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Gervase and has
The only other of his works which has been printed, besides a few letters ( in The Historical Works of Gervase of Canterbury, ed.
Another source, Gervase of Canterbury, has the king telling the chapter they could choose their own nominee after six months, while the king secretly sent envoys to Rome to secure de Gray's election.
* Cuthbert Gervase ' Bwana ' Brabazon-Biggar, who has been cheated of a substantial amount of money by Honest Patch Perkins.
However, the military historian Gervase Phillips has defended Scottish tactics, pointing out that Arran moved from his position by the Esk as a rational response to English manouevres by sea and land.
Gervase Phillips has estimated that only about 7 Englishmen and 20 Scots were killed but 1, 200 Scottish prisoners were taken, including Sinclair, the Earls of Cassillis, Glencairn and Maxwell.
The works of Gervase were published in the Rolls Series in 1879 – 1880 under the editorship of Dr. Stubbs, whose introduction has been the groundwork of all subsequent accounts of Gervase.
Gervase of Canterbury says that Ceolnoth was Dean of the see of Canterbury previous to being elected to the archiepiscopal see of Canterbury, but this story has no confirmation in contemporary records.
It has been suggested that, after the resounding defeat of Otto and his English ally John at the Battle of Bouvines ( 1214 ), Gervase was forced to retire to the duchy of Braunschweig, where he became, and died, provost of Ebstorf, and it is apparent that his work was known to the authors of the Ebstorf world map ( ca.

Gervase and been
In addition, a number of individuals are known to have read the text or have been indirectly influenced by it, including: Vussin, Hrabanus Maurus, Hermann of Reichenau, Hugo of St. Victor, Gervase of Melkey, William of Malmesbury, Theoderich of St. Trond, Petrus Diaconus, Albertus Magnus, Filippo Villani, Jean de Montreuil, Petrarch, Boccaccio, Giovanni de Dondi, Domenico di Bandino, Niccolò Acciaioli bequeathed copy to the Basilica of San Lorenzo, Florence, Bernward of Hildesheim, and St. Thomas Aquinas.
Firstly, it was into Henry IIs hands that the manor of West Tilbury Hall was taken, after its tenant in chief, William of Essex, defaulted in the King ’ s service against the Welsh at the battle of Conseyeth in 1163, when Gervase would have been about 10 or 15.
Gervase of Tilbury next found service at the court of William II of Sicily, a move which would have been arranged due to the fact that the Sicilian monarch was himself son in law of Henry II ( he married the Princess Joan, sister to Richard Lionheart and King John ).
George Gervase was born at Bosham, Sussex, in 1569, and seems to have been received into the Catholic Church when he was aged about thirty.

Gervase and with
Ralph Vaughan Williams produced his most famous settings of six songs, the cycle On Wenlock Edge, for string quartet, tenor and piano ( dedicated to Gervase Elwes ) in 1909, and it became very popular after Elwes recorded it with the London String Quartet and Frederick B. Kiddle in 1917.
Reliable accounts of the middle and later parts of John's reign are more limited, with Gervase of Canterbury and Ralph of Coggeshall writing the main accounts ; neither of them were positive about John's performance as king.
This transformation is often associated with the appearance of the full moon, as popularly noted by the medieval chronicler Gervase of Tilbury, and perhaps in earlier times among the ancient Greeks through the writings of Petronius.
* In Maryland, the Jesuits Andrew White, John Altham Gravenor, and Thomas Gervase arrived with Lord Leonard Calvert on March 25, 1634, and in that year established an institution of higher learning at St. Mary's which later became known as Georgetown University, North America's oldest university.
A 12th-century writer, Gervase of Tilbury, wrote in his Latin geography that " Poland is bordered in one side with Russia, which is also called Ruthenia, as you may see from the following phrase of Lucan …" The original Latin text: Polonia in uno sui capite contingit Russiam, quae et Ruthenia, de qua Lucanus: Solvuntur flavi longa statione Rutheni.
In France, Saint Medard ( 8 June ), Urban of Langres, and Saint Gervase and Saint Protais ( 19 June ) are credited with an influence on the weather almost identical with that attributed to St Swithun in England.
" She had Sir William Wade, the honest Lord Lieutenant of the Tower, removed to make way for a new Lieutenant, Sir Gervase Helwys ; and a gaoler, of whom it was ominously said that he was " a man well acquainted with the power of drugs ," was set to attend on Overbury.
With the Melos Ensemble he recorded chamber music for both woodwinds and strings, such as Ravel's Introduction and Allegro along with Osian Ellis ( harp ), Gervase de Peyer ( clarinet ), Emanuel Hurwitz and Ivor McMahon ( violin ), Cecil Aronowitz ( viola ) and Terence Weil ( cello ).
In 1225 Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall, swapped the land of Merthen ( originally part of the manor of Winnianton ) with Gervase de Tintagel for Tintagel Castle.
Little is known of his life beyond these small details, and disparaging references by Ben Jonson in 1618 / 19, describing him, ( with Dekker and Edward Sharpham ) as a “ rogue ” and ( with Thomas Middleton and Gervase Markham ) as a “ base fellow ”.
Trials in this hall have included those of Anne Askew ( Protestant martyr ), Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, Sir Nicholas Throckmorton, Lady Jane Grey, Guildford Dudley, Thomas Cranmer, Henry Peckham, John Daniel, John Felton ( Catholic ), Roderigo Lopez, Henry Garnet ( in connection with the Gunpowder Plot ), Sir Gervase Helwys ( in connection with the Overbury plot ) and it contains memorials to Pitt the Elder, Pitt the Younger, Admiral Lord Nelson, the Duke of Wellington, William Beckford, and Winston Churchill.
Clipped box met with resistance from garden patrons for its " naughtie smell " as the herbalist Gervase Markham described it.
The revision team was overseen by Baker and led by Luis Villa with key support from Gervase Markham and Harvey Anderson.
* William Sampson ( playwright ), collaborated with Gervase Markham
His first major composition, the Clarinet Concerto, was performed at the Cheltenham Festival of 1954 by Gervase de Peyer with the Hallé Orchestra and Sir John Barbirolli.
They are followed by such artists as Lawrence Crosse ( died 1724 ), Gervase Spencer ( died 1763 ), Bernard Lens III, Nathaniel Hone and Jeremiah Meyer, the latter two notable in connection with the foundation of the Royal Academy.
In 1168, when concluding an alliance with Frederick Barbarossa, Henry II seized the chief representatives of the Jews and sent them to Normandy, while tallaging the rest 5, 000 marks ( Gervase of Canterbury, ed.
While Guy is overseas, a German doodlebug hits Uncle Peregrine's flat and kills him and Virginia, sparing Virginia and Trimmer's son, Gervase, who is in the country with Guy's sister.
Quilter enjoyed a fruitful collaboration with the tenor Gervase Elwes until the latter's death in 1921.
A hertasi (" Gervase, the Lizard Wizard ," as mentioned in The Oathbound ) is credited with the expansion of the White Winds School of magic.

Gervase and others
This was reinforced when their foremost interpreter and performer, Gervase Elwes ( who had initiated the music festivals at Brigg in Lincolnshire at which Percy Grainger and others had developed their collections of country music ) died in a horrific accident in 1921.
Anne Paxch posted in MERELEWIS that many who never attended any Inklings meetings heard CSL read his unpublished works elsewhere, and that she recalls Gervase Mathew and others discussing passages which later appeared in The Dark Tower.

Gervase and same
Huntingford later noted that he was not alone in this theory, citing Sir Harry Johnston in 1911 and Dr. Gervase Mathew later in 1963 having made the same identification.
The editors of the Oxford Medieval Texts edition of Gervase of Tilbury's Otia Imperialia conclude that although the two Gervases being the same man is an " attractive possibility ", to accept it requires " too many improbable assumptions ".

Gervase and name
It is interesting to note that the fanciful derivation of the name Veronica from the words Vera Icon ( eikon ) " true image " dates back to the " Otia Imperialia " ( iii 25 ) of Gervase of Tilbury ( fl.
Walton was born at Stafford ; the register of his baptism gives his father's name as Gervase.
The arguments for Gervase of Tilbury being the maker of the Ebstorf map are based on the name Gervase, which was an uncommon name in Northern Germany at the time and on some similarities between the world view of the mapmaker and Gervase of Tilbury.

Gervase and .
Gervase and Protase — and is one of the oldest extant bodies of historical personages known outside Egypt.
Gervase Markham edited and commented on the list in his The Gentleman's Academic in 1595.
An early printed recipe for haggis appears in 1615 in “ The English Huswife ” by Gervase Markham.
Other material from Thomas of Elmham, Gervase of Canterbury, and William of Malmesbury, later medieval chroniclers, adds little to Bede's account of Justus ' life.
Stephen probably had three illegitimate sons, Gervase, Ralph and Americ, by his mistress Damette ; Gervase became Abbot of Westminster in 1138, but after his father's death Gervase was removed by Henry in 1157 and died shortly afterwards.
More infrequent visitors included Percy Bates, Charles Leslie Wrenn, Colin Hardie, James Dundas-Grant, John David Arnett, Jon Fromke, John Wain, R. B. McCallum, Gervase Mathew, and C. E. Stevens.
He was taken to the priory of St Gervase at Rouen, where he died on 9 September 1087.
** Gervase Markham, English poet and writer ( d. 1637 )
These include Robert of Torigni's work, Roger of Howden's Gesta Regis Henrici Secundi and Chronica, Ralph Diceto's works, William of Newburgh's Historia Rerum, and Gervase of Canterbury's works.
According to accounts left by the monk Gervase of Canterbury and eyewitness Edward Grim, they placed their weapons under a tree outside the cathedral and hid their mail armour under cloaks before entering to challenge Becket.

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