Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Irish Land Acts" ¶ 7
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

John and Bright
First The Life Of John Bright appeared and seven years later Lord Grey Of The Reform Bill.
He was highly influenced in public life by John Bright.
Influenced by his " favorite living hero in public life ", the British liberal, John Bright, Carnegie started his efforts in pursuit of world peace at a young age.
Although Disraeli forged a personal friendship with John Bright, a Lancashire manufacturer and leading Radical, Disraeli was unable to convince Bright to sacrifice principle for political gain.
Disraeli's proposal to extend the tax to Ireland gained him further enemies, and he was also hampered by an unexpected increase in defence expenditure, which was forced on him by Derby and Sir John Pakington ( Secretary of State for War and the Colonies ) ( leading to his celebrated remark to John Bright about the " damned defences ").
The leading Radicals were John Bright and Richard Cobden, who represented the manufacturing towns that had gained representation under the Reform Act.
Writers such as John Bright and Richard Cobden opposed both aristocratic privilege and property, which they saw as an impediment to the development of a class of yeoman farmers.
The Anti-Corn Law League brought together a coalition of liberal and radical groups in support of free trade under the leadership of Richard Cobden and John Bright, who opposed militarism and public expenditure.
* Homicide: Life on the Street ( 1997 ) – Gwen Munch, John Munch's ex-wife, in episode: " All is Bright "
Classical liberals generally opposed colonialism ( as opposed to colonization ) and imperialism, including Adam Smith, Frédéric Bastiat, Richard Cobden, John Bright, Henry Richard, Herbert Spencer, H. R. Fox Bourne, Edward Morel, Josephine Butler, W. J.
Hawks developed the script with Seton Miller for their eighth and final collaboration and the script was by Miller, Kubec Glasmon, John Bright and Niven Busch.
* John Kruth, Bright Moments: The Life & Legacy of Rahsaan Roland Kirk, 2004: ISBN 1-56649-105-3
" Talk Radio " host John Williams, of Chicago's WGN 720 AM, has used " Always Look on the Bright Side of Life " from Life of Brian in a segment of his Friday shows.
* 1889 – John Bright, English statesman ( b. 1811 )
* 1811 – John Bright, British politician ( d. 1889 )
As John Bright, the liberal statesman of the next generation, said, " It was not a good Bill, but it was a great Bill when it passed.
John Bright described a 19th century plot within the leadership of the United Kingdom Liberal Party, directed against the 1866 Reform Bill, in these terms ( see Adullamites ).
The screenplay is based on a never-published novel by two former street thugs — Beer and Blood by John Bright and Kubec Glasmon — who had witnessed some of Al Capone ’ s murderous gang rivalries in Chicago.
Chamberlain was one of the 250, 000, including the Mayor, who marched for Reform in Birmingham on 27 August 1866 ; he recalled that " men poured into the hall, black as they were from the factories ... the people were packed together like herrings " to listen to a speech by John Bright.
When elected, Chamberlain resigned as mayor of Birmingham, and was introduced to the House of Commons by John Bright and Joseph Cowen, an M. P.
# John Bright ( B3 )
In nineteenth century Britain there was a liberal internationalist strand of political thought epitomised by Richard Cobden and John Bright.
After 1848 middle class parliamentary Radicals continued to press for universal franchise, and were joined by some supporters of the Anti-Corn Law League, with John Bright and the Reform League agitating in the country.

John and ',
* John D. Morgan, ' Palae-pharsalus – the Battle and the Town ', The American Journal of Archaeology, Vol.
Trevor Huddleston, Sir Julian Huxley, Edward Hyams, the Bishop of Llandaff Dr Glyn Simon, Doris Lessing, Sir Compton Mackenzie, the Very Rev George McLeod, Miles Malleson, Denis Matthews, Sir Francis Meynell, Henry Moore, John Napper, Ben Nicholson, Sir Herbert Read, Flora Robson, Michael Tippett, the cartoonist ' Vicky ', Professor C. H. Waddington and Barbara Wootton.
* Rignall, John, ed., ' Oxford Reader's Companion to George Eliot ', Oxford University Press, 2000, ISBN 0-19-860099-2
* Rignall, John, ed., ' George Eliot and Europe ', Scolar Press, 1997, ISBN 1-85928-334-9
" John Chadwick, a decipherer of Linear B, remarks "" her name may be connected with hērōs, ἥρως, ' hero ', but that is no help, since it too is etymologically obscure.
He and other Scottish Enlightenment thinkers developed what he called a ' science of man ', which was expressed historically in works by authors including James Burnett, Adam Ferguson, John Millar and William Robertson, all of whom merged a scientific study of how humans behave in ancient and primitive cultures with a strong awareness of the determining forces of modernity.
Once the 14-year-old king had regained control of the capital and then the whole country, Grindcobbe was tried in the Moot Hall ( on the site of the present-day W H Smith stationery shop, where a plaque commemorates the event ) and adjudged a ' traitor ' alongside John Ball (' the mad priest of Kent ', one of the rebel leaders who had escaped from Smithfield, London to Coventry ) and more than a dozen others.
) The John H. Chafee Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor retraces the history of " America's Hardest-Working River ', the Blackstone.
He eventually turned to writing for money in 1925, and by 1931 was selling short stories and serial fiction to American science fiction pulp magazines, most under the pen names of ' John Beynon ' or ' John Beynon Harris ', although he also wrote some detective stories.
* Unveiling of ' Peace & Harmony ', European Peace Monument – Dedicated to John Lennon
In 2004, Film Australia and SBS screened the documentary ' Troubled Minds – The Lithium Revolution ', a 60 minute documentary portraying John Cade's discovery of the use of Lithium in mental illness.
* Kobal, John, ' Gotta Sing, Gotta Dance ', New York, 1970
According to John Iliffe, " The worst crises were in the 1680s, when famine extended from the Senegambian coast to the Upper Nile and ' many sold themselves for slaves, only to get a sustenance ', and especially in 1738 – 56, when West Africa's greatest recorded subsistence crisis, due to drought and locusts, reportedly killed half the population of Timbuktu.
They, and many of the moderates not in overt rebellion, forced King John to agree to a document later known as the ' Articles of the Barons ', to which his Great Seal was attached in the meadow at Runnymede on 15 June 1215.
John Bellenden Ker (? 1765 – 1842 ), for example, wrote four volumes arguing that English nursery rhymes were actually written in ' Low Saxon ', a hypothetical early form of Dutch.
His new enthusiasm for Evangelicalism, his ' Conversion ', his and his move to Olney in 1767 brought him into contact with John Newton.
* ' John Newton, William Cowper and others: the Olney Hymns in context ', in Ian Donnachie and Carmen Lavin ( eds.
* Wolffe, John, ' Olney Hymns ', in Religion, Exploration and Slavery, ( Milton Keynes: The Open University, 2004 ), pp. 15 – 52
', an economic policy package, which, according to Keating ’ s biographer, John Edwards, ‘ appeared to astonish and stun Hawke ’ s cabinet ’.
The constellation is located close to those forming the old constellation of Argo Navis ( the ship Argo ), and in the 19th century astronomer John Herschel suggested renaming Pyxis to ' Malus, the mast ', but the suggestion was not followed.
For example, the absence of the tuple (' John ', ' Spanish ') from a table of language skills cannot necessarily be taken as evidence that John does not speak Spanish.
In 1991, the BBC broadcast a new version of John Barton's ' The War that Never Ends ', which had first been performed on stage in the 1960s.
The Freischoeffen also provided the subject for Berlioz's unfinished opera Les francs-juges, the overture to which provided the signature tune for ' Face to Face ', the well-known early series of British television interviews, conducted by the Rt Hon John Freeman MBE.

0.127 seconds.