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later and biographies
Of his later works the moralistic biographies gathered as De casibus virorum illustrium ( 1355 – 74 ) and De mulieribus claris ( 1361 – 1375 ) were most significant.
The later biographies of Caesar by Suetonius and Plutarch are also major sources.
According to biographies preserved by Ibn al-Nadim and the Persian polymath al-Biruni, he allegedly received a revelation as a youth from a spirit, whom he would later call his Twin ( Aramaic Tauma ( תאומא ), from which is also derived the name of the apostle Thomas, the " twin "), his Syzygos ( Greek for " partner ", in the Cologne Mani-Codex ), his Double, his Protective Angel or ' Divine Self '.
The most important group of sources, the biographies contained in the Historia Augusta, claim to be written by a group of authors at the turn of the 4th century, but are in fact written by a single author ( referred to here as " the biographer ") from the later 4th century ( c. 395 ).
Those who were playwrights pure and simple fared far less well ; the biographies of early figures like George Peele and Robert Greene, and later ones like Brome and Philip Massinger, are marked by financial uncertainty, struggle, and poverty.
Horne has since been made the subject of two biographies, Norman Hackforth's Solo for Horne in 1976 and, 30 years later, Barry Johnston's more detailed Round Mr Horne.
Some years later, biographies of heroes of resistance, such as Fridtjof Sælen's Shetlands-Larsen, about Leif Andreas Larsen, and David Armin Howarth's Ni liv.
The Chan Ssu Lun of the Chinese Madhyamika school identifies two different individuals given the name " Shantideva ": the founder of the Avaivartika Sangha in the 6th century, and a later Shantideva who studied at Nalanda in the 8th century who appears to be the source of the Tibetan biographies.
Most now claim that, if this incident happened at all, it occurred later, and the object of Gluck's journeying was not Vienna but Prague, and connected to his studies at the University of Prague, where according to early biographies he began studying logic and mathematics in 1731.
There he met and worked alongside Rule, a former Seattle police officer and aspiring crime writer who would later write one of the definitive Bundy biographies, The Stranger Beside Me.
The marriage between Trujillo and Aminta Ledesma, not mentioned in later official biographies, ended in a divorce in 1925.
The biographies section of the Samguk Sagi describes young Hwarang who distinguished themselves in the struggles against the Gaya confederacy and later Baekje and Goguryeo.
His biographies include studies of Shakespeare, Marlowe, and the Earl of Southampton, the major players in the sonnets, as well as later luminaries of English literature such as Milton, Swift and Matthew Arnold.
Warder, the Jatakas are the precursors to the various legendary biographies of the Buddha, which were composed at later dates.
McCormack gave an account of his background that has been incorporated into later biographies: that he was born to Joseph H. McCormack, a hod carrier, and Ellen ( née O ' Brien ) McCormack, that his parents were both the children of Irish immigrants who had arrived during the Irish potato famine in 1848, and that there were 12 children, of whom three survived to adulthood.
Some scholars thus conclude ( among them Oskar von Hinüber and A. P. Buddhadatta ) that Buddhaghosa was actually born in southern India, and was relocated in later biographies to give him closer ties to the region of the Buddha.
He described Nietzsche's philosophy as " aristocratic radicalism ", a description which delighted Nietzsche, and the idea of " aristocratic radicalism " influenced most of the later works of Brandes and resulted in voluminous biographies Wolfgang Goethe ( 1914 – 15 ), Francois de Voltaire ( 1916 – 17 ), Gaius Julius Cæsar 1918 and Michelangelo ( 1921 ).
He obtained a law degree from La Salle Extension University, though he did not list it on later official biographies.
He still makes use of some recognized sources – Herodian up to 238, and probably Dexippus in the later books, for the entire imperial period the Enmannsche Kaisergeschichte – but the biographies are increasingly tracts of invention in which occasional nuggets of fact are embedded.
In his later years, still a political outcast, he divided his time between writing biographies and histories in London, fox hunting in Shropshire, and farming at Achentoul in Scotland.
3, pp. 31 – 67 ( London, 1830 ) the fount of information of later biographies.
# Mary Killigrew ( 1623 – 1677 ), later wife of Sir John James, she has been confused in other biographies

later and subordinate
great ) was subordinate to the priestly ensi, and was appointed at times of troubles, but by later dynastic times, it was the lugal who had emerged as the preeminent role, having his own " é " (= house ) or " palace ", independent from the temple establishment.
In 351, as a consequence of the difficulty of managing the entire empire alone, Constantius elevated his cousin Constantius Gallus, the eldest surviving son of Constantius ' half-uncle, Julius Constantius, to the subordinate rank of Caesar, but had him executed three years later after receiving scathing reports of his cousin's violent and corrupt nature.
Some sixty years later the town ( at that time a tiny village ) became subordinate to the Hohenzollern state, and when this state was divided, Bayreuth ended up in the county of Kulmbach.
A year later, discontented at being totally subordinate to GM management, Fokker resigned.
It was directly subordinate to the central Russian SFSR authorities rather than the local oblast and later ( after 1978 ) to the Ukrainian SSR administration.
Though originally understood as a subordinate component of the essentially metaphysical concept of Ṛta, Dharma eventually grew to overshadow Ṛta in prominence in later Vedic and early Hindu literature.
But the Irish Parliament was, from the passage of Poyning's law in 1494 until its repeal in 1782, subordinate to the English, and later British, Parliament.
There are three different historical regions: the abbey and the city of Prüm have been directly subordinate to the Holy Roman Emperor in medieval times ; later the free city became the principality of Prüm, occupying large portions in the north.
In 2, Wang Mang issued a list of regulations to the ally-vassal Xiongnu, which the Xiongnu chanyu Nangzhiyasi ( 囊知牙斯 — later shortened to Zhi in response to Wang Mang's request ) obeyed, but Wang Mang's tone of treating Xiongnu as a subordinate state rather than an ally offended Nangzhiyasi, which would foreshadow the eventual breakdown of relationships with the Xiongnu.
An 1890 royal commission led by Lord Hartington ( later the 8th Duke of Devonshire ) criticized the administration of the War Office and recommended the devolution of authority from the commander-in-chief to subordinate military officers.
He then went on to capture the city later in 1204 and set up a kingdom there, subordinate to Baldwin, although the title of " king " was never officially used.
At first as a subordinate to his brother William, who as a Swedish lieutenant-general succeeded to the command, but later as an independent commander, Bernard continued to push his forays over southern Germany ; and with the Swedish General Gustav Horn he made in 1633 a successful invasion into Bavaria, which was defended by the imperialist general count Aldringer.
The CCI and later Amt D were subordinate to the SD and Gestapo only in regards to who was admitted to the camps and who was released.
Its use, from at least the reign of Yekuno Amlak onward, meant that both subordinate officials and tributary rulers, notably the gubernatorial vassals of Gojjam ( who ranked 12th in the states non-dynastic protocol as per 1690 ), Welega, the seaward provinces and later Shewa, received the honorific title of, a word for " king.
* Panzergruppe — one or more Armeekorps subordinate to an infantry army ; later became independent as Panzerarmee
Natick Laboratories became a subordinate element to the Troop Support Command in July 1973 and was redesignated two years later as the U. S. Army Natick Development Center and reassigned to the AMC.
In September 1980, the NRDC was redesignated as the U. S. Army Natick Research & Development Laboratories and three years later as the U. S. Army Natick Research and Development Center, a subordinate element of the U. S. Army Troop Support Command in St. Louis, Missouri.
He later appointed territories to the remaining children, allowing them to rule as subordinate kings and expend their energies in rivalries amongst each other, instead of trying to dethrone him.
A Whig, he became Member of Parliament ( MP ) for Newcastle-under-Lyme in 1823, being returned for Hastings three years later, and holding for a short time a subordinate position in George Canning's ministry.
Three years later, Lucius Cornelius Sulla defeated Mithridates in the First Mithridatic War and in 85 BC reorganized the province into eleven assize districts, each central to a number of smaller, subordinate cities.
Sherman's force of about 100, 000 men was composed of three subordinate armies: the Army of the Tennessee ( Grant's and later Sherman's army of 1862 – 63 ) under Maj. Gen. James B. McPherson ; the Army of the Cumberland under Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas ; and the relatively small Army of the Ohio ( composed of only the XXIII Corps ) under Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield.
However, after the Mongol Invasions of Korea, these rulers remained technically subordinate to the Mongol Empire and later China until King Gojong declared the Korean Empire in 1897 and assumed the title of " Hwangje ," or Emperor ( the Korean rendition of the Chinese " huang di ").
But the Parliament of Ireland was, from the passage of Poynings ' Law ( 1494 ) until its repeal in 1782, subordinate to the Parliament of England, and later Parliament of Great Britain.
This office became known as the First Bishop and later the " Presiding Bishop " when subordinate bishops were called in the Nauvoo period ( 1839 – 1844 ).

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