.
The rule, as was inevitable, was subject to frequent violations ; but it was not until the foundation of the Cluniac Order that the idea of a supreme abbot, exercising jurisdiction over all the houses of an order, was definitely recognized.
Agrarianism claimed agriculture was the source of all wealth and called for the wide distribution of land as the foundation of democracy and freedom.
Classical Arminianism ( sometimes titled Reformed Arminianism or Reformation Arminianism ) is the theological system that was presented by Jacobus Arminius and maintained by some of the Remonstrants ; its influence serves as the foundation for all Arminian systems.
The death of André-Marie Ampère occurred decades before his new science was canonized as the foundation stone for the modern science of electromagnetism.
It was not uncommon for the Merovingian, Carolingian, or later kings to make laymen abbots of monasteries ; the layman would often use the income of the monastery as his own and leave the monks a bare minimum for the necessary expenses of the foundation.
The highlight for them all was a triumphal return to Dunfermline, where Carnegie's mother laid the foundation stone of a Carnegie Library for which he donated the money.
The work was universally applauded, and laid the foundation of his fame.
To accommodate it, the south part of the summit was cleared, made level by adding some 8, 000 two-ton blocks of limestone, a foundation deep at some points, and the rest filled with earth kept in place by the retaining wall.
In mathematics, the axiom of regularity ( also known as the axiom of foundation ) is one of the axioms of Zermelo – Fraenkel set theory and was introduced by.
ASP was an intermediate protocol, built on top of ATP, which in turn was the foundation of AFP.
For Oscar Wilde the contemplation of beauty for beauty's sake was not only the foundation for much of his literary career but was quoted as saying " Aestheticism is a search after the signs of the beautiful.
In 995 Otto III came of age, and Adelaide was free to devote herself exclusively to works of charity, notably the foundation or restoration of religious houses.
It was William's only personal foundation — he was buried before the high altar of the church in 1214.
Its mythical foundation was attributed to Heracles ( on behalf of his fallen friend Abderus ), its historical one to a colony from Klazomenai.

foundation and drawn
Richard of Cirencester ( c. 1335 – c. 1401 ), historical writer, was a member of the Benedictine abbey at Westminster, and his name ( Circestre ) first appears on the chamberlain's list of the monks of that foundation drawn up in the year 1355.
Thus a satisfactory conclusion about the epic ’ s origins cannot be drawn based on the lifespans of historical heroic figures .... Jiangbian pointed out that the foundation for the origin of epic is ethnic folk culture.
The pre-Christian monastic order of the Therapeutae may have drawn inspiration for its ascetic lifestyle from contact with Buddhist monasticism, although the foundation and Scriptures were Jewish.
# The Regula ad Monachos and Regula ad Virgines, drawn up by him for a monastery and a convent of his own foundation ( edited by Holstenius in his Codex Regularum ; and by P. de Cointe in his Annales Ecclesiastici Francorum ).
This frame is put in a hive box with empty drawn frames and foundation at the same location of the old hive.
This is done by any number of slight variations from empty frames in the brood nest, frames of bare foundation in the brood nest or drawn combs in the brood nest, or moving brood combs to the box above to cause more expansion of the brood nest.
Equally, Ptolemy's narrative was drawn upon by later philosophers and astronomers, such as Johannes Kepler who used similar examples and the same order of arguments to explain the physical foundation of some astrological claims.
Over this time, the foundation slowly downsized the concerts that were held in association with the village, as some of the earlier rock concerts had drawn nearly 20, 000 spectators and had completely overwhelmed the area's limited access roads and had caused considerable friction with the surrounding towns.
The principles which inspired its foundation are contained in the Ventotene Manifesto, drawn up in 1941 by Spinelli himself, in collaboration with Ernesto Rossi, Eugenio Colorni and Ursula Hirschmann.
Plans were drawn for 12 to 20 acre ( 49, 000 to 81, 000 m² ) farms in the swamp ( later to be drained and become the foundation for the establishment of Toowoomba ) in the hope of attracting more people to the area to support the land and build up the town.
All misunderstanding between the ordinary and regulars concerning temporal affairs will be averted if, at the founding of a new house, a document be drawn up expressing clearly all that relates to the foundation itself, to the rig ts thence flowing and to the duties connected with it.

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