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Tichborne is a village and civil parish east of Winchester in Hampshire, England.
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Tichborne and is
** The case of the Tichborne Claimant is decided against the claimant Arthur Orton ( who, as a result, is convicted of perjury in 1874 ).
Chidiock ( Charles ) Tichborne ( 1563 – 20 September 1586 ) is remembered as an English conspirator and poet.
The Tichborne family is ancient and believed to have held land at Tichborne from before the Norman Conquest.
Chidiock Tichborne was never called Charles-this is an error that has grown from a misprint in the AQA GCSE English Literature syllabus which has included the Elegy in its early poetry section for several years.
The north aisle is now railed off to form the Tichborne Chapel, with monuments to members of the manorial family.
Tichborne and village
This was followed by an inaugural local village cricket competition, with participating teams from Tichborne, Old Alresford, Ropley and Cheriton, for the annual John Arlott Cup.
Tichborne and Winchester
Chidiock descended from Sir Roger de Tichborne who owned land at Tichborne, near Winchester, in the twelfth century.
Tichborne and Hampshire
Tichborne and England
Some churches still continue these hand outs as traditions in England, such as the Wayfarer's Dole, St Briavels Bread & Cheese Dole and the Tichborne Dole.
Tichborne and .
Notable practitioners of elegiac poetry have included Propertius, Jorge Manrique, Jan Kochanowski, Chidiock Tichborne, Edmund Spenser, Ben Jonson, John Milton, Thomas Gray, Charlotte Turner Smith, William Cullen Bryant, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Evgeny Baratynsky, Alfred Tennyson, Walt Whitman, Louis Gallet, Antonio Machado, Juan Ramón Jiménez, William Butler Yeats, Rainer Maria Rilke, and Virginia Woolf.
* May 11 – The first trial in the case of Tichborne Claimant begins in the London Court of Common Pleas.
This first group included Babington, Ballard, Chidiock Tichborne, Sir Thomas Salisbury, Robert Barnewell, John Savage and Henry Donn.
* Arthur Orton, also known as the Tichborne Claimant, claimed to be the missing heir Sir Roger Tichborne.
The Wandering Heir ( 1875 ), of which he also wrote a version for the stage, was suggested by the Tichborne Case.
Soon after he had begun to make his mark he was briefed against the claimant in the famous Tichborne Case.
The strain, however, of the Tichborne trials had been great, so that his physical health became unequal to the tasks which his zeal for work imposed upon it, and in 1879 his acceptance of a position as a High Court judge in the Queen's Bench division, on the retirement of Mr Justice Mellor, gave him the opportunity of comparative rest.
He was engaged in most of the celebrated trials of his time, including the Overend and Gurney and the Tichborne cases.
Kenealy came to national prominence in 1874 when he acted as leading counsel for the Tichborne Claimant, which became one of the most notorious trials in 19th century British legal history, leading to Kenealy being disbarred from his profession.
He attributed it to Lord Bowen, said to have coined it as junior counsel defending the Tichborne Claimant case in 1871.
Initially the river flows north, through the villages of Cheriton and Tichborne, before joining up with its tributaries the River Arle and the Candover Brook, just below the town of New Alresford.
Chidiock's father Peter appears to be the youngest son of Henry Tichborne ( born circa 1474 ) and Anne Mervin ( or Marvin ) but the records are unclear.
Chidiock's second cousin and contemporary was Sir Benjamin Tichborne who lived at Tichborne Park and was created a Baronet by King James I in 1621.
is and village
The connective system, or network, is tailored to meet the requirements of the objective, and it is therefore not surprising that a military body acting as a single coordinated unit has a different communication network than a factory, a college, or a rural village.
An ivory tablet in the infant's cask recounts the story of his sinful origins and is preserved for the child by the monks of a monastery in the fishing village.
Likewise, and equally fascinating, is the news that such unlikely synonyms as `` pratakku '', `` sweathruna '', and the tongue-twister `` nnuolapertar-it-vuh-karti-birifw- '' all originated in the same village in Bathar-on-Walli Province and are all used to express sentiments concerning British `` imperialism ''.
Miss Marple is an elderly spinster who lives in the village of St. Mary Mead and acts as an amateur detective.
Most of the families moved to the nearby village of Dooagh, which is beside the sea, while some others emigrated.
The school is involved in a study of the prehistoric and historic landscape at Slievemore, incorporating a research excavation at a number of sites within the deserted village of Slievemore.
It was during his early trips to Achill prior to the outbreak of World War I that Henri painted extensively and is reputed to have done portraits of almost all the children in Dooagh village.
There is also the traditional village politics of the Samoa Islands, the " faamatai " and the " faasamoa ", which continues in American Samoa and in independent Samoa, and which interacts across these current boundaries.
The site of the ruins is within the borders of this village, though the expansion of the Limassol tourist area has threatened the ruins: it is speculated that some of the hotels are on top of the Amathus necropolis.
Among the most exciting recent archaeological discoveries in Greece is the recognition that the sanctuary site near the modern village of Kalapodi is not only the site of the oracle of Apollon at Abai but that it was in constant use for cult practices from early Mycenaean times to the Roman period.
A small group of houses on Incline Road mark the beginning of the village and the village boundary is near Cwmavon.
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