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774 Sentences With "livings"

How to use livings in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "livings" and check conjugation/comparative form for "livings". Mastering all the usages of "livings" from sentence examples published by news publications.

There are not enough people making decent livings in a global economy.
Mr. Cupido lived in an area controlled by the Hard Livings gang.
Mr. Cupido lived in an area controlled by the Hard Livings gang.
They disproportionately affect poor countries, where many eke livings from vulnerable agricultural land.
Top cubers are on the verge of making full-time livings solving puzzles.
Nowadays, most UK sex workers make their livings indoors, either working for agencies or independently.
In mostly agricultural societies, farmers must scratch livings from smaller plots on ever less fertile soils.
Melania, Marla, and Ivana have their gracious livings secured, mob-style, by their silence and invisibility.
It has one of the world's highest real per capita incomes, which adjusts for livings costs.
Many have no land of their own and eke out livings by working on other people's rice paddies.
Sooner or later, most of us have to ask the same question about how we're earning our livings.
Notable names like PewDiePie, Logan Paul, and Jeffree Star have made their livings creating content on the video platform.
Meanwhile, Australia, whose players generally earn their livings in less floodlit leagues, was widely considered a soft opening opponent.
Not so his sons, whose bequests from the painter's estate largely freed them from immediate pressure to make their livings.
Midfielder Koo Ja-cheol plays for F.C. Augsburg in Germany's Bundesliga, where many of Germany's stars make their excellent livings.
The result is a list of startups to watch in 2020 from the people who make their livings watching startups.
The result is an exciting list of startups to watch in 2020 from the people who make their livings watching startups.
I know plenty in power who should have gone home long ago – many of whom still make their livings from decrying the establishment.
Crucially, although these two peoples make their livings in different ways, their languages are closely related and they both live in the rainforest.
There are people from Wall Street, even from Goldman Sachs, that have made honorable livings and served our country well as public servants.
Sure, there are plenty of authors who make decent livings, but it's not like Jonathan Franzen gets mobbed when he walks down the street.
A tech company in the spirit of Airbnb, Uber, or Netflix, it immediately threatened pornographers and sex worker's livings by disrupting traditional revenue streams.
Yet, those who have will sometimes find themselves suddenly thrust back into society, forced to make livings that they might not be prepared to make.
With or without legal-residency or work permits, they often end up making their livings as maids, care-givers, dishwashers, waiters, street vendors, or prostitutes.
Dentists have in some ways benefited from the separation -- largely escaping the corporate consolidation of American medicine, with many making good livings in smaller practices.
As I looked out at my audience, I realized that the room was filled with winners — folks who, from all appearances, earned their livings from intellectual labor.
There are dozens of women (it is mostly women who are gun influencers) making partial or complete livings off Instagram grids full of guns and perfect smiles.
Several of the top Japanese pitchers who make their livings in the United States, including Tanaka and Darvish, declined to participate in this year's World Baseball Classic.
Though he once dreamed of Etsy sellers making their livings selling things they made themselves, he knows now that was never really what happened for the vast majority.
His grandparents were born and raised in Brooklyn and made their livings in standard Jewish ways: One grandpa worked in the "schmatta industry," selling clothes at Alexander's department store.
Newcomers from the French Caribbean often settled in the northern part of the city, with the women often eking out livings as servants, sex workers, street vendors or artists' models.
There's so much money in the movement now that it is propelled by the energy and entrepreneurial vim of the coaches, consultants, writers, and academics who make livings from it.
Do all the bullshit influencer things that even we sometimes know are bullshit, but we've already accepted that this is how it works nowadays, that this is how livings are made.
Before we go on, though, a fact that's little-known to those who aren't hardcore sports fans: Many college basketball refs only earn part-time livings by blowing whistles and calling fouls.
But the move to inhibit the flow of American tourism and investment will certainly have an effect on the Cuban economy — as well as the entrepreneurs making livings in the tourism industry.
Even the Bundesliga, where 13 members of world champion Germany's 23-man squad earn their livings, is dwarfed by the Premier League in terms of the number of players at this year's Euros.
Until then, weed farmers in California had been making middle-class (or, in some cases, much better) livings growing under the vague and erratic protections afforded by the state's ambiguous medical-marijuana laws.
They were not full-on hippies, entry-level at best, but they did what they could to instill in me a healthy distrust of big business and corporate greed despite earning livings off both.
Indeed, they make their livings that way, sucking in thousands of litres of water a day and running it through intricate systems of channels that trap particles of organic matter, which they then digest.
"This is the most unpredictable national election we've had in my lifetime and a lot of people who make their livings reading crystal balls are going to end up eating ground glass," Blackwell said.
Ward and Farmer could identify the rock because they were professional meteorite hunters, members of a small clan of adventurers, most of whom make their livings retrieving specimens for the rarified trade in extraterrestrial mineralogy.
Some of those now singing Winnie's praises make their livings from institutions that might well be shattered if the implications of her political vision were carried to their full conclusion: mining corporations, elite educational institutions.
The financial stability benefits of Orderly Liquidation Authority and livings wills thus far only exist in the minds of regulators — they are untried and unproven in practice, and there is much that could go wrong.
"I know a lot of cities have followed policies that directly seek to attract people of a certain age and people who make their livings a certain way," attorney Aristotle Theresa told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Mad Men's very first scene has Don Draper sitting in a restaurant booth, surrounded by smoke and other "Mad Men" who make their livings selling American dreams as he scribbles pitches for Lucky Strike on a napkin.
The human inhabitants of the area around the Samburu reserve (some of whom have given their tribal name to the place) have traditionally made their livings as pastoralists, driving herds of cattle from grazing place to grazing place.
If you look at the numbers on the sort of people who make their money driving in some way, shape or form, I believe that settles out at around three in 10 men earn their livings behind the wheel.
A steady stream of the stuff raining down from the surface would affect everything along the way, especially filter-feeding animals such as sponges and krill, which make their livings by extracting small particles of food floating in the water.
Menulog, a food delivery app I didn't care about five seconds ago, kept the tradition alive this year by recruiting Goldblum as their spokesman, inexplicably appearing in people's livings rooms to shill out for what's likely his jazz piano fund.
Education, we've been told, is an investment in our "human capital"—in the knowledge and skills that will allow us to earn good livings for ourselves, in the same way our employers might invest in physical capital like computers or factory tools.
The collection's other stories are no less bleak, about people eking out hardpan livings on failing ranches, in defeated families, in tough cowboy bars — or in the case of 'The Mud Below,' on the backs of mean bulls on the rodeo circuit.
The film takes its name from a Muddy Waters song, but he is mentioned only in passing, a onetime colleague of several musicians featured here, mainly regional heroes who eke out livings playing the juke joints that still make up the chitlin' circuit.
"There is a real problem with lobbyists … who benefit from their membership on the RNC and make their living — sometimes really good livings — by lobbying and the influence they have as part of our national committee," said Morton Blackwell, the RNC committeeman from Virginia.
Off-Center summer series of staged concerts came up with the charming idea of interviewing City Center employees and weaving their stories into the fabric of a show based on conversations with Americans about the pleasures and pains of how they earn their livings.
And with the exception of those who went on aerial raids to make their livings, no one else pulled off a bomber jacket quite so persuasively as Mr. Shepard did in his breakthrough film role as the pilot Chuck Yeager in "The Right Stuff" (1983).
In an era when foreign aid is largely based on charity, Dr. Polak (pronounced POLE-ack) instead advocated training people to earn livings by selling their neighbors basic necessities like clean water, charcoal, a ride in a donkey cart or enough electricity to charge a cellphone.
The simple and unfortunate fact is that there are not that many athletic, 250-pound men out there, and fewer still who are willing to make their livings in the perilous world of combat sports—especially when there are far more lucrative big-man sports like football and hockey out there.
The likes of red baseball-capped American bodybuilder Randy Santel (544,419 YouTube subscribers), Joey Chestnut (1.53-time winner of the prestigious Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest, which translates to 72 dogs in ten minutes), and the Diet Coke-chugging Miki Sudo—people earning sometimes considerable livings through the pursuit of sheer excess.
Here, where livings are eked out on meager paychecks, or social service assistance, with nearly 60 percent of its households relying on food stamps, the new neighbor will be one of the world's most profitable high-tech companies, bringing what could be a work force of 25,000 people making salaries upward of $100,000.
The location reminded the brothers a bit of their Chesapeake Bay hometown, the blue-collar hamlet of Deale, Md. Many of its residents eked out livings on the water, but for the Osbornes — described by T.J. as "the only liberal family that I can think of in our town" — plumbing was the family business.
Sports brings this out of people, and football really brings it out of people, and the people with the most invested in football's particular manias: the ones in the owner's suites, the people those owners empower to do the hiring and firing and negotiating and other administrative work, the people who make their livings translating and touting the wisdom of whatever those powerful people do.
Beyond the lost jobs, and nights out that'll never be, it's the story of a city turning against youth culture, in a country which already sees the young as a bunch of debt-saddled walking erections, moronic chip-eaters happy to spend a life in malnourished rented bedsits, eeking out meagre livings, seemingly happy to go to bed the second the sun sets because there's nothing to do.
He held various livings, including rector of Cottenham, and Witney.
Christ's web site He held livings at Bourn, Caldecot and Waddingham.
107–118 A priest, he held the livings at Endellion and Camborne.
The Hard Livings had clashes with rival gangs the Americans and the Mongrols. Under the rule of Rashied Staggie, the Hard Livings took part in violent gang wars that led to a bloodbath in the streets of Cape Town.
Abbas – Cutts, (1922) p80 He held livings at Caerwys, Pennant, Llansantffraid and Llandrillo.
Kahlenberg – Oyler, 1947 p146 He held livings at Little Plumstead,Witton and Brundall.
Chalmers – Fytche, (1944) p206 He held livings at Danby Wiske, Yafforth and Hutton Bonville.
He held livings at Hartland, Coton and Yarmouth; and was a prebendary of Norwich Cathedral.
They mostly earned their livings in other clerkly trades, as journalists, parliamentary reporters or lawyers.
107–118 He was also a priest, and held livings at Modbury, Dorney and Sturminster Marshall.
The Masters of Trinity Hall, Cambridge He held livings at Weston Longville, Swannington, Stokesby and Hingham.
Masters of Christ's He held livings at Wigan, Cambridge and Bingham He died in July 1522.
Simeon expanded the group of livings with money he had inherited. It continues to operate to this day.
He became Fellow in 1504; and Master from 1517 to 1523. He held livings at Rushbrooke and Landbeach.
The Centre is embarking on an Independent Livings Project, a move towards the provision of community psychiatric services.
That the bishops and kirkmen should be reponed in their former places, and be suffered to intromit with their livings.
Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Eade-Eyton He held livings at Lugwardine, Bromyard and Upton Bishop. He died on 23 March, 1749.
In addition, countless African Americans have earned livings as musical performers, club owners, radio deejays, concert promoters, and record label owners.
He held livings at Harrowden, Northamptonshire; St George Botolph Lane in the City of London; Brixton Deverill, Wiltshire; and Much Hadham, Hertfordshire.
People of Turlandi earn their livings by agricultures mostly wheat, tobacco, vegetables, virgenia and small businesses but mostly attached with government services.
Together they starred in a 1971 comedy sketch series for BBC2, Get The Drift, based on their stage show The Northern Drift. Livings also jointly translated, together with academic Gwynne Edwards, three works by Spanish poet and playwright Federico García Lorca-–The Public, Play Without a Title and Mariana Pineda. Books by Livings include That the Medals and the Baton Be Put on View: Story of a Village Band, 1875–1975, which relates to Dobcross Band, two volumes of short stories, Pennine Tales (1985) and Flying Eggs and Things: more Pennine tales (1986), illustrated by his daughter Maria Livings, and his autobiography The Rough Side of the Boards (1994), also turned into a stage show, which featured Arthur Bostrom in its premiere. Livings died on 20 February 1998 at Delph, near Oldham.
107–118 A priest, he held the livings at Bampton, St Issey, Whitstone, Aveton Gifford, and Kingsdon. He died on 7 November 1561.
He became Fellow in 1791; and was Master from 1808 to 1814. He held livings at Little Snoring, Seaton Ross, Bere Ferrers and Bourn.
He held livings at Salkeld and Crosthwaite. The brother of Bishop Henry Robinson, Robinson, Henry , he was Archdeacon of Carlisle from 1600 until 1602.
Abbas – Cutts, (1922) p378 He held livings at Wytham, Little Staughton and Edgworth. Condall was Archdeacon of Huntingdon from 1576 until his death in 1612.
He was ordained in 1493 and held livings at Campsall and Coton. He was Master of St Catharine's from 1506 to his death in 1507.
He had several livings in England and knew the country though the letter shows a confusion between the rank of a knight and that of a lord.
An Evening At Elmwood were formed in Perth by Chris Shalley, John Horner, Robert Livings, Rhys Dixon and Jamie Calabrese. In 2007, An Evening At Elmwood released a three-track self-titled demo. At the time there were 5 members. Shortly after vocalists Robert Livings & Chris Shalley departed the band, resulting in Jamie Calabrese dropping guitar for vocals then Ben Broadley and Colyn Prater joining the band on guitar.
Henry Livings (20 September 1929 – 20 February 1998) was an English playwright and screenwriter, who worked extensively in British television and theatre from the 1960s to the 1990s.
Hence their slow, unsteady gait, their obvious lack of conversation, thier pitiful appearance, and thier loathing towards these dratted livings who do nothing but make fun of them.
Abbey – Challis, (1940) p329 He was ordained deacon on 11 October 1789, and priest on 10 October 1790. He held livings at Colton, Lofthouse, Stainton and Middleton-in-Teesdale.
Swift left a manuscript giving the case against the Bill.On the Bill for the Clergy’s Residing on their Livings, Swift archive. Tenison was buried in St Mary's Church, Dublin.
He was born on 13 August 1737, the only son of the Rev. Charles Lind, D.D. His father was vicar of West Mersea 1738–48, rector of Wivenhoe 1750–1771, and rector of Paglesham 1752–71, all livings in Essex. He married a Miss Porter of Winchester, and died 6 March 1771, leaving his livings sequestrated and two daughters. John Lind matriculated on 22 May 1753 at Balliol College, Oxford, graduating B.A. 1757, M.A. 1761.
Oxford University Press, 2008. . The Failure of Ralph Hamsterley, Pages 89–92. Hamsterley was a Fellow of Merton College, Oxford. He had livings and canonries in Durham, Essex, and Northamptonshire.
The village has a farming based culture. Majority of the people do farming for their livings. They grow a variety of crops. Two major grown crops are Wheat and Rice.
Joseph William Lionel, 17th Baron Petre (5 June 1914 – 1 January 1989) was an English peer. He was the patron of three livings but, being a Roman Catholic, could not present.
About 90 percent of the village's population form whom agriculture is the main occupation to earn their livings. The remainder one are serving in government institutions, forces, technical and business sector.
On the same site in about 1228 Louis I, Duke of Bavaria, established a community of 12 secular canons attached to the collegiate church. The canons were given the livings of the parishes of Altötting, Waldötting (now Kastl) and Unterneukirchen. In 1382 the number of canons was reduced to 8. In 1401 were added the livings of the parishes of Neuötting, Alzgern, Burgkirchen am Wald, Perach, Hirschhorn and Rogglfing (both in Wurmannsquick), in 1404 Eggenfelden, and in 1424 Oberaichbach.
Rashied Staggie (1961 - 13 December 2019) was a South African gangster and leader of the Hard Livings gang. He was shot and killed in Salt River on 13 December 2019, in Cape Town, South Africa. His twin brother, Rashaad Staggie, the initial leader of the Hard Livings gang, was killed after being shot and burned alive in Salt River in 1996 by members of the vigilante group PAGAD. The Staggie brothers were killed in the same street, London Road.
By the time the twins were teenagers they were active drug dealers and were able to make some money. As they got older they became more aggressive and influential in the Cape Town underworld. By the 1990s the twins were notorious gang leaders and their gang the Hard Livings had members all around the Cape Peninsula. The Hard Livings gang participated in a range of crimes such as armed robbery, dealing of guns and drug distribution.
He was a long-time friend and collaborator of the playwright and actor Henry Livings with whom he starred in a 1971 comedy sketch series for BBC2, Get The Drift, based on their stage show, The Northern Drift. This included a version of "As Soon as This Pub Closes (The Revolution Starts)". In 1980, he appeared with Livings at the Perth Festival in Western Australia in The Northern Drift. Glasgow emigrated to Australia the following year.
In 1630 he became Vicar of St Dunstan-in-the-West. He also held livings in Chingford and Cuckfield. He was Archdeacon of Chichester from 1640 to 1641. He died before 1646.
The intent here was to provide livings for some of the 700 noble members of the cathedral chapters whose property and estates had been expropriated when the prince-bishoprics were secularized.Gagliardo, p.
The heroines were independent young women who often earned their own livings. The stories followed a familiar plot line - a chorus girl breaks into high society, a shop girl makes a good marriage.
360–361 Caulfield was born in Inverness. He was educated at Westminster and Christ Church, Oxford. He held livings at Castlerahan and Kilashee. He was Archdeacon of KilmoreNUI Galway from 1776 until 1810.
He was appointed Fellow in 1596; and Master in 1618. He held livings at Alkham, Appledore, St Mary Abchurch in the city of London and Little Wilbraham. He died on 31 July 1626.
He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford, where he matriculated in 1769, aged 17, and graduated B.A. in 1773, M.A. in 1776. For many years he held the livings of Saxlingham and Benacre.
Magdalene College Publications He held livings at Llantrisant (Anglesey), Llanengan, Terrington St John and Llanllechid; and was Dean of Bangor from 1534 until 1554, and again from 1557 until his death in 1570.
A History of Magdalene College, Cambridge. Magdalene College Publications He held livings at Lanivet, St Ervan, Cheriton Fitzpaine and Lanreath; and was a Canon of Exeter from 1579 until his death in 1590.
Nathaniel Joseph Livings (born March 16, 1982) is a former American football guard in the National Football League for the Cincinnati Bengals and the Dallas Cowboys. He played college football at Louisiana State University.
Originally published by University of Oxford, Oxford, 1891. He held livings at Eastwell, Astbury and Malpas. He was Archdeacon of Richmond from 1607, and Dean of Ripon from 1635, holding both posts until his death.
Dabbs – Juxton, (1922) p359 He held livings at Alburgh, Edgefield and Bolton Percy. At a time when plurality was common he was also a prebendary of York from 1744; and Precentor of Salisbury from 1754.
He was a Fellow of Gonville Hall for many years; and Master of Corpus from 1553 to 1557. He held livings at Haslingfield and Teversham. He died at the Master's Lodge on 7 December 1557.
The archbishop also appointed him master of St John's Hospital, Canterbury, and gave him a chaplaincy, which enabled him to hold his two livings. Duncombe died at Canterbury 19 January 1786 and was buried there.
Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p228 and incorporated at Oxford in 1591.He held livings at Cold Norton, Hildersham, Soham and St Stephen Walbrook in the City of London. Murriell was Archdeacon of Norfolk from 1621 until 1629.
Inspired by the worldwide success of The Godfather films, in the 1970s Italian films depicted Mafiosi as anti-heroes, men who made their livings via crime, but who possessed a certain nobility and grandeur of character.
In accordance with the provisions of two acts of 1703 (5 & 6 Anne, c. 24, and 6 Anne, c. 27), about 3900 poor livings under the annual value of £50 were discharged from first-fruits and tenths.
McGinn p. 39. He added to all this economic views. The Demonstration states that the patronage of livings was a work of Antichrist;Christopher Hill, Economic Problems of the Church (1968) p. 62. and he opposed usury.
He was allowed to retain the Shropshire livings in commendam with the bishopric until his death. He was given the sinecure of Clerk of the Closet in 1737, a post he held until his death in 1746.
He became Fellow in 1508; and Master"The Early History of Christ's College, Cambridge" Lloyd, A.H. p381: Cambridge, CUP, 1934 (rev 2010) in 1523.He held livings at Madingley and Landbeach. He died on 29 November 1544.
He was appointed to the livings of St Andrews, Dinas Powis, Glamorgan (1617) and St Nicholas in the same county in 1626, later being given the sinecure position of rector of Denbigh in 1637 and given the living of Hirnant, Montgomeryshire, in 1638. He became Canon and Archdeacon of St David's in 1644. During the English Civil War, he was a marked Royalist and lost his position as Archdeacon and also his parish livings. He was taken prisoner for three weeks by Colonel Thomas Horton after the Battle of St Fagans in May 1648.
Clement Barksdale (November 1609 – January 1687) was a prolific English religious author, polymath and Anglican priest. He lost his London parish in the English Civil War, but gained Gloucestershire livings at the Restoration and taught at a private school.
Nicholas Marston was a 16th century English priest.CCEd Marston was educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Mab-Marygold He held livings at Budock, Moretonhampstead, St Marychurch, Clayhidon and Exbourne. He was appointed Archdeacon of Cornwall in 1574.
He married Elizabeth, daughter of William Godfrey of Winchester. They had three children that survived past infancy. Theodore, his eldest surviving son became a physician in Canterbury. Basil Becon followed his father into the Church and held several livings in Kent.
Gower died at St. John's College on 27 March 1711, and was buried in the college chapel. By his will he left money towards providing livings for the college, and for scholarships, and left his books to the college library.
The settlers lived a poor life here. They earned their livings by fishing (trout mainly), keeping sheep and cattle, as well as producing cheese and wool. Men also worked in the woods, cutting the trees. Some of them were poachers.
Although during this period powerful friends found him livings, he could not take them because he would not take an oath of allegiance to Parliament. He was finally restored to his bishopric after the restoration of the monarchy in 1660.
He continued to hold the three livings of Binfield, Ashow, and St. Lawrence until his death, which took place at Binfield on 18 April 1831. Gabell married, on 11 Jan. 1790, Miss Gage, the daughter of a clergyman of Holton, Oxfordshire.
Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Rabbetts-Rhodes He held livings at Lowthorpe, Brandeston, Bainton and Lockington where he died in 1615. Remington was Archdeacon of Cleveland from 1582 to 1589; and Archdeacon of the East Riding from then until his death.
A History of Magdalene College, Cambridge. Magdalene College Publications He was ordained in 1724 by the bishop of London and held livings at Radwinter and Faulkbourne in Essex. He was Master of Magdalene from 1740 until his death in 1746.
Tower of St Salvator's College, St Andrews, one of the three universities founded in the fifteenth century In the early fourteenth century the Papacy managed to minimise the problem of clerical pluralism, by which clerics held two or more livings, which elsewhere resulted in parish churches being without priests, or serviced by poorly trained and paid vicars and clerks. However, the number of poor clerical livings and a general shortage of clergy in Scotland, particularly after the Black Death, meant that in the fifteenth century the problem intensified.Andrew D. M. Barrell, Medieval Scotland (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), , pp. 244–5.
In the early fourteenth century, the Papacy managed to minimise the problem of clerical pluralism, by which clerics held two or more livings, which elsewhere resulted in parish churches being without priests, or served by poorly trained and paid vicars and clerks. However, the number of poor clerical livings and a general shortage of clergy in Scotland, particularly after the Black Death, meant that in the fifteenth century the problem intensified.Barrell, Medieval Scotland, pp. 244–5. As a result, parish clergy were largely drawn from the lower ranks of the profession, leading to frequent complaints about their standards of education or abilities.
His first stage play, Stop It, Whoever You Are, about a washroom attendant in a factory, was performed in 1961. The Evening Standard Awards for 1961 named Livings as Most Promising Playwright of the Year for Stop It, Whoever You Are, jointly with Gwyn Thomas, author of The Keep. Among other plays by Livings are The Quick and the Dead Quick (1961), an unconventional historical drama about François Villon; Big Soft Nellie (1961), whose witless hero creates chaos in a radio repair shop; and the play and TV comedy Nil Carborundum (1962), based on his experience of National Service.
Giles Langley was an Welsh Anglican priest in the 16th century.National Library of Wales Langley was educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Labdon-Ledsam He held livings at Chieveley, Welford and Shabbington. Langford was appointed Archdeacon of Llandaff in 1564.
Earlier family names include Pitcher, Williams, Newhook, Higdon, Woodman, Pollett, Cranford, Hillier, Hefford, George, Thorne. The people of New Hr. have made livings from industries such as Fishing, Shipbuilding, the Pothead Drive, Hunting, Mink Ranching, Farming and from Working Seasonally, in distant places.
In 1775 he resigned his Suffolk church livings, and two years afterwards graduated M.D. at St Andrews. He practised medicine in London and was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1779. He and Ann continued to be involved in political reform.
He was appointed Fellow in 1597; and Master in 1626. He was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1629 to 1631.University of Cambridge web-site He held livings at Birdbrook then Barton Mills. He hanged himself on 1 April 1632.
As an unincorporated community with few businesses, many Linden residents make their livings in or around the city of Show Low. Linden maintains its own fire district, and law enforcement is performed by Navajo County Sheriff's Office and Arizona Department of Public Safety.
Kahlenberg – Oyler, p 387 1947 He held livings at Tuddenham,White's Directory of Norfolk, 1836 Honingham and Reymerston. He was Dean of Hereford from 1827 until his death.'The Deanery of Hereford is now vacant, by the death of the Rev. Edward Mellish.
Freddie reveals to Emsworth that Popjoy is in fact Bingham, hopeful of one of the many livings in Emsworth's gift. When Emsworth realises that he can inflict the man on his enemy Parsloe- Parsloe, he doesn't hesitate from granting him the job.
Richard Langridge, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 16th century.CCEd Lever was educated at Merton College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Lee-Llewellin He held livings in Colchester, Barkway and Wheldrake. Langridge was Archdeacon of Cleveland from 1534 until his death in 1547.
Most Sabans are descended from a handful of families. Hassell, Simmons, and Johnson are common surnames. Early settlers relied on farming, fishing, sailing, and shipbuilding for their livings; pirates sought haven there, too. They passed down a hardy nature necessary to survive the island's conditions.
Shadowed Realms published many prominent Australian horror writers such as Stephen Dedman, Lee Battersby, Martin Livings, and Paul Haines, and a number of US and UK horror authors including Kurt Newton, Greg Beatty, Alistair Rennie and Eric Marin.Shadowed Realms contributors list Retrieved 9 September 2007.
Thomas A. Livesley (December 8, 1863 – July 22, 1947) was an American businessman and politician in the state of Oregon. A successful hop farmer and broker, Livesley was known as the "Hop King" of Oregon.Index to Politicians: Little-smith to Livings. The Political Graveyard.
Annette Cowley retired South African Swimmer Rashied Staggie former leader of the Hard Livings gang. In 2004 he was convicted of stealing weapons from the Faure police station. He was sentenced to 13 years in jail. He stayed in a highly secured property in Boston.
Alexander Belsyre, D.D. was an English priest and academic in the mid 16th- century.Historic England A Fellow of New College, Oxford, he was the first President of St John's College, Oxford. He held Livings at Colerne, Osney and Hanborough. He died on 13 July, 1567.
East St. Louis continued to have an economy based on industry. Through and after World War II, many workers could make decent livings. It was named an All-America City in 1959 by the National Civic League. East St. Louis celebrated its centennial in 1961.
Robert de Hemmingburgh (died 1349) was an English born judge and priest, who held office as Master of the Rolls in Ireland. St Mary's Church, Hemingbrough, which was Robert's birthplace He took his name from his birthplace, Hemingbrough in North Yorkshire. He became a clerk of the Chancery about 1319 and is said to have been a valued royal servant who was highly regarded by both Edward II and Edward III. He is also said to have been a noted religious pluralist, acquiring numerous livings in England, Scotland and Ireland, though we know the names of only two of these livings, Glasgow and Antingham, Norfolk.
Livings was born in Prestwich, Lancashire, England. He won a scholarship from the Stand Grammar School in Whitefield to the University of Liverpool but attended for only two years, leaving in 1950 without graduating. He went on to serve in the Royal Air Force (1950–52), became an expert cook, and held a number of jobs before going into the theatre. He trained as an actor at Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop, which he joined in 1956. Livings appeared in the first of the Carry On films, Carry on Sergeant (1958) and as Wilf Haddon, Martha Longhurst's son- in-law, on Coronation Street in May 1964.
Robert Markham (14 June 1768 – 17 June 1837) was an English churchman, Archdeacon of York from 1794 until his death.British History On-line The son of Archbishop William Markham, he was educated at Christ Church, Oxford. He held livings at Barton in Fabis, Bishopthorpe and Bolton Percy.
John Sellick (1609-1690) was an English priest in the 17th century.CCEd Sellick was educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Scadden-Sheyne He held livings at Elworthy and Clifton Campville. He was Archdeacon of Bath from 1661 until his death on 30 June, 1690.
407–408 Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 360–361 to supplement his income he held several livings, was a prebendary of four other dioceses and Treasurer of Lismore. He died in 1619."Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 1" Cotton,H. pp. 125–126.
1-24 Published by: Cambridge University Press Blythe was born in Doncaster and educated at Clare College, Cambridge. He became Fellow in 1658. He was ordained a deacon in the Church of England in 1667.theclergydatabase He held livings at Everton, Bedfordshire and Newton-in-the-Isle.
He held livings at Llanvihangel (1831-1858)Crockford's Clerical Directory 1885 p284: London; Horace Cox; 1885 and Bryngwyn (1834-1896).Cobbold Family History Trust He was Archdeacon of Monmouth from 1844 to 1885.forebears/monmouthshire/bryngwyn His son RichardDictionary of Welsh Biography was a noted classical scholar.
He became Fellow of Christ's in 1727; and was Master from 1745 until his death.Christ's web site He was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1745 to 1746.University web-site He held livings in Cambridge, Great Eversden, Little Abington, Foxton, Hadstock and Great Horkesley.
His play Eh? was performed Off-Broadway in 1966, with Dustin Hoffman in the leading role. Livings won an Obie Award for Best Play for the production. Eh? was turned into the 1967 film Work Is a Four-Letter Word, starring David Warner and Cilla Black.
Country Livings Jessica Mattern noted that the video shows how her family with her husband has transformed her life. E! Online's Johnni Macke described it as a "cinematic dream" and wrote that "It's simple in some respects but dramatic in tone, location and wardrobe, which we love".
He was appointed Fellow in 1567; and Master in 1573. He was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1584 to 1585.University of Cambridge web-site He held livings at Forncett and Little Gransden. He died at the Master's Lodge on 2 November 1587.
Alexander Vaus [Vause, de Vaus] (d. after 1450) was a late 14th century and 15th century Scottish prelate. Said to have been the younger son of one Patrick Vaus (died 1392), he apparently held "church livings" in Galloway as early as 1421.Dowden, Bishops, p. 244.
In Kōshin belief, Kōshin-san is thought to help all those who strive in their livings, with all their efforts to be good persons. He is also thought to punish the bad. Kukurizaru is the round, ball shaped talisman made of cloth, representing the good faith monkeys.
These early years of his career filled him with admiration for those making their livings in some of the toughest environments in Australia. Throughout his career, Carter has produced series that show the progression of events over time. Concentrating on rituals and process, they comprise evocative images.
Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Riader-Roissie He held livings at East Treswell, Fulbeck, Thornton, Great Easton, Brant Broughton, Fishtoft, Caistor, Kingston Bagpuze, Gransden and Somersham. Robinson became Precentor of Lincoln Cathedral in 1573; and Archdeacon of Bedford in 1574, holding both positions until his death in 1598.
Giles Lawrence, DCL was an English Anglican priest in the 16th century. Lawrence was born in Gloucestershire and educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714 Labdon-Ledsam He was Regius Professor of Greek at Oxford from 1548 to 1553. He held livings in Minety, Chalgrove and Rickmansworth.
Miles Spencer was an English priest and academic in the first half of the 16th century.VBritish History On-line Spencer was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Spackman-Stepney He held livings at Soham and Terrington. He was Archdeacon of Sudbury from 1537 until his death.
William Glynne was a Welsh Anglican priest in the 16th century.Catalogue of the Lansdowne Manuscripts in the British Museum, British Museum, London 1819, p. 242 Glynne was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Gilpin-Greenhaugh He held livings at Ysceifiog, Llandinam, Clynnog Fawr and Llanfwrog.
He was ordained a priest in the Church of England in 1707.theclergydatabase He held livings at Whittlesford and Trowbridge. Wilcox was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge between 1716 and 1717.Full List of Vice-Chancellors of the University of Cambridge He died on 9 April 1726.
Lightning struck the tower again in January 1978, this time causing less damage. The spire, and the clock and bell tower were extensively repaired in 2002. Simon Foliot, the first Rector, had two assistants and by 1535 there were five. The assistants lost their livings in the English Reformation.
More than half of the Maran clergy resigned or were deprived at the beginning of Elizabeth's reign.Brigden, Susan. London and the Reformation, Clarendon Press, 1989, p. 577 Dom Norbert Birt has collected instances of nearly two thousand priests who were deprived or who abandoned their livings for conscience' sake.
At first, Bacchus Ladies had made livings by selling bottles of Bacchus-F, a popular energy drink in South Korea, which they sold to elderly men who socialized in the parks and plazas in Seoul. Eventually, many of these men became their main clientele after transitioning into prostitution.
The eldest son of the Rev. Thomas Noel, he was born at Kirkby Mallory, Leicestershire. His father had been presented to the livings of Kirkby-Mallory and Elmsthorpe by his kinsman Thomas Noel, 2nd Viscount Wentworth. Thomas Noel the son graduated B.A. from Merton College, Oxford, in 1824.
John Rigge was an Oxford college head in the 16th-century.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Riader-Roissie Rigge was educated at Exeter College, Oxford; and was Rector of Exeter College, Oxford from 1515 to 1516. He held livings at St Michael, Honiton and St Thomas, Exeter. He died in 1537.
The heroines were independent young women who often earned their own livings. The stories followed a familiar plot line – a chorus girl breaks into high society, a shop girl makes a good marriage. There was always a misunderstanding during act one and an engagement at the end.Coward, Noel.
John Paterson, the last bishop of Glasgow and a non-juror Episcopalianism had retained supporters through the civil wars and regime changes in the seventeenth century. Although the bishops had been abolished in the settlement that followed the Glorious Revolution, becoming "non-jurors", not subscribing to the right of William III and Mary II to be monarchs, they continued to consecrate Episcopalian clergy. Many clergy were "outed" from their livings, but the king had issued two acts of indulgence in 1693 and 1695, allowing those who accepted him as king to retain their livings and around a hundred took advantage of the offer.Mackie, Lenman and Parker, A History of Scotland, pp. 252–3.
Martin Livings of the Australian Horror Writers Association wrote in his Long Fiction Report for the 2009 Australian Shadows Award that Slights is "an extraordinary achievement". He described the book as "an intimate portrait of an awful person", who after a broken childhood, never grows up and is unable to have meaningful relationships with others. Livings said it is "a punch in the face, a kick in the testicles" and will remain with you for a "long, long time". Publishers Weekly selected Slights as its "Pick of the Week" in August 2009, and said that Warren "manipulates Stevie’s voice to create a portrait of horror that in no way reads like a first novel".
As an outsider, he comments on the absurd or irrational aspects of English society. Gotobed finds much at fault with his host country: the sale of livings in the Church of England, the sale of commissions in the British army, the custom of primogeniture, the unelected hereditary House of Lords and the lack of proportional representation in the House of Commons, and a system that defers to the wealthy and titled at the expense of justice to those of lower social standing. It is difficult to know the extent to which Gotobed's views reflected Trollope's own. On the one hand, the Senator's denunciations of clerical livings were very similar to criticisms that Trollope had levelled at Bishop Wilberforce.
C. Peters, Women in Early Modern Britain, 1450–1640 (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), , p. 147. In the early 14th century the Papacy managed to minimise the problem of clerical pluralism, but with relatively poor livings and a shortage of clergy, particularly after the Black Death, in the 15th century the number of clerics holding two or more livings rapidly increased.Andrew D. M. Barrell, Medieval Scotland (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), , pp. 244–5. This meant that parish clergy were largely drawn from the lower and less educated ranks of the profession, leading to frequent complaints about their standards of education or ability, although there is little clear evidence that this was actually declining.
All the books went into numerous revisions, with the information upgraded to take account of modern knowledge."C. H. B. and Marjorie Quennell". Archived link here. The books were especially strong on housing, agriculture and the way people earned their livings. They were described by Hector Bolitho as “transforming teaching”.
Thomas Lambert, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 17th century.CCEd Lambert was educated at Trinity College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Labdon-Ledsam He held livings at Sherrington and Boyton, both in Wiltshire. Lambert was Archdeacon of Salisbury from 12 June 1674 until his death on 29 December 1694.
Cadwalader Hughes was a Welsh Anglican priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.British History On-line Hughes was educated at Balliol College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Horrobin-Hyte He held livings at Heathfield, Bridgwater, Skilgate and Milverton. He was Archdeacon of LlandaffOU on-line from 1601 to 1616.
Likewise, purchases of manors such as those in Nene Valley and Stoke by Newark enabled him to invest his wealth in land. His ecclesiastical status meant that he could also rely on a succession of livings, not only those in Cambridgeshire, but as far afield as Rutland, Devon, and Cornwall.
Robert Comyn (1672-1727) was an English priest in the first half of the 18th century. Crosse was born in East Ilsley and educated at Balliol College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Colericke-Coverley He migrated to University of Cambridge in 1693. Comyn held livings at Wigmore, Brampton Bryan, Pontesbury and Presteign.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. 54, p.193 He was a Commissioner of Lieutenancy for the City of London, Lord of the Manors of Onibury and Stokesay and patron of five livings. He was considered an eminent philanthropist, and was Treasurer and a Governor of Christ's Hospital.
1-24 Published by: Cambridge University Press Morgan was born in Covent Garden, London, and was educated at Clare College, Cambridge. He became a Fellow of the college in 1700. He was ordained a priest in the Church of England in 1704.theclergydatabase He held livings at Thurston, Suffolk and Glemsford.
Whereas Life never stops to generate itself and to generate all the livings in its radical immanence, in its absolute phenomenological interiority that is without gap nor distance.Michel Henry, Paroles du Christ, éd. du Seuil, 2002, p. 107.Translation in English : Michel Henry, Words of Christ, Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2012.
Gilbert Segrave (1266 – 1316) was a medieval Bishop of London. He was the son of Nicholas Segrave, 1st Baron Segrave. Segrave obtained the living of Kegworth, Leicestershire in 1279. He was then, with a dispensation for plurality, given the livings of both Harlaxton, Staffordshire in 1282 and Aylestone, Leicestershire in 1292.
Although the archetype of the Randian hero appears in Rand's earliest work (notably in Night of January 16ths Bjorn Faulkner and We the Livings Leo Kovalensky), its best known examples appear in Rand's mature work, specifically in the novella Anthem (1938) and the novels The Fountainhead (1943) and Atlas Shrugged (1957).
He may then have travelled to Italy with Richard Pace. From 1519 he was supported by Cardinal Wolsey at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, as a reader in humanities, as successor to John Clement. He then was given church livings and lectured in Greek. He was tutor to Thomas Wynter, Wolsey's son.
He became Fellow of Christ's in 1702; and was Master from 1723 until his death.Christ's web site He was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1734 to 1735.University web-site He held livings at Caldecote and Snailwell. He was Chaplain to King George II from 1727 until 1732.
Yates was a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London. He declined offers of the livings of Blackburn in Lancashire, and of Hilgay in Norfolk. During the last five or six years of his life he was an invalid, and he died at Penshurst in Kent on 24 August 1834.
He was appointed Fellow in 1587; and Master in 1603. He was Vice- Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1608 to 1609.University of Cambridge web-site He held livings at Sible Hedingham and Ashen. He was Archdeacon of Norwich from 1604 until his death on 2 March 1618.
Humphrey Edwards was a Welsh Anglican priest in the 16th century. Edwards was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Eade-Eyton He held Livings at St Trillo, Llandrillo, Denbighshire and St Mary Woolnoth in the City of London. He was Archdeacon of St Asaph from 1554 to 1558.
John Rixman was a 16th century English priest.CCEd Rixman was educated at Oriel College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Riader-RoissieHe was Principal of St Mary Hall, Oxford from 1532 to 1537. held livings at St Petroc, Trevalga, St Clement Danes, London; St Mary, Berry Pomeroy and St Mary,Churston Ferrers.
George Sandby, D.D. (5 April 1716 – 24 March 1807) was an 18th-century English priest and academic.UCL Sandby was educated at Merton College, Oxford, matriculating in 1734 and graduating B.A. in 1737. He held livings at Denton and Skeyton. He was Master of Magdalene College, CambridgeCunich, Hoyle, Duffy and Hyam (1994).
John Lee was an English Anglican priest in the 17th century.National Archives Lee was born in Surrey and educated at Magdalen College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Lee-Llewellin He held livings at Milton-next-Gravesend, Southfleet, and Bishopsbourne. Lee was Archdeacon of Rochester from 1660 until his death on 12 June 1679.
Charles William Frederick Cavendish-Bentinck (8 November 1817 – 17 August 1865) was a clergyman of the Church of England, holding livings in Bedfordshire, and a great-grandfather of Queen Elizabeth II. He used his names in the order William Charles Frederick Cavendish-Bentinck, and his usual signature was "W. C. C. Bentinck".
Nathaniel Lye, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the late 17th and early 18th centuries.National Archives Lloyd was educated at Brasenose College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Lloyd-Lytton He held livings at Cowley, Kemerton and Dursley. He was Archdeacon of Gloucester from 29 July 1714 until his death on 29 October 1737.
He was ordained deacon in 1866 and priest in 1867.Crockford's Clerical Directory 1885 p185: London; Horace Cox; 1885 He served curacies at Itchenstoke, Alverstoke and Brompton; and held livings at St Nicholas (1862-1872) and Newport (1882-1919). He was Archdeacon of Monmouth from 1885 to 1914. He died at Rogiet.
John Berney was Archdeacon of Norwich"The Third Edition of The Court and City Register. For the Year 1757" p83: London, J.Barnes, 18 February 1758 from 11 October 1744 until his death on 13 June 1782.British History On-line He held livings at Hethersett,hethersett.org St Mary, SaxlinghamGeograph and St Clement, Norwich.
In 1833 he was presented to the perpetual curacy of St Barnabas, Kensington, by the vicar, Joseph Holden Pott. He resigned his Essex livings in 1846, and Kensington in 1848, becoming domestic chaplain to the Duchess of Kent. He died at Bath on 27 August 1861, a few months after his royal patroness.
While the plantation owners returned to Europe, the freedmen continued to eke out livings on Anguilla as subsistence farmers and fishermen. There were droughts and famines in the 1830s and 1840s. The British government attempted to send the entire population of the island to Demerara in British Guiana (modern Guyana) but most remained.
Barnard was the author of a pamphlet in three sheets quarto, entitled Censura Cleri, against scandalous ministers not fit to be restored to the church's livings in prudence, piety, and fame. This was published in the latter end of 1659 or beginning of 1660, ‘to prevent such from being restored to their livings as had been ejected by the godly party in 1654–55.’ His name is not set to this pamphlet, and Anthony a Wood says he did not care afterwards, when he saw how the event proved, to be known as its author. He is best known as the author of Theologo-Historicus, a true life of the most reverend divine and excellent historian, Peter Heylyn, D.D., sub-dean of Windsor (London, 1683, 8vo).
Divino Otelma says he believes in reincarnation and says that he is the incarnation of God and that he was in the past a priest from Atlantis, a woman pharaoh and one of the Quindecimviri sacris faciundis. He defines himself Count of Quistello, First Theurgist of the Church of the Livings, Great Master of the Theurgical Order of Helios, European President of the Order of Occultists of Europe, National President of the Order of Italian Occultists, President of the Italian Centre of Astrological Studies and of the Astrological-Occultist Union of Italy, Source of Life and Salvation, Dispenser of Archetypal Truth, Light of Livings. In 1991 he founded the political party ‘’Europa 2000’’ and in 2003 he took his second degree, in history.
Walter Jones was a Welsh Anglican priest"A History of the County of Brecknock" Jones, T. p278: London; George North; 1809 in the mid 16th Century. Jones was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Jablonski- Juxston He held livings at Hodgeston and Aberporth. He was Archdeacon of Brecon from 1561 until 1567.
144MacAlister, J. Y. W., et al., The Library (Oxford University Press, 1975), p. 306 In 1679, on the recommendation of Ormond, Parker was translated to become Archbishop of Dublin and Primate of Ireland, holding at the same time various other livings. He died at Dublin in December 1681 and was entombed there in Christ Church.
Later (1738) he was instituted vicar of St. Mary's, Reading. He held both benefices together for life, and was non-resident in his deanery. He raised some money to add to poor livings in the diocese of Carlisle. Bolton died in London on 26 November 1763, having come to town to consult Dr. Anthony Addington.
Port, M. H. Six Hundred New Churches; 2nd ed. Spire, 2006, p. 252. Further legislation abolished sinecure benefices and drastically restricted the permissible occasions for pluralism,Chadwick, Owen The Victorian Church, Part I. Black, 1966, p. 137. compelling the decoupling of long-standing joint livings (including perpetual curacies) which did not qualify as exemptions.
He was ordained a priest in the Church of England in 1716. He held livings at Madingley, Everton, Bedfordshire and Kensington.theclergydatabase Wilcox was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge between 1736 and 1737, and 1751 to 1752.Full List of Vice-Chancellors of the University of Cambridge He died on 16 September 1762.
On 1 November 1816, he was appointed rector of the family living of Birling, Kent, and on 23 September 1818, to the vicarage of Frant, Sussex, which his elder brother John had vacated for him. He resigned his livings in 1844 and succeeded his unmarried elder brother, John, as Earl of Abergavenny in 1845.
He became Fellow of Clare in 1473. He held livings at Fulbourn, Toppesfield and Wimbush. He was Archdeacon of Taunton from 1505 to 1509; Archdeacon of Norwich from 1509 to 1516; Precentor of St Paul's Cathedral from 1509 to 1510; and Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge from 1515 to 1516. from 1517 to 1523.
Thomas Greenway was an Oxford college head in the 16th-century.British History On-line Greenway was born in Hampshire and educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Alumni Oxonienses, 1500-1715 (Surnames Greenhill-Gysby) He became a Fellow of Corpus in 1541. He held the livings at Bowers Gifford, Rettendon, Winterbourne Earls and Heyford Purcell.
Thomas Anyan, D.D. was an Oxford college head in the 17th-century.British History On-line Anyan was born in Kent and educated at Lincoln College, Oxford. Alumni Oxonienses, 1500-1715 (Surnames Abannan-Appletree) He held the livings at Beckenham, Ashtead, Checkendon and Cranleigh. Anyan was President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford from 1614 until 1629.
Particular patterns and fabrics are identified with specific Amish communities; for example, pre-1940s quilts from Lancaster County were almost always made of wool while those sewn in Ohio during the same period were commonly made of cotton.Levie, Eleanor; Place, Jennifer; Sehafer Sears, Mary (1992). Country Livings Country Quilts. New York: Hearst Books. p. 98. .
The Ven Matthew Woodford, MA (1738 – 1807) was Archdeacon of Winchester from 1795 until 1807. Woodford was born in Southampton and educated at Christ Church, Oxford, where he matriculated in 1755, graduating B.A. in 1759. A Chaplain to George III, he held livings at Tadmarton, Chilbolton and Upham. He died on 30 September 1807.
William Roberts was a Welsh priest in the 16th Century.British History On-line Newcombe was born in Castellmarch and educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Riader-Roissie He held incumbencies at Shrivenham, Ruthin and Llandudno. He held Livings at Caerwys, Llanfachraeth, Festiniog, Llanddeniolen-juxta-Bangor, Llanfihangel-y-traethau and Llanbedroc- in-Llyn.
John Langworth, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 16th century.CCEd Langworth was born in Worcestershire and educated at St John's College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714 Labdon-Ledsam He held livings in Colchester, Barkway and Wheldrake. Langridge was Archdeacon of Chichester from 1581 to 1586; and Archdeacon of Wells from 1589 until his death in 1613.
Splitting the Church had major implications. Those who left forfeited livings, manses and pulpits, and had, without the aid of the establishment, to found and finance a national Church from scratch. This was done with remarkable energy, zeal and sacrifice. Another implication was that the church they left was more tolerant of a wider range of doctrinal views.
George Snell, DD was an Anglican priest in the Sixteenth Century."Catalogue of the Harleian Manuscripts in the British Museum" p522: London; King George; 1808 By British museum Snell was educated at the University of St Andrews. He was Incorporated at Oxford in 1621.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Smith-Sowton He held livings at Wallasey, Great Smeaton and Waverton.
Laurence Pay was an English priest in the 17th century."Art, Literature and Religion in Early Modern Sussex: Culture and Conflict" Hadfield, A: London; Routledge; 2016 Pay was educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Pace-Payton He held livings at West Stoke, Pulborough and Birdham. He was Archdeacon of Chichester from 1634 until 1939.
Livings was signed by the Cincinnati Bengals as an undrafted free agent on May 2, 2006. He spent two seasons in the team's practice squad, until November 17, 2008, when he was promoted for depth purposes. He became a starter at left guard in the eleventh game of the season, and remained a starter in the following years.
Crockfords 1868 (OLondon, Horace Cox, 1868) Hony was educated at Exeter College, Oxford, where he matriculated in 1805, graduating B.A. in 1811, and M.A. in 1812, and was a Fellow from 1808 to 1827. He held livings at South Newington and Baverstock. Hony died on 7 January 1875.Deaths The Times (London, England), Friday, Jan 08, 1875; pg.
James Cottington, DD was an Anglican priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. Cottington was educated at Trinity College, Oxford, graduating BA in 1572, MA in 1575 and BD in 1580.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Colericke- Coverley He became a Fellow of Trinity in 1572. He held livings in East Brent, Ditcheat and Yeovilton.
He held livings at Chilmark, Wiltshire and Bishopstone, Salisbury. He was Archdeacon of Sarum from 1836Ecclesiastical Intelligence 'The Essex Standard, and Colchester, Chelmsford, Maldon, Harwich, and General County Advertiser' (Colchester, England), Friday, December 30, 1836; Issue 313 until his appointment as Dean. He died on 23 March 1850.Deaths. The Times (London, England), Wednesday, Mar 27, 1850; pg.
He held livings in Newington, Brasted, Lambeth and Sundridge. He made inquiries on Dr. Samuel Johnson's behalf in search of Johnson's relatives around Lichfield, at the time when the Doctor was making his will in 1784.E. Malone (ed.), The Life of Samuel Johnson..., by James Boswell, Esq., 5th, Revised and Augmented Edition, 4 vols (T.
Located at Huandao Rd, Zengcuoan () used to be a small fishing village near the sea. People who live by the water made their livings on the water. Gradually, many ancient houses with red bricks were established one after another and small alleys came into being. Nowadays, Zengcuoan has become the gathering place of literature and art.
Shortly thereafter he went to serve three Leicestershire churches: Thornton, Bagworth, and Markfield. His evangelical preaching produced many conversions and flourishing congregations here. He later became minister of two small livings in Lewes, Sussex. After the death of his parents, he moved, because of bad health, to Islington, London and preached at different churches and chapels there.
Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. iv. Kahlenberg – Oyler, (1947) p108 He held livings at Wateringbury, Shorne, Chatham, Westmill and Great Easton.
Stephen Creyke (13 October 1796 – 11 December 1883) was an English Anglican priest. He was Archdeacon of York from 1845 to 1866.Early CanterburyBritish History On-line Creyke was born in Stonehouse, Plymouth, England, and was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He held livings at Beeford"History and Topography of Yorkshire, Volume II, 1867" Sheahan,J.
Edward Drew was an Anglican priest in England during the late 17th and early 18th centuries.National Archives Drew was born in Devon and educated at Exeter College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Disbrowe-Dyve He held livings at Lezant and Bridestowe. He became a Canon of Exeter Cathedral in 1671 and Archdeacon of Cornwall from 1633 to 1667.
As of 2010, Hindu High School is the only secondary level school in this village. The locals of this village hosted a portal Aundipatty to post the village updates and events, especially for the natives who later moved on to different cities for making their livings. Now (2012 Jan 20) Hindu high school crossed the age of 100.
He was Bachelor of Divinity (1730) and Doctor of Divinity (1735). He held livings at Buttermere, Wiltshire,"Institutiones Clericorum in Comitatu Wiltoniae Volume 1" Phillipps, Thomas, Bt p71:Broadway; Montanis; 1825 Oborne and Chilton Foliat.Rectors of St. Mary, Chilton Foliat, Wiltshire The family owned the Advowson and Richard was also Rector of Appleton. He died on 1 March 1779.
The Coughlans were a well-known family in Blackrock at the turn of the 20th century. The father, John Coughlan, earned his livelihood as a fisherman. All of his sons would later earn their livings on the sea. The Coughlans also came to be regarded as a famous hurling family in the early years of the championship.
He was Domestic Chaplain to the Duke of Portland."Archbishop Howley, 1828–1848" Garrard, J p20: London, Routledge, 2015 He held livings at West Ham and Aldham. He retired to the family estate in Brynsteddfod or Bryn Eisteddfod, Glan Conwy, Wales.Bryn Eisteddfod In 1816, he became Treasurer of St Paul's Cathedral, holding the post until his death.
William Nevill, 4th Earl of Abergavenny (28 June 1792 – 17 August 1868), styled Hon. William Nevill until 1845, was a British peer and clergyman. The fourth son of Henry Nevill, 2nd Earl of Abergavenny, he was ordained in 1816 and occupied two of the family livings until 1844. He succeeded his brother as Earl of Abergavenny the following year.
Two years later, Rutledge sailed to England to further his studies at London's Middle Temple. In the course of his studies, he won several cases in English courts.Flanders 438–439 After finishing his studies, Rutledge returned to Charleston to begin a fruitful legal career. At the time, many new lawyers barely scraped together enough business to earn their livings.
Burke, pp. 207–209 He was a captain in the East Kent Militia, and raised a troop of the Dorsetshire Yeomanry in 1830 to deal with the Disturbances or Swing Riots of that year;Burke, p. 207 he held the patronage of five church livings, and was a deputy-lieutenant of Dorset in the late 1850s.Richardson, p.
Brodrick was a committed ecclesiastical reformer. One obituary following his death described him as "a prelate of distinguished piety, and of the most exemplary attention to the duties of his high station, as evinced by his increasing vigilance in enforcing the residence of the clergy, and by his disinterested appointments to the vacant livings" in his diocese.
Some of southwest Louisiana was developed for industrial processing and export of oil products. In some areas, wetlands were drained and bayous dredged for navigation. This has been found to increase erosion of the wetlands and loss to area soils, with loss of coastline. Small farmers and hunters continued to make subsistence livings in some rural areas.
Later, Warham took holy orders, held two livings (Barley and Cottenham) and became Master of the Rolls in 1494. Henry VII found him a useful and clever diplomatist. He helped to arrange the marriage between Henry's son, Arthur, Prince of Wales, and Catherine of Aragon. He went to Scotland with Richard Foxe, then bishop of Durham, in 1497.
John Holt, D.D. was an Oxford college head in the 17th-century.British History On-line Holt was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Alumni Oxonienses, 1500-1715 (Surnames Hieron-Horridge) He held the livings at Welbury, Cranleigh and Ewhurst. Holt was President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford from 1629 until his death on 10 January 1631.
Robert Morwent was an Oxford college head in the 16th-century.British History On-line Morwent was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford. Alumni Oxonienses, 1500-1715 (Surnames Mordaunt-Mytton) He held the livings at Lydeard St Lawrence, East Knoyle and Bishopstone. Morwent was President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford from 1537 until his death on 26 August 1558.
He was appointed its Vicar in 1995. From 2002 to 2007, he was additionally Area Dean of North Camden (Hampstead). In February 2008, Galloway left parish ministry having been appointed Chaplain of the Queen's Chapel of the Savoy and Chaplain of the Royal Victorian Order. He is additionally the Secretary for Church Livings for the Duchy of Lancaster.
St Giles' has also a Sanctus bell that Ellis I Knight of Reading cast in 1639. Gilbert Sheldon held the living of the parish for a time in the 17th century. Sheldon also simultaneously held the livings of Hackney, Ickford, Buckinghamshire and Oddington, Oxfordshire. After the Restoration of the Monarchy, Sheldon was consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury in 1663.
Henry Wilcocks DCL was an English priest in the early 16th-century.University of Leicester Wilcocks was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714,Widdis-Wilshman He became Chief Moderator of the Civil Law School at Oxford in 1501; and an advocate of Doctors' Commons in 1511. He held livings at Wood Eaton, Eynsham and Haseley.
Robert Robotham, D.D. was an Anglican priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.British History On-line Robotham was born in Buckinghamshire was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Riader- Roissie-Peyton He held livings at Newland, Gloucestershire, St Georges super Ely, Caerwent, Mitcheltroy, Llangibby, Dilwyn andAymestrey. He became Archdeacon of Llandaff in 1617.
Up until the early fourteenth century, the Papacy minimised the problem of clerical pluralism, but with relatively poor livings and a shortage of clergy, particularly after the Black Death, in the fifteenth century the number of clerics holding two or more livings rapidly increased.Andrew D. M. Barrell, Medieval Scotland (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), , pp. 244–5. This meant that parish clergy were largely drawn from the lower and less educated ranks of the profession, leading to frequent complaints about their standards of education or ability, although there is little clear evidence that this was actually declining. As elsewhere in Europe, the collapse of papal authority in the Papal Schism had allowed the Scottish crown to gain effective control of major ecclesiastical appointments within the kingdom, a position recognised by the Papacy in 1487.
He was ordained on 21 February 1619. After a curacy at Madingley he held livings at Hambledon, Hampshire, Bishops Waltham and Buriton.A History of Christianity in Petersfield, Leaton, E. (ed.) (2001, Petersfield, Petersfield Area Historical Society: Monograph Number 4 p17) ISSN 0262-5970 He was also Chaplain to the Bishop of Winchester from 1628."English Historical Facts, 1603-1688" Cook,C.
Edward Layfield, D.D. was an Anglican priest in the 17th century. CCEd Layfield was educated at Merchant Taylors' and St John's College, Oxford.Labdon-Ledsam He held Livings at Ibstock, East Horsley, Wrotham, Chiddingfold, Barnes and All Hallows-by-the-Tower in the City of London. He became a Canon Residentiary of St Paul's Cathedral in 1633; and Archdeacon of Essex in 1634.
John Parker was an English Anglican priest in the 17th century."Annals of the Reformation and Establishment of Religion" Strype, J. p38: Oxford; Clarendon; 1824 Jones was educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Pace-Payton He held livings at Fen Ditton, Stretham and Bluntisham. He was Archdeacon of Ely from 1568 until his death on 26 May, 1592.
Ralph Pickover (died in 1614/1615) was an English priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.CCEd Pickover was educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Phanne-Popejoy He held livings at Ludgershall and Winterbourne Cherborough. He was Archdeacon of Rochester from 1576 to 1584; and Archdeacon of Sarum from 1585 until his death on 8 March 1614/1615.
He was the son of Thomas Godwin, Bishop of Bath and Wells, born at Hannington, Northamptonshire. He was the great uncle of the writer Jonathan Swift. He was elected student of Christ Church, Oxford, in 1578, took his bachelor's degree in 1580, and that of master in 1583. After holding two Somerset livings he was in 1587 appointed subdean of Exeter.
He was a Fellow of University College and became Master of the College in June 1547. He resigned from the position in October 1551. He was not a supporter of the Reformation and was later deprived of his livings in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Anthony Salveyn, Master of University College from 1557–58, was probably Richard Salveyn's brother.
Thomas Spencer D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 16th century."Art, Literature and Religion in Early Modern Sussex: Culture and Conflict" Hadfield, A: London; Routledge; 2016 Spenser was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Spackman-Stepney He held the livings iat Hadleigh, Suffolk. He was Archdeacon of Chichester from 1560 until his death on 6 July 1571.
John Clegge was an Anglican priest in the first half of the 17th century.British History On-line"Catalogue of the Lansdowne Manuscripts in the British Museum" p255: London; British Museum ; 1819 Clegge was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Choke-Colepepper He held livings at Llangibby and Llansoy from 1601 to 1607. He became Archdeacon of Llandaff in 1646.
Edward Grey, D.D. (25 March 1782 – 1837) was an Anglican bishop who served in the Church of England as the Bishop of Hereford from 1832 to 1837. Grey was educated at Christ Church, Oxford. He held livings at St Mary, WhickhamGeograph and St Botolph Bishopsgate. He was Dean of Hereford from 1830 to 1832; and a Prebendary of Westminster Abbey from 1833.
Penguin Books; pp. 78-79 Malachy Hitchins, astronomer, became Vicar of St Hilary in 1775; in 1785 he also became Vicar of Gwinear and retained both these livings till his death, which took place on 28 March 1809 at St Hilary. The chancel was restored by John Dando Sedding in 1870. The roof was repaired in oak and raised to its old pitch.
Maurice Gwynn was a Welsh Anglican priest in the 17th century."An History of the Mitred Parliamentary Abbies, and Conventual Cathedral Churches" Bowyer, W. p343: London; Robert Gosling; 1719 Gwynn was educated at University College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Gilpin-Greenhaugh He held livings at Trawsfynydd, Llanfwrog and Llantrissaint. Gwynn was Archdeacon of Bangor from 1613 until his death on 9 September 1617.
Morgan Godwin was an English priest in the first half of the 17th century."Fasti Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ from the First Erection Thereof to this Present Year 1715" p120: London; J.Nutt; 1716 Philips was educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Gilpin-Greenhaugh He held livings at Bicknor and Lydney. He was Archdeacon of Shropshire from 1631 until his death in 1645.
Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209–1752 Vol. i. Abbas – Cutts, (1922) p. 22 He held livings at Swaffham,Historic England Fordham and Dry Drayton.
Church ministers were forced to accept the new circumstances or lose their livings. Up to a third, at least 270, of the ministry refused. Most of the vacancies occurred in the south-west of Scotland, an area particularly strong in its Covenanting sympathies. Some of the ministers also took to preaching in the open fields in conventicles, often attracting thousands of worshippers.
Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p246 He was ordained in 1702 and held livings at Caldecote, Thornhaugh and Penmark. He was an Honorary Chaplain to the King from 1725 until 1730; and Dean of Gloucester'Cantabrigia Depicta. A concise and accurate description of the University and town of Cambridge, and its environs' p117: Cambridge, J Burges, 1796 from 1730 until his death on 3 March 1758.
In addition, these livings also have floor ventilation space underneath the house. These ventilation spaces are connected through air vents that can be seen in the facade front wall below and above the windows. The houses are rectangular shaped with all rooms interconnected, and the houses are entered from one of the short sides. The layout is based on a “hierarchy of rooms”.
A few years before his birth, the household's women earned their livings as domestic servants in private homes. Lonnie was then a dishwasher in a restaurant and Luther a laborer in a cemetery. Sockwell's father was an alcoholic and reportedly had two other families. His mother suffered a schizophrenic breakdown in 1948 and spent 15 years in St. Elizabeths Hospital.
William Rougham (undated - 1393) was the second master of Gonville Hall, Cambridge (later Gonville and Caius College) from c. 1360. He had been a fellow of the college since the 1350s and was Bachelor of Medicine by 1366. He was also a priest with livings in the Diocese of Norwich and was personal physician to Henry le Despenser, Bishop of Norwich.Christopher Brooke, 1996.
Alexander went to Italy with Erasmus, and Paniter became tutor to the king's brother, the Earl of Moray. As rewards, ecclesiastical titles piled up, and next Paniter became Archdeacon and Chancellor of Dunkeld, then Deacon of Moray in 1509. He exchanged some of these livings to become Rector of Tannadice in Angus in 1510. In 1513 he became Abbot of Cambuskenneth.
Thomas Mun was born in June 1571. He was the third child of a substantial London family based in the vicinity of St Andrew Hubbard, where he was baptised on 17 June 1571. His father, John Mun, and his stepfather both earned their livings as mercers. His grandfather, also named John Mun, was provost of moneyers in the Royal Mint of England.
"Biographical History of Gonville and Caius College" John Venn/John Archibald Venn p27: Cambridge; CUP; 1901 He was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1508 to 1509;University of Cambridge web-site and Master of Gonville Hall from 1513 to 1536. He held livings at Barnwell; Holy Sepulchre, Cambridge; and St Michael Coslany, Norwich. He died on 18 June 1540.
Cummings, Shane Jiraiya (Aug 2007). "Robert Hood Joins HorrorScope". HorrorScope. Retrieved 09-09-2007. Aside from regular news items and reviews of books, magazines, and movies, HorrorScope has published interviews with notable Australian and international horror and speculative fiction authors such as RL Stine, Will Elliott, Stephen Dedman, Martin Livings, Brett McBean, Rocky Wood, Queenie Chan, Jason Nahrung, and David Conyers.
Thomas Gillingham, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 16th century."Art, Literature and Religion in Early Modern Sussex: Culture and Conflict" Hadfield, A: London; Routledge; 2016 Gillingham was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Gabel-Gilmore He held livings in Colchester, Barkway and Wheldrake. Langridge became Rector of Barcombe and Archdeacon of Chichester in 1576.
Kaile – Ryves, 1924 He held livings at Stadhampton, Coventry, Baginton, Leamington Hastings and Tatenhill.A history of the parish of Tatenhill in the county of Stafford. Hardy, R p20: London, Harrison & Sons, 1907 Kimberley was appointed Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons by Speaker William Bromley in 1710, and then Dean of Lichfield in 1713. He died in Tatenhill in 1720.
According to the regulations then in force, he might have been elected for another term if he had resigned in 1794, before reaching the age of 60, but declined to do so. He held his livings until 1814, when he resigned them and moved to London. Hey died 17 March 1815, and was buried in St John's Chapel, St John's Wood.
Queen Anne's Bounty was a scheme established in 1704 to augment the incomes of the poorer clergy of the Church of England, and by extension the organisation ("The Governors of the Bounty of Queen Anne for the Augmentation of the Maintenance of the Poor Clergy") which administered the bounty (and eventually a number of other forms of assistance to poor livings).
The Venerable Guy Etton was an Anglican priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.'The English Reformation and the Laity: Gloucestershire, 1540–1580' Litzenberger, C p89: Cambridge; CUP; 1997 He was educated at the University of Oxford. He held livings at St. James the Elder, Horton, Gloucestershire and St. Leonard, Shoreditch. He was Archdeacon of Gloucester from 1559 to 1571.
The Americans gang is a large street gang and organized crime group based in Cape Flats area of Cape Town. Like the Hard Livings gang, many smaller gangs throughout the Cape Flats owe allegiance to it. Some of these gangs include the Spoilt Brats, Dollar Kids, Young Americans, and Dixie Boys. It is the largest of the street gangs in Cape Town.
Walter Benet was the Archdeacon of Wilts from his collation on 7 March 1610 until his death on 30 July 1614.Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857: Volume 6, Salisbury Diocese p18 From Somerset, he was educated at New College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500–1714. Oxford;OUP; 1891 Pages 108 He held livings at Little WittenhamA History of the County of Berkshire: Volume 4.
Michael Reniger, D.D. was an English priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.National Archives Reniger was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Rabbetts-Rhodes He held livings at Broughton, Crawley and Chilbolton. Reniger was appointed Chancellor of Lincoln Cathedral in 1566 (Precentor, 1567/ Subdean, 1568); Archdeacon of Winchester in 1575; and Canon of St. Paul's in 1583.
Richard Harford was a Welsh Anglican priest in the 16th century.Bosbury in Annals of the Harford Family, 1909 Harford was educated at Merton College, Oxford. Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Haak-Harman He held livings at Canon Frome, Bromsgrove, Richard's Castle and Woolhope. Harford was Archdeacon of St Davids"Historical Register Vol XVII" Green, C.H. p350:London; S.Nevill; 1732 from 1757 to 1751.
George Roberts, D.D. was an English priest in the 17th century."Catalogue of the Lansdowne Manuscripts in the British Museum" p252: London; British Museum ; 1819 Roberts was born in Oxfordshire and educated at St John's College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Riader-Roissie He held livings at Shermanbury and Hambleden. Roberts was Archdeacon of Winchester from 1660 until his death in 1661.
St Katharine's before the alterations of 1859 The church of Ickleford was originally a chapel to Pirton, and the two livings were held together until divided by order of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners in 1847. The advowson was purchased by Thomas Wilson in 1868. It was conveyed before 1875 to the Rev. T. I. Walton, and then belonged to the Rev.
It was only in 1866 that the livings were separated by an Order in Council. The church stands in what was the centre of the town. It was rebuilt by John de la Moote, abbot of St Albans, about 1400, the architect being Beauchamp. Playing on its antiquity, it continues to call itself "Barnet Church", although this is not an official title.
Jasper Mayne (1604 – 6 December 1672) was an English clergyman, translator, and a minor poet and dramatist. Mayne was baptized at Hatherleigh, Devon, on 23 November 1604, and educated at Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Mascall-Meyrick He then entered the Church, was given two college livings in Oxfordshire (the vicarages of Cassington near Woodstock, and Pyrton near Watlington), and in 1646 was made a Doctor of Divinity (D.D.). These livings ended under the Commonwealth (1649–1660), when he was turned out of office to become chaplain to the Duke of Devonshire. After the Restoration, he was made canon of Christ Church (1660–1672), Archdeacon of Chichester (1660–1672), and chaplain in ordinary to King Charles II. Burke records that Dr. Mayne gave £500 towards the rebuilding of St. Paul's Cathedral after the Great Fire of London in 1666.
Ralph Lever, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 16th century."A Kingdom in Two Parishes: Lancashire Religious Writers and the English Monarchy, 1521-1689" Hardman, M p121: Vancouver;Fairleigh Dickinson University Press; 1998 Lever was educated at St John's College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Lee-Llewellin He held livings at Washington and Stanhope. Lever was Archdeacon of Northumberland from 1566 until his resignation in 1573.
Meredith Morgan was a Welsh Anglican priest in the 16th century."Queenship and Political Discourse in the Elizabethan Realms" Natalie Mears, N. p242: Cambridge; CUP; 2005 Morgan was educated at Jesus College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Mordaunt-Mytton He held Livings at Compton Beauchamp and Llanwrthwl. He was appointed Archdeacon of Carmarthen in 1583, a post he held until his death on 4 December 1612.
John Morton, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 18th century."Magnae Britanniae Notitia, Or the Present State of Great-Britain, Volume 2" Chamberlayne, J. p553: London; Goodwin; 1708 Morton was educated at Lincoln College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Mordaunt-Mytton He held livings at Washington and Stanhope. Lever was Archdeacon of Northumberland from 5 October 1685 until his death on 10 November 1722.
Edward Talley was an Welsh Anglican priest in the late 17th and early 18th centuries.'Liber Valorum et Decimarum. Being an account of the valuations and yearly Tenths of all such Ecclesiastical Benefices in England and Wales' Ecton, J: London; R.Gosling; 1728 A Cistercian, Talley was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Tabbe-Thomyow He held livings at Llangathen and Eglwyscummin.
John Hutton was an English priest in the late 17th and early 18th centuries."Catalogue of the Lansdowne Manuscripts in the British Museum" p240: London; British Museum ; 1819 Hutchinson was born in Sedgwick and educated at The Queen's College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Horrobin-Hyte He held livings at Hannington, Farthingstone and Wappenham. He was Archdeacon of Stow from 1683 until his death on 29 April 1712.
Lawson Huddleston (1677-1743) Geni was an English priest in the 18th century."The Measure of Christian Beneficence" Bowyer, T. p3: London; C.Rivington; 1735 Huddleston was educated at Jesus College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Horrobin-Hyte He held livings at St Nicholas, KelstonVillage web-site and St Cuthbert, Wells.Church web-site He was Archdeacon of Bath from 1733 until his death on 19 April 1743.
Richard Crosse (b Thurloxton 26 November 1669 d Hereford 5 June, 1732) was an English priest in the first half of the 18th century."Memorials of Cambridge" Cooper, C.H. p342: Cambridge; CUP; 2912 Crosse was born in and educated at Trinity College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Covert-Cutts he was appointed a Fellow of New College, Oxford in 1691. He held livings at Broughton, Oxfordshire and Ledbury.
William Johnson, D.D. (18 October 1642; 2 February 1698) was an Anglican priest in the Seventeenth Century."Hereford Cathedral" Aylmer, G p248 Johnson was born in Sedgeberrow and educated at The Queen's College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Jablonski-Juxston He was appointed Chaplain to Herbert Croft, Bishop of Hereford in 1668; and Canon Residentiary of Hereford Cathedral in 1669. Johnson held livings at Croft, Whitbourne and Clifton.
Gunn was born on 7 April 1750 at Guildford, Surrey, the son of Alexander Gunn of Irstead, Norfolk. He attended Fletcher's private school at Kingston-upon-Thames for six years. In 1784 he entered Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, as a sizar. He took holy orders, in 1784 became rector of Sloley, Norfolk, and in 1786 obtained the consolidated livings of Barton Turf and Irstead.
He cheapened his straw, preached against the public order for lessening the capacity of the bushel, and got into trouble by refusing to let the clerk of the market cut down his measure with the rest. His unworldliness meant that his wife had to borrow money to pay his harvestmen. Richer livings were steadily declined by him. Nevertheless, he was not appreciated by his flock.
Andrew Phillips was a Welsh Anglican priest in the late 17th and early 18th centuries."Religion and Society in the Diocese of St Davids 1485-2011" Morgan- Guy, J. p85: London; Routledge; 2016 Phillips was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Phanne-Popejoy He held livings at Llangathen, Christchurch and Coity. He was the Archdeacon of Brecon from 1578 to 1620.
Stephen Phillips was an English priest in the second half of the 17th century."History of the Parish and Town of Bampton: With the District and Hamlets" Giles, J.A. p40 Philips was educated at Brasenose College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Phanne-Popejoy He held livings at Hannington, Farthingstone and Wappenham. He was Archdeacon of Shropshire from 1669 until his death on 24 August 1684.
164 He did not reach the highest ranks of the Church, but he was appointed Archdeacon of Dublin, then Archdeacon of Meath; he was also given the livings of Kilberry, County Meath, and Brington, Northamptonshire.Ball p.164 He achieved high office in the political and judicial spheres, being appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer of Ireland in 1376, and Lord Treasurer 1400–1402.Ball p.
He employed himself, preparing some of his works for the press, the most noted being a Friendly Call to a New Species of Dissenters, which went through several editions. He dedicated it to Sir William Scott, afterwards Lord Stowell, whose interest with his younger brother, Lord Eldon, then lord chancellor, obtained for Barry the two livings of St Mary and St Leonard in Wallingford, Oxfordshire.
Francis Lloyd was a Welsh Anglican priest in the late 17th and early 18th centuries."The Present State of Europe, Volume 21" p78: London; Henry Rhodes; 1711 The son of Bishop Humphrey Lloyd, he was educated at Oriel College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Lloyd-Lytton He held livings at Criccieth, Llanrhaiadr in Kinmerch, Llandyrnog and Llandudno. He was appointed Archdeacon of Merioneth,Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae Vol.
Edmund Mervin was a 16th century English priest. Mervin was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Mab-Marygold He held livings at Bramshott and Sutton. He was appointed Archdeacon of Surrey"The history of Surrey", Part 2, Vol I Brayley, E.W. p262: Dorking; Robert Best Ede; 1841 By Edward Wedlake on 18 December 1556 and deprived by Queen Elizabeth in 1559.
The Venerable William Hodges, D.D. was an Anglican priest in England during the 17th-century."Catalogue of the Lansdowne Manuscripts in the British Museum" p253: London; British Museum ; 1819 Hodges was born in Chittlehampton and educated at Exeter College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Hieron- Horridge He held livings at Bampton and Ripple. Hillerson was Archdeacon of Buckingham from 1671 until his death on 1 November 1684.
Thomas Clutterbuck, D.D. was an English priest in the 17th century.The Gentleman's Magazine, Volume 101, Part 1; Volume 149 p565: London; J.B. Nichols & son; 1831 Clutterbuck was born in Dinton, Buckinghamshire and educated at Magdalen College, Oxford, becoming Fellow in 1644.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Choke-Colepepper He held livings at Leckford, Llandrillo and Southampton. Clutterbuck was Archdeacon of Winchester from 1684 to 1700.
George Allanson was Archdeacon of CornwallCCeD from 14 September 1737 until his death in 1741 .British History on-line Allanson was born in the City of London, educated at Christ Church, Oxford and admitted to the Middle Temple in 1713.Part 1 vol I p3 (1922) He held livings at St Tudy and St Gluvias; and was made a prebendary of Exeter Cathedral in 1730.
Richard Stokes was an English Anglican priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries."An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk" Blomefield, F p509: London; William Miller; 1806 Stokes was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Stermont-Synge He held livings at Bishopsteignton, Bunwell and Banham. he was Archdeacon of Norfolk from 1587 until his death in 1619.
He held livings at Ballysheehan, Killenaule and Ballingarry He was appointed Archdeacon of Cashel in 1640"Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 1" Cotton,H. p5 Dublin, Hodges & Smith, 1848–1878 and Dean of Clonfert in 1666; "Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 4" Cotton,H. p179 Dublin, Hodges & Smith, 1848–1878 and held both offices until his death in 1669.
John Drewery, DCL was an English Anglican priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries."The Gentleman's Magazine" Sylvanus Urban p646: London; Nichols & Son; 1804 Drewry was born in Pulborough and educated at Lincoln College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Disbrowe-Dyve He held livings at Pulborough and Witney. He was appointed a Canon of Chichester Cathedral in 1582 and Archdeacon of Oxford in 1592.
The Coughlan family lived in Blackrock, Cork at the turn of the 20th century, and the father, John Coughlan, earned his livelihood as a fisherman. All of his sons would later earn their livings on the sea. The Coughlan's also came to be regarded as a famous hurling family in the early years of the championship. Pat Coughlan was the eldest of the family.
Talbot was presented to St Giles' Church, Reading, around 1768, where he succeeded James Yorke; this was an exchange of livings, and it took place after Secker had presented Talbot to the London church All Hallows, Thames Street. Yorke was the same time Dean of Lincoln. The Secker and Talbot families were close. In Reading, Talbot continued with a pastorate of the same kind as in Kineton.
He had several other livings, although he had not been ordained a priest. He represented Henry VIII in Paris in 1529, persuading the theologians of the Sorbonne to support Henry's divorce from Catherine of Aragon.ODNB, Reginald Pole Her youngest son Geoffrey Pole married well, to Constance, daughter of Edmund Pakenham, and inherited the estate of Lordington in Sussex. Margaret's own favour at Court varied.
Barnes took a Bachelor in Divinity and Doctor of Divinity at Cambridge in preparation for a career in the church. He was ordained in 1769 held various livings in Norwich and Wattisham, Suffolk, and became Vice-Provost of King's. In 1788 Barnes became Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University as well as Master of Peterhouse, Cambridge. His appointment to the latter post was highly contentious.
Hugh Gore DD (1613-1691) was a seventeenth century Anglican Bishop of Waterford and Lismore in Ireland who founded Swansea Grammar School. He was born in Maiden Newton in Dorset, England in 1613. He want to school in Lismore, and studied at Trinity College, Oxford and at Trinity College, Dublin. On becoming a priest he held livings in Nicholaston and Oxwich near Swansea, Wales.
In July 1663, having resigned his fellowship of Peterhouse in the previous year, he was consecrated bishop of Sodor and Mann. His nephew preached the consecration sermon. In April 1664, the Earl of Derby also appointed him Governor of the Isle of Man. During his brief residence there he acquired a liberal and reforming reputation, establishing schools and improving the livings of the impoverished clergy.
He died on 1 December 1658, at the age of 77 and was buried at Trinity College chapel.1812 Chalmers Biography He was satirised by the royalists as a notorious pluralist, but there is no proof that he enjoyed all his livings at the same time. John WilkinsTract on Preaching, pp. 82-3. describes him as one of the most eminent divines for preaching and practical theology.
Just like any village Bagh Dushkhel has people who earn their livings through farming. Few years Back, Farming was the main source of income for most of the people but due to overpopulation the suitable areas for farming are now covered with houses. As most people are now doing Government jobs so they do not consider Farming as the main source of their income.
The Venerable Nathaniel Ellison, D.D. (Newcastle upon Tyne, 29 March 1657Whitburn, 12 June 1721) was an Anglican clergyman.British History On-line He was educated at St Edmund Hall, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Eade- Eyton He became a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford in 1678. Ellison was Chaplain to Thomas Wood, Bishop of Lichfield; and held livings at St. Lawrence, Towcester and St. Nicholas, Newcastle-on-Tyne.
In about 1150 Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester founded the Hospital of St. James and St. John. Its master was a priest, assisted by a number of religious brothers. Its duties included providing accommodation and care for poor travellers. In the 15th century there were complaints that successive masters were absentees, holding other livings at the same time as being in charge of the hospital.
James Proctor was a priest in England during the 16th century.Catalogue of the Lansdowne Manuscripts in the British Museum, British Museum, London 1819, p. 246. A Cistercian, he was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Popham-Price He held livings at Islip (perhaps), Thornton, Normanton-upon-Soar, Binbrook, Abbots Ripton, Winterbourne Gunner Berwick St Leonard, Malmesbury, East Hendred and Bratton Fleming.
Jobs had been created by the railway, and citizens also began working in mines and mills. At this time, around 70 percent of the villagers were Protestants, and about 30 percent were Catholics. Most people made their livings as firemen, farmers, singers, businessmen, and mechanics. The branch of mining that stood out most strongly was baryte mining, which was not abandoned locally until 1948.
Silvanus Griffiths, D.D. was an Anglican priest in the 17th century."Hereford Cathedral" Aylmer, G p248: London; Hambledon Press; 2000 Griffiths was born in Herefordshire and educated at Brasenose College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Greenhill-Gysby He held livings at Kingsland, Hampton Bishop and Hopesay. Griffiths became Treasurer of Hereford Cathedral in 1604; Archdeacon of Hereford in 1606; and Dean of Hereford in 1617.
He held various church livings in Hertfordshire and Kent including Northchurch, Hertfordshire; Bexley, Kent, 1659–65; Barkway, Hertfordshire, 1666–94; and Berkhampstead, 1693. From 1697 until his death he was Royal Chaplain. In his will Smoult bequeathed £100 for the purchase of books for the Library at St John's. Bexley National School, London was built from an earlier endowment by him to the parish in 1703.
Baker was born at Barnstaple, Devonshire, in or about 1523, and educated at Eton College, whence he was elected in 1540 to King's College, Cambridge (B.A., 1544; M.A., 1548; B.D., 1554; D.D., 1562). He was nominated provost of King's College by Queen Elizabeth in 1558. Baker held several church livings and cathedral appointments; and he was vice-chancellor of the university in 1561-2.
Tenison introduced a Bill of Residence in the Irish Parliament in December 1731, and became a literary target for Jonathan Swift.Stephen E. Karian, Jonathan Swift in Print and Manuscript (2010), pp. 84–5; Google Books. Swift found Tenison's politics objectionable, and in his poem On the Irish Bishops attacked Tenison's support for the Bill of Residence, and a Bill of Division, both concerned with Irish clerical livings.
John Lee's mother was named Anne, and he had a brother, Francis Lee, as well as a sister married to a husband surnamed Tote. As Chambers notes, there was a family connection, as John Lee held the livings of Fleet Marston and Wootton, but he could not have been a legitimate son 'or Sir Henry Lee would not have been Cromwell's heir at law'.
Dom Norbert Birt has shown that the number of Marian priests who were driven from their livings was far greater than was commonly supposed. After a careful study of all available sources of information he estimates the number of priests holding livings in England at Elizabeth's accession at 7500 (p. 162). A large number, forming the majority of these, accepted, though unwillingly, the new state of things, and according to tradition many of them were in the habit of celebrating Mass early and of reading the Church of England service later on Sunday morning. But the number of Marian priests who refused to conform was very large, and the frequently repeated statement that only two hundred of them refused the Oath of Supremacy has been shown to be misleading, as this figure was given originally in Sander's list, which only included dignitaries and was not exhaustive.
Edward Layton, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 16th century."Bishops and Reform in the English Church, 1520–1559" Carleton, K. p18: Woodbridge; Boydell & Brewer, 2001 Layton was born in Surrey and educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Lee- Llewellin He held livings at All Cannings, Wiltshire, and Cheriton, Hampshire. Layton was Archdeacon of Salisbury from 2 August 1539 until his resignation on 20 July 1546.
He travelled widely and, in 1927, exchanged livings with a vicar in Dorset, Douglas Adams. 1927 Douglas Adams, having taken over as vicar found himself faced with internal church squabbling, including differences over the church school. He organised the first Sunday school trip which went to Boston Spa. He also dedicated the memorial chapel at St Andrew's to those who had lost their lives in the First World War.
Richard Langford was an Welsh Anglican priest in the late 17th and early 18th centuries.'Liber Valorum et Decimarum. Being an account of the valuations and yearly Tenths of all such Ecclesiastical Benefices in England and Wales' Ecton, J: London; R.Gosling; 1728 Langford was born in Llanfwrog, Denbighshire and educated at St Alban Hall, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Labdon- Ledsam He held livings at Penmorfa, Bosbury, Llanrhaeadr-ym-Mochnant and Goodrich.
One of those in the churchyard was brought there from a road junction about half a mile east of the churchtown.Langdon, A. G. (1896) Old Cornish Crosses. Truro: Joseph Pollard; pp. 306-08, 48 & 134 Malachy Hitchins, astronomer, became Vicar of St Hilary in 1775; in 1785 he also became Vicar of Gwinear and retained both these livings till his death, which took place on 28 March 1809 at St Hilary.
Anthony Jones was a Welsh Anglican priest in the 17th century."A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain and Ireland" Burke, J./ Burke, J.B. p66: London; Henry Colburn; 1846 Jones was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford. Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Jablonski-Juxston He held livings at Penbryn, Dormington and Llantrisant. He was Archdeacon of St Davids from 1667 until his death on 22 June, 1678.
John, born in 1687, became rector of Broughton in Northamptonshire in 1718, and of Byfield in November 1721, holding both livings till 1753, when he resigned Broughton in favour of his son Nathaniel; he married, on 23 November 1721, Ann, daughter of Richard Walker of Harborough, and died at Byfield on 25 May 1763. Elizabeth, married, 20 August 1703, Francis Gastrell, bishop of Chester, and died on 2 February 1761.
Brian Higden"York Clergy Wills 1520–1600: I Minster Clergy, Volume 1"Cross, C. p135:York; Borthwick; 1984 was a priest in England during the 16th century.Yorkshire Historical Directory Higden was educated at Pembroke College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500–1714, Hieron-Horridge He held livings at Buckenham, Rickinghall and Nettleton. Higden was Archdeacon of York from 1515 to 1516; and Dean of York from 1516 until his death on 5 June 1539.
The Venerable John Hillersdon was an Anglican priest in England during the 17th-century."The Environs of London: Counties of Herts, Essex & Kent" Lysons, D p216:London; W.Davies; 1796 Hill was born in Stoke Hammond and educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Hieron-Horridge He held livings at Odstock and Castle Ashby. Hillerson was Archdeacon of Buckingham from 1671 until his death 1 November 1684.
The Venerable William Powell, D.D. was an Anglican priest in England during the late 16th and early 17th centuries." Description of Bath" Wood, J. p209: W. Bathoe; and T. Lownds; 1765 Powell was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Popham-Price He was appointed Fellow in 1564 and Praelector in 1578. He held he livings at St Mary, Reading and All Hallows, Bread Street in the City of London.
The views of the Reformers had spread in his diocese, and he was suspected of temporizing with them. He resigned (1550) in favor of the Dominican Egidio Foscherari, reserving to himself an annual pension and the patronage of livings. Later, he founded the diocesan seminary. On 11 December 1553, he opted for the titulus of San Lorenzo in Lucina,Cardinal-Priests of San Lorenzo in Lucina which meant a greater income.
While at Greenwich he entered holy orders, and moving to Exeter was for a short time vicar of Hennock. On 6 November 1775 Bishop Frederick Keppel presented him to the vicarage of St Hilary, Cornwall, and on 23 May 1785 to that of Gwinear. Hitchins retained both his livings till his death, which took place on 28 March 1809 at St Hilary. He was buried in the parish church.
Isaac Singleton was an Anglican priest in the late 16th and 17th centuries."The Ejected of 1662 in Cumberland & Westmorland" Nightingale, B. p649 Singleton was born in London and educated at Brasenose College, Oxford.Shield-Smethurst He held livings at Whitchurch, Oxfordshire, Bleddfa, Great Salkeld and Crosthwaite.He was appointed a Canon of St Pauls in 1614; wasArchdeacon of Brecon from 1620 to 1623; and Archdeacon of Carlisle from 1623 to 1643.
Archdeacon John Douglas Giles (28 November 1812 – 5 February 1867)'Births, Deaths, Marriages and Obituaries' Pall Mall Gazette (London, England), Tuesday, 12 February 1867; Issue 627 was an Anglican priest who was Archdeacon of Stow from 1862 until his death.British History )n-line Giles was born in Wedmore and educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He held livings at Swinstead, Belleau and Willoughby. In 1845, he married Sarah Elizabeth Allen.
He held livings in Oswaldkirk and Bristol.CCEd Frankland was Dean of Gloucester from 1723 until 1729,Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae Vol.1 p487 and then Dean of Ely"Magna Britannia: pt. 1. Cambridgeshire. pt. 2. The county palatine of Chester" Lysons, S. p262 London; T.Cadell and W.Davies;1808 until his death on 3 September 1730,Deans, pp10-12, Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541-1857: Volume 7, Ely, Norwich, Westminster and Worcester Dioceses.
He was waived on August 30, 2012 and signed to the team's practice squad. He was promoted to the active roster on December 21, for the last two games of the season. Leary entered the 2013 offseason competing for a starting job on the offensive line. He was getting first-team reps at left guard ahead of an injured Nate Livings, before needing arthroscopic surgery on his right knee during preseason.
It is annexed to that of Hoveringham. The two livings have recently been augmented to the value of £450 by Trinity College, Cambridge, and in 1850 a large, handsome parsonage house was erected for the present incumbent, the Rev. Henry Lea Guilleband MA, who is now erecting a neat Sunday school. The school has a rent charge of £10 for the education of 20 boys of this parish, and Hoveringham.
The Congal Biomarine Station is a reserve operated by a private non-profit organization beside the Muisne River estuary that protects the mangrove wetlands. The mangroves had been heavily affected by aquaculture and over-extraction of natural resources. Many people depended on shrimp farms, and lost their livings when an exotic viral disease destroyed the shrimps. The station attempts to develop community-based sustainable use of the reserve's resource.
In the General Assembly he identified himself with the reformers, and took part in the debates against pluralities in livings and the abuses of lay patronage. Like Thomas Chalmers, his ecclesiastical successor, he was interested in social questions, and founded in Edinburgh a weekday school, known as "Dr. Andrew Thomson's". He also took a prominent part in the agitation against slavery in the British colonies, advocating immediate and not gradual abolition.
One of the livings at Bradshaw's disposal was the rectory of Mary's Church, Stockport and he presented Paget to it. Paget automatically lost Chad's as soon as he accepted Stockport. A marginal note in Chad's parish register for 1658/9 relates that: "March 27, Mr. John Bryan was chossen minr. by the whole parish, being the next lord's day after that Mr. Paget had loste the place."St.
Henry Cary's biography of his father says that Cardinal Newman was an "intimate friend of his (the son) when they both had livings in Oxford". Cary was a prolific writer, eventually resigning his cure in 1844 to pursue his classical studies. His father died the same year and Cary subsequently published a 2-volume "Memoir" of his father. From 1847 to 1849 he was curate at Drayton, Berkshire.
Some who had an allocation lived in cities, where they hoped to make better livings. Lee County as a named entity was formed on December 7, 1836, under the jurisdiction of Wisconsin Territory. It would become a part of Iowa Territory when it was formed on July 4, 1838. Large- scale European-American settlement in the area began in 1839, after Congress allowed owners to sell land individually.
His other degrees were BD and D.D., both in 1799. He was elected Fellow of Balliol College on 29 November 1785, and in July 1797 was presented by the college to the united livings of All Saints and St Leonard's, Colchester. On 14 November 1798, he was elected Master of Balliol, an office he held till his death. From 1807 to 1810, he was Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University.
William Goberd was an English priest in the first half of the 16th century."Church and State in the Diocese of Hereford:1327-1535" Tarrant, J p136: University of Sydney; 1968 Goberd was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Gabel-Gilmore He held livings at Bicknor and Lydney. He became Treasurer of Hereford Cathedral in 1513, and Archdeacon of Shropshire in 1515, dying later that year.
Subsequently he was chaplain, first to the royalist Sir Robert Shirley of Eatington (1629–1656), and then at the Exeter House chapel. After the Restoration in 1660 he was installed as a canon of Canterbury Cathedral. In the same year he returned to Cambridge as Master of Corpus Christi, and was appointed Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity. He also received the livings of Cottesmore, Rutland, and Stoke Bruerne, Northamptonshire.
In 1241 Walter already held a number of livings in various parts of the country; in 1256 he was an agent for Walter of Kirkham Bishop of Durham in a lawsuit. Walter was also prothonotary of the chancery in 1258. Walter rose to prominence as a skilled lawyer and negotiator. When Henry III went to France to negotiate the Treaty of Paris, Walter was left behind as a trusted royal servant.
On the expiration of his indentures he went into business on his own account; but turned to literature and history. In 1781 he was ordained to the curacies of Baddesley Clinton and Packwood, Warwickshire. On the sudden death of the incumbent, Noble was himself presented to the two livings ('starvations,' he called them). Noble, now a married man, took a house at Knowle, Warwickshire, conveniently situated for both his parishes.
He also briefly became attached to the household of Pierre d'Ailly. A career ecclesiastic, although only in minor orders, he amassed a number of clerical livings, including a canonry of the Church of St. Denis in Liège. When John of Walenrode, Prince- Bishop of Liège, died in 1419, de Sart acquired his private library. Under Walenrode's successor, John of Heinsberg, de Sart was appointed chancellor of the prince-bishopric.
For more than twenty years Echard resided in Lincolnshire, chiefly at Louth, and wrote a number of works. On 24 April 1697 he was installed prebendary of Louth in the cathedral of Lincoln, and on 12 August 1712 archdeacon of Stow. In or about 1722 Echard was presented by George I to the livings of Rendlesham and Sudbourne in Suffolk. There he lived in bad health for nearly eight years.
Greenhill matriculated at Trinity College, Oxford in 1746, graduating B.C.L. in 1754.s:Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715-1886/Greenhill, John Russell He was ordained deacon by Thomas Secker in 1754, and priest in 1755. He became rector of Fringford in 1756, with the addition of Marsh Gibbon in 1779, both livings being in Oxfordshire. On the death of his cousin Mary Russell, Greenhill inherited Chequers.
He became Bishop of Dunwich in June 1945 and during his nine years of Episcopate he held the livings of Badingham and Dennington. He was consecrated a bishop on St James's Day 1945 (25 July), by Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury, at Westminster Abbey. In retirement from 1955 to 1961, he lived at Madehurst where he served as curate-in-charge.The Times, Obituaries March 1961 He died at the age of 81.
The first abbot was Gerung. In 1248 canons from All Saints were sent to Lorsch Abbey to turn it into a Premonstratensian monastery, since when Lorsch was counted as a daughter house of All Saints. Another daughter house was set up at Haguenau. Through various gifts and livings, inter alia at Oberkirch and Oppenau, the monastery grew rapidly and became one of the major religious, cultural and political centres of the region.
Livings attended Washington-Marion Magnet High School where he played defensive tackle. As a senior, he was named All-Southwest Louisiana after registering 124 tackles and 5 sacks. He had academic eligibility problems and instead of going to a junior college, chose to sit out two full years taking correspondence courses. He received a scholarship from Louisiana State University, where he was a three-year starter and played every offensive line position except center.
Livings signed as a free agent with the Dallas Cowboys on March 16, 2012, with the intention of replacing Kyle Kosier. Although he started every game, his play didn't live up to expectations. On September 1, 2013, he was placed on the injured reserve list after missing most of the pre-season with a right knee injury, the same problem that bothered him for much of the previous year. He was released on September 5.
The Venerable William Higgins was an Anglican priest in England during the 17th Century."Visitation Articles and Injunctions of the Early Stuart Church, Volume 2" Church of England Record Society p248:Woodbridge; Boydell; 1998 : Higdgins was born in London and educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Hieron-Horridge He held livings at Henstridge, Almondbury, Cheselbourne and Stoke on Tern. He was Canon of Lichfield Cathedral in 1633, and Precentor in 1636.
The Venerable John Priaulx, D.D. was an Anglican priest in England during the 17th century."Catalogue of the Lansdowne Manuscripts in the British Museum" p246: London; British Museum ; 1819 Priaulx was educated at Merton College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Popham-Price He held the livings at Fovant, Long Newnton and Berwick St John, all (at that time) in Wiltshire. He was Archdeacon of Sarum from 1671 until his death on 2 June 1674.
Thomas Stanoe was a Welsh Anglican priest in the late 17th and early 18th centuries."A Survey of the Cathedrals of England" Browne,W p370: London, T.Osborne, 1742 Stanoe was educated at Trinity College, Oxford and became a Fellow in 1667.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Spackman-Stepney He held three livings in the City of London: St Ethelburga, Bishopsgate; Christ Church, Greyfriars and St Leonard, Foster Lane. Stanoe was Chaplain to William and Mary.
3), and so continued until 1703. The Court of First Fruits and Tenths was subsequently subsumed into the Exchequer Office of First Fruits and Tenths in 1554. Beginning in 1703, Queen Anne's Bounty was the name applied to a perpetual fund of first-fruits and tenths granted by a charter of Queen Anne and confirmed by statute in 1703 (2 & 3 Anne, c. 11), for the augmentation of the livings of the poorer Anglican clergy.
Handling other MPs, Sir Francis proved adept and subtle. When Sir William Strode suggested involving the bishops in about depriving ministers form livings and benefices, Hastings steered a course towards inclusion. More Puritans would be needed to staff the parish churches, so embrace Presbyterianism and the innovation of Conventicles. The real threat posed was by Catholic France and Spain, the Society of Jesuits who must not be allowed to "settle teaching" in England.
James Phillott (20 February 1750 – 11 June 1815) was Archdeacon of Bath from 28 July 1798 until his death."Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857": Volume 5, Pages 18-20, Bath and Wells Diocese Institute of Historical Research, London, 1979 Phillott was educated at The Queen's College, Oxford, matriculating in 1766 and graduating B.A. in 1769. He held livings at Bath and Stanton Prior. He was a Prebendary of Wells from 1791 onwards.
Pedicures generally take approximately 45 minutes to an hour in the US. According to the US Department of Labor, manicure and pedicure specialists earned a median income of around $20,820 in 2015. Most professionals earn an hourly wage or salary which can be augmented through customer tips. Independent nail techs depend on repeat business and consistent business to earn their livings. The most successful independent manicure technicians may earn salaries of over $50,000 per year.
Strachey was born in Edinburgh on 30 July 1737,"The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, Volume 88, Part 2" p631 the second son of Henry Strachey of Sutton Court, and younger brother of Sir Henry Strachey, 1st Baronet. He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge. He was ordained in 1760 and became Chaplain to Philip Yonge, Bishop of Norwich of Erwarton from 1801 to 1835. He held livings at Erpingham and Thwaite.
He established the Simeon Trust, a fund that became a major source of evangelical patronage. By the time of his death, the Trust controlled the livings of 42 churches, including Bath Abbey. He also helped to found the Church Missionary Society in 1799, which was meant to be an evangelical alternative to the high-church Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts. The society sponsored mission work in India, Africa, and Australia.
It has been likened to an African Fight Club and Less Than Zero Staggie's background has been influenced by his being a nephew of Rashied of the Hard Livings gang, though this was not a direct influence on Risk. His filmmaking was influenced primarily by Quentin Tarantino, and his skills led to his being selected as a finalist in the 2013 Kevin Spacey Jameson Prize. Staggie is currently planning another book, named Epic.
It would seem from this that to his other preferments he had added a canonry at Durham Cathedral. In fact, he was only imitating a number of the beneficed clergy of his time who absented themselves from their livings that they might be more free to enjoy themselves. He appears to have died in office in 1568 but details of his death, or burial place, are unknown and his successor was not appointed until 1569.
The first band to win in Uppermill was the Wyke Temperance Band. Bands from around the country, and indeed the world, travel to the area annually to compete. Due to the huge popularity of the event, Whit Friday band contests are now held in others of Saddleworth's surrounding villages. In the village of Dobcross a Henry Livings memorial prize is open to bands who play on any of the morning's walks on Whit Friday.
Rector of two livings, Chaplain of Greenwich Hospital and a Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford,ibid Tindal was sufficiently prosporous to allow his son, Capt George Tindal RN to settle in Coval Hall, Chelmsford.Monument to Capt George Tindal in Chelmsford Cathedral. Capt George Tindal's grandson, Rev William Tindal (1756–1804), was a Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford and chaplain of the Tower of London. An antiquarian, he published a history of Evesham Abbey.
20 years practice of his words has proved his foresight; during the period the white-headed langur population in Nongguan Mountains has increased from the initial of about 100 individuals to about 820 individuals, and the people there have as well gradually improved their livings to well-off standard. Peking University Press is proud to present the monograph series of Prof. Pan Wenshi. How do we see the scientific achievements by Prof.
This post he resigned in the following year; but in 1612, when desirous of returning to the college as rhetoric professor, he was unsuccessful in obtaining the post. In 1616, he became rector of Parndon Magna in Essex, and of East Hanningfield in the same county. He retained both livings until about December 1643, when he was deprived, and his benefices were sequestered by the House of Commons. He died early in 1645.
Lack of financial support made them hard to keep good players and even to afford the increasing traveling expenses. Some players chose to transfer to teams such as Taipower for making livings. The remaining people were sometimes unable to attend the league games due to working overtime in the weekends. A shocking 0–19 defeat to Flying Camel on January 26, 1986 revealed their difficult position – in that game they had only 8 applicable players.
In 1801 Thomas Stonor, father of Thomas, Lord Camoys, gave him the chapelry of Nettlebed in Oxfordshire. His father presented him to the united livings of Basildon and Ashampstead in Berkshire in 1802, when he resigned Nettlebed, but retained the curacy of St. Lawrence, which he served gratuitously for many years. The Rev. Charles Simeon paid a first visit to Basildon in 1807, and was from that time a friend and correspondent of Marsh.
Composers made their livings from commissioned work, and worked as conductors, performers and tutors of music or through appointments to the courts. To a certain extent, music publishers also paid composers for rights to print music, but this was not royalty as is generally understood today. The European Church was also a large user of music, both religious and secular. However, performances were largely based on hand-written music or aural training.
It is presumed that he conformed with the change of religion, for he retained under Edward VI the livings of Great Baddow, Essex, and of Wokey, Somerset, which he had received in 1546, and was presented in 1552 by the dean and chapter of Canterbury to the rectory of All Hallows, Lombard Street, London. He died shortly after this last preferment at Croydon, Surrey, where he was buried on 10 June 1552.
A team of 40-50 canoeists, mostly men who make their livings as fishermen, mans each vessel. In the past, diviners used the results of these races to predict the future, but today a Christian priest presides instead. Up to the late 1930s, a family on Jebale Island claimed to be able to summon the Miengu water spirits to help favoured participants. Beginning in the 1930s, football has grown to eclipse other sports in popularity.
Samuel Radcliffe was an Oxford college head in the 17th-century."The History and Antiquities of the Colleges and Halls in the University of Oxford":, Vol 3 p364 à Wood, A: Oxford; Clarendon; 1786 Radcliffe was born in Lancashire. He was educated at Brasenose College, OxfordRabbetts-Rhodes, Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714He held livings at Steeple Aston and Boxford; and was Principal of BrasenoseBNC web-site from 1612 until death on 26 June 1648.
Francis Yarborough, D.D. was an Oxford college head in the 18th-century."The History and Antiquities of the Colleges and Halls in the University of Oxford":, Vol 3 p365 à Wood, A: Oxford; Clarendon; 1786 Yate was born at Campsall and educated at Brasenose College, Oxford.Yaire-Youle, Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714 He held livings at Over Worton and Aynho; and was Principal of BrasenoseBNC web-site from 1745 until his death 24 April 1770.
He served as the Royal Academy's chaplain from 1784 to 1788, at which time he resigned to become chaplain to the Prince of Wales. In 1784, Peters was awarded the living of Scalford, Leicestershire by Charles Manners, 4th Duke of Rutland. In 1788, the Dowager Duchess gave him the living at Knipton, at which time he also obtained that at Woolsthorpe. These livings were near to Belvoir Castle, at which he was curator of pictures.
Michael Hudson (1605–1648) was an English clergyman who supported the Royalist cause during the English Civil War. In 1628 Hudson graduated from Queen's College, Oxford with an M.A, and became fellow c. 1630. King Charles I gave him various livings; and he was one of the king's chaplains at Oxford. He was scoutmaster to the northern army (1643–1644) and, along with John Ashburnham, accompanied Charles I to Newark in 1646.
The hospital was closed in 1423 for maladministration but re-established in 1425. In 1449 a master was appointed who seems to have continued the practice of non-residence while holding parish livings elsewhere. In 1484 the patron, Viscount Lovell granted control of the hospital to William Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester, citing its failure to give hospitality and alms. Waynflete had founded Magdalen College, Oxford in 1458 and Magdalen College School, Oxford in 1480.
He was educated at Merchant Taylors' School, London, and Oxford. After graduating he became Greek reader in Corpus Christi College, and held that office for ten years, resigning in 1588. He then left Oxford and held successively the livings of Aveley, Essex (1589–1592), Ardleigh, Essex (1592–1594), Faversham, Kent (1594–1599), and St Sepulchre-without-Newgate London (1599–1614). He was also presented to the living of Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, in 1592.
King Charles II appointed him to the livings of St Lawrence Jewry in London, and Uplowman in Devonshire, in 1661. He also became dean of Exeter Cathedral (1661) and rector of St Breock, Cornwall in 1662. In the latter year he was consecrated Bishop of Exeter, and in 1667 he was translated to the see of Salisbury. The office of Chancellor of the Order of the Garter was conferred on him in 1671.
John Ramridge was an English priest in the 16th Century."English Reformations: Religion, Politics, and Society Under the Tudors" Haigh, C: Oxford; Clarendon; 1993 Ramridge was educated at Merton College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Rabbetts-Rhodes He held livings at Garsington, Coventry and Husbands Bosworth. He was Dean of Lichfield from 1554 to 1558British History Online – Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857 – Deans of Lichfield and Archdeacon of Derby from 1558 until his deprivation in 1559.
The Ven Gilbert Heathcote (5 February 1765 – 19 October 1829) was Archdeacon of Winchester from 1814 until his death. The fifth son of Sir Thomas Heathcote, 2nd Baronet (of Hursley) by his second wife, Anne Tollett, he was educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford. He held livings at Hursley and Andover; and was appointed Treasurer of Wells in 1814."Ecclesiastical" The Morning Post (London, England), Tuesday, March 08, 1814; Issue 13456.
Justinian Lancaster was an English Anglican priest in the 16th century."Annals of the Reformation and Establishment of Religion, and Other Various Occurrences in the Church of England, During Queen Elizabeth's Happy Reign" Volume 3 p351 Strype, J. p351: Oxford; Clarendon; 1824 Lever was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Lee-Llewellin He held livings at Enmore, Huish Champflower, Chawton, Donyatt, Yatton and Churchstanton. Lancaster was Archdeacon of Taunton from 1560 until 1584.
Michael Hughes was a Welsh Anglican priest in the 17th century."Willis' Survey of St. Asaph, considerably enlarged and brought down to the present time" Edwards, E. pp177/8: Wrexham, John Painter, 1801 Hughes was educated at Brasenose College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Horrobin-Hyte He held Livings at Usk, co, Monmouth, 1633, sinecure rector of Llandyssil, co. Montgomery, and vicar of Chirk,"Chirk Castle Accounts, A.D. 1666-1753" Myddelton, W.M. p7: Manchester; Manchester University Press; 1931 and Llandudno.
However, the post-revolutionary situation required a conceptual shift. At the end of the 19th century 74%Kuchenbecker 2000 p59 of the Jewish population, due to restrictions in the tsarist times, “made livings from petty commerce, retail sales, small-scale handicraft production, and unskilled labor”,Kuchenbecker 2000 p59 while only 3.5% worked in agriculture.Kuchenbecker p.59 The social structure of the Jewish population basically reversed the overall proportions of the agricultural society they were living in.
Failing to find a pulse, Len declared Martha dead. Martha was laid out in the vestry bedroom prior to being buried in the family plot with her husband, Percy. Her insurance policies only came to £22, 4s and 9d; not enough for a funeral, so Lily and her husband Wilf (Henry Livings) had to pay the rest. Helping Lily clear out the house, Ena and Minnie happened upon the record Martha had made in Blackpool in 1934.
He was ordained priest in Lincoln Cathedral in 1719 by the bishop of Lincoln, Edmund Gibson, and immediately took the nearby livings of Croft and Kirkby-on-Bain. He resigned in 1722 to become vicar of St. Mary's Church, Nottingham. The story for which Disney is remembered involves the buccaneering Archbishop Blackburne performing confirmation in St. Mary's. At the end of the proceedings, the archbishop sent out his messenger to fetch his pipe, tobacco and some ale.
On the death of Thomas Secker in 1768, Cornwallis's friendship with the prime minister, the Duke of Grafton, resulted in his translation to Archbishop of Canterbury. As archbishop, his sociability and geniality made him popular. He was a consistent supporter of the administration of Lord North, and led efforts in support of Anglican clergy who were dispossessed of their livings in the American colonies during the American Revolution. He was buried at St. Mary's Church, Lambeth.
They were in effect tenants of the Crown, but they had security of tenure and could transfer their rights. Provided that they did not interfere with the king's hunting, they were free to make their livings in the Forest. Economic activity included farming, milling and other industries such as mining. There are records of iron forging from 1206, but the industry declined in the 14th century because the wood which supplied the forges was used up.
In November 1552 he was presented to the vicarage of Norton, in the diocese of Durham. Persons appointed to livings in Royal patronage at that time were required to preach before the King, that there might be an opportunity of ascertaining their orthodoxy.Memoirs of Bernard Gilpin by Rev C S Collingwood, page 45, 1884. Simpkin, Marshall & Co., London Accordingly, on the first Sunday after Epiphany 1553 Gilpin went to Greenwich to preach in the Royal presence.
Overall, however, the economic situation for many Chinese in the new Chinatown remained the same as in the old Chinatown. The majority of Chinatown’s residents were poorly-educated immigrants who made their livings through low-skill, manual labor or through restaurant-related work. In turn, the wealthy merchant families still wielded immense power in the area, with the Moys wielding the most. Numerous important buildings and structures in Chinatown arose in the area during this early period.
Owen Wood was a sixteenth century priest."A New History of Ireland" T. W. Moody, F. X. Martin, F.J. Byrne and Cosgrove, A: Oxford, OUP, 1976 Wood was born in AngleseyArmagh clergy and parishes : being an account of the clergy of the Church of Ireland in the Diocese of Armagh and educated at Jesus College, Oxford.Pages 1654-1674 Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714 He held livings at Llanbeulan, Ewelme and Great Cheverell. He was appointed Dean of Armagh in 1588.
He remained with Richardson until 1802, when he was appointed, through the influence of William Wilberforce, to the chancellor's livings of St. Crux and St. Margaret's in the city of York. In politics Overton was a Tory and admirer of Pitt the younger. He took an active part in promoting the election of Wilberforce to parliament. He died at York on 17 July 1838, and was buried in the chancel of St. Crux, in a vault with his wife.
He was a descendant of Sir William de Staunton, or Stanton, of Staunton, Nottinghamshire, by Athelina, daughter and co-heiress of John de Masters of Bassingham, Lincolnshire. He seems to have held the living of Soham, as early as 1289; afterwards he held the livings of Thurston and Werbeton, and about 1306, on being ordained priest, received the living of East Dereham. In November 1300 there is mention of him as going to the court of Rome.
On the other hand, his administration of his diocese became the subject of an inquiry. The report dated 24 February 1587, described the bishop as holding in commendam, with the archdeaconry and the rectory of Llysvaen, which he held by virtue of a faculty obtained in 1573, 15 livings. He had leased out parts of the bishopric, as lordships, manors, and rectories. The bishop was further charged with extorting money from his clergy on his visitations.
He was ejected from his livings in 1650 under the Propagation Act of the Commonwealth for delinquency and refusing the engagement, after which he kept a school in Swansea. After the Restoration of Charles II he returned to favour and became Dean of Lismore in 1664; and Bishop of Waterford and Lismore in 1666. He founded Swansea Grammar School in 1682, which is now named Bishop Gore School in his honour. He retired to Swansea in 1689.
Robert Towerson Cory was born in Cambridge and educated at the local Perse School. He matriculated at Emmanuel College in 1776, as a sizar and graduated as fifth wrangler in the Mathematical Tripos in 1780. He then began a career in the church and was ordained deacon of Bath and Wells on 26 May 1781. There followed other church livings including Reverend of Kilken (or Kilkern), Flintshire in 1813. In 1790 he took his Bachelor of Divinity.
Staggie's daughter, Ingrid Carolus, came out of their house two hours after the shooting, screaming: "He's dead, he's dead!" The shooting occurred after another Hard Livings leader, Ballie Tips, was shot and killed in Mitchells Plain the previous night. Staggie was killed in the same street, London Road, where his twin brother and fellow gangster, Rashaad Staggie was shot and burned alive by People Against Gangsterism and Drugs (Pagad) members in 1996. No one has been arrested yet.
Most of the population of valley go abroad for earning their livings. Tehsil Maidan has recently been declared a subdivision which comprises on five Union Councils namely Lal Qilla, Kotkay, Bashigram, Zaimdara and Gal. There are two police stations in Maidan, namely Lal Qilla and Zaimdara. The people of Maidan are highly educated compared to other parts of the District, but it is regretted to say that so far there is no government colleges for females in Maidan.
In the same year (1571) he received from the crown the deanery of Christ Church, Oxford, with licence to hold his other deaneries and livings in commendam. Chester he resigned in 1573, and Salisbury in 1578. On the elevation of Edmund Freake to Norwich he was elected bishop of Rochester, and was consecrated 15 April 1576. He held the bishopric of Rochester little more than a year, being translated to Salisbury on Edmund Gheast's death in November 1577.
When war broke out in Ireland in 1690, Brady, by his influence, thrice prevented the burning of the town of Bandon, after James II gave orders for its destruction following the Capture of Bandon. The same year he was employed by the people of Bandon to lay their grievances before the English parliament. He soon afterward settled in London, where he obtained various preferments. At the time of his death, he held the livings of Clapham and Richmond.
Although most players play on a casual, amateur level, the professional disc golf scene is also growing rapidly, with the top professionals playing full-time and earning their livings through tournament winnings and sponsorship from equipment manufacturers. Online viewership of major tournaments and events has increased rapidly, with coverage of the 2019 world championship achieving more than 215,000 views on YouTube, and a clip of a single albatross by professional Philo Braithwaite boasting more than 1.4 million views.
Andrew Morris was Dean of St AsaphFasti ecclesiae Anglicanae Vol.1 p82 from 1634 until he was deprived by the Commonwealth of England."Willis' Survey of St. Asaph, considerably enlarged and brought down to the present time" Edwards, E. p171: Wrexham, John Painter, 1801 Morris was educated at Oriel College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714 (Mordaunt-Mytton) pp1026-1049:Oxford, OUP, 1891 He was Chaplain of All Souls' College, Oxford and held livings at Erbistock, Oddington, Chiddingstone, Llanycil and Corwen.
William Gwyn, (b Prescot 11 April 1736 – d Brighton 19 August 1770) was an Oxford college head in the 18th-century."The History and Antiquities of the Colleges and Halls in the University of Oxford":, Vol 3 p365 à Wood, A: Oxford; Clarendon; 1786 Gwyn was educated at Brasenose College, Oxford. He held the livings at Cottingham, Northamptonshire; and was Principal of BrasenoseBNC web-site from his election on 10 May 1770 until his death four months later.
He was educated at a number of Norfolk schools before attending Caius College, Cambridge. He attained a bachelor's degree, followed by a Master's, after which he left to become curate at his father's church in Sporle. He then worked under Thomas Page, Rector of Beccles, and on his father's death in 1747, Nelson succeeded to the livings of Hilborough and Beccles. During his time at Beccles, Nelson met Catherine Suckling, and married her on 11 May 1749 at Beccles.
Cunningham was born in Limerick and educated at Trinity College, Dublin.Alumni Dublinenses : a register of the students, graduates, professors and provosts of Trinity College in the University of Dublin (1593-1860) Burtchaell,G.D./Sadlier,T.U. pp201/2: Dublin, Alex Thom and Co, 1935 He held livings at Killuken, Tumna and Creeve.'The History of Ireland: From the Earliest Period to the Year 1840' d' Alton, J. p92: Dublin; University Pres; 1845 was appointed Archdeacon of Elphin in 1751.
A Master of Arts, he became rector of Chignal-Smealy, near Chelmsford, on 19 June 1680, and continued there until 1704. He was next preferred to the vicarage of Broomfield, Essex, on 11 February 1685, and to the rectory of Stock-Harvard in the same county on 24 February 1703; these livings he held until his death. He was also lecturer of St. Michael's, Cornhill, but resigned the appointment in 1730. Cox died on 11 January 1734.
As a patron of several parishes, she presented socialist clergy including Conrad Noel to their livings despite the controversy caused. As a Socialist she opposed World War I as a Capitalist imposition and supported the October Revolution. After the war, she joined the Independent Labour Party.Martin Crick, The history of the Social-Democratic Federation, p. 318She stood as Independent Labour Party candidate in 1923 for the Warwick and Leamington constituency against Anthony Eden who was the eventual winner.
For sixteen years Molesworth was curate of Millbrook, Hampshire. William Howley, approving of Molesworth's first work, presented him in succession to the livings of Wirksworth, Derbyshire (1828), and St. Martin's, Canterbury (1829). He also appointed him one of the Six Preachers at Canterbury; recommended him unsuccessfully for the vicarage of Leeds when Hook was elected, and in 1839 presented him to the vicarage of Minster-in-Thanet. A few months later (3 March 1840), Howley presented Molesworth to Rochdale.
"Clogher clergy and parishes : being an account of the clergy of the Church of Ireland in the Diocese of Clogher, from the earliest period, with historical notices of the several parishes, churches, etc" Leslie, J.B. pp46/47: Enniskille; R. H. Ritchie; 1929 He was ordained on 13 July 1777. He held livings at Templecarne, Drumcrin, Belleek, Kilmore, Killeevan, Drumsna and Currin. He was appointed Registrar and Vicar general of Clogher in 1784 and Chancellor of Clogher in 1795.
Duncombe subsequently became assistant-preacher at St Anne's Church, Soho. He was in succession chaplain to Samuel Squire, bishop of St David's, and to John Boyle, 5th Earl of Cork. In 1757 Archbishop Herring, a friend, presented him to the united livings of St Andrew and St Mary Bredan, in Canterbury. He was later made one of the Six Preachers in the cathedral; and in 1773 obtained from Archbishop Frederick Cornwallis the living of Herne, near Canterbury.
The Winter Clothes Day is not only the day to deliver winter clothes to the dead, but also the day for the livings to prepare for the coming of winter. On that day, women take out winter clothes that they have made for their children and husbands, and ask them to try clothes on. Men are used clearing up fireplaces and chimneys to make sure that fireplaces and chimneys can keep the house warm when winter comes.
The offshoots of industrialization reached Raschau only in the second half of the 19th century. In 1859, Wilhelm Merkel founded Raschau's first factory, a cork factory that can still be recognized from a distance, empty and forsaken though it now is. Merkel began with only five workers, but the cork factory developed quickly under his successor, becoming the community's main employer. By 1888, there were 100 employees, and by 1913 there were 350 earning their livings by manufacturing cork.
The living of Barnet is a curacy, held with the rectory of East Barnet till the death of the last incumbent in 1866, when the livings were separated. The parish of Chipping Barnet, served by St John's Church, was provided with a chapel-of-ease in Victorian times; subsequently Chipping Barnet parish was split in two, and the chapel-of-ease (on Bells Hill, Barnet) raised to the status of a parish church, dedicated to St Stephen.
Moses Fowler was Dean of Ripon from 1604 until his death in March 1608.Church MOnument Society From Kent, Fowler was educated at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209–1751 Vol. ii. Dabbs – Juxton, (1922) p168 He held livings at Aylsham, Brandesburton and Sigglesthorne.
The legal right of lay patrons to present clergymen of their choice to local ecclesiastical livings led to minor schisms from the church. The first in 1733, known as the First Secession and headed by figures including Ebenezer Erskine, led to the creation of a series of secessionist churches. The second in 1761 led to the foundation of the independent Relief Church. In 1743, the Cameronians established themselves as the Reformed Presbyterian Church, remaining largely separate from religious and political debate.
Simon Lloyd was a Welsh Anglican priest in the 17th century.Dictionary of Welsh Biography lloyd was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p96 He held Livings at Llansilin, Newtown, Bettws, Llanynys, Llanfihangel-y-traethau and Llandudno.
By becoming educated and earning their own livelihood, women would no longer be a burden on their parents or spouses. He proclaimed: "I am trying to guide our young women's lives into entirely new channels. I want to see them able to earn their livings in trades and professions, so that they are not economically dependent on marriage, nor a burden on their fathers and brother[s]". In effect, marriage would no longer be imposed on women due to economic necessity.
Richard Sparcheford was an English priest in the first half of the 16th century."Church and State in the Diocese of Hereford:1327-1535" Tarrant, J p136: University of Sydney; 1968 Sparcheford was educated at the University of Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Spackman-Stepney He held livings at St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate in the City of London and St Mary the Great, v. He was a canon (priest) of St Paul's Cathedral; and Archdeacon of Shropshire ifrom 1536 until his death in 1560.
He was short of money, but was offered livings, appointed in 1796 to Blakesley by Susannah Wight of Blakesley Hall, which he had for the rest of his life; and later to Broadwell with Adlestrop, in the gift of Chandos Leigh, his nephew. In 1802 Twisleton became secretary and chaplain to the British administration in Ceylon. He was appointed Archdeacon of Colombo in 1815, receiving the Oxford degree of D.D. in 1816. He died in Colombo, on 15 October 1824.
John Skelton was an English priest in the second half of the 17th century and the first decade of the 18th.Bedfordshire Archives Service Catalogue Skelton was educated at The Queen's College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Shield-Smethurst He was chaplain to Bishop Thomas Winniffe and held livings at Stixwold, Scrayfield, East Wickham and Walgrave. Skelton was appointed a canon of Lincoln Cathedral in 1683 and Archdeacon of Bedford in 1679, holding both positions until his death on 3 April 1704.
By becoming educated and earning their own livelihood, women would no longer be a burden on their parents or spouses. He proclaimed: > I am trying to guide our young women’s lives into entirely new channels. I > want to see them able to earn their livings in trades and professions, so > that they are not economically dependent on marriage, nor a burden on their > fathers and brother[s]. In effect, marriage would no longer be imposed on women due to economic necessity.
Huet, who was probably from Brecknockshire, Wales originally, is recorded as being a member of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge in 1544. He was Master of the College of the Holy Trinity, Pontefract when it was dissolved. Between 1559 and 1565, he was appointed to various church livings: he became rector of Cefnllys and Llanbadarn Fawr, both in Radnorshire, and also prebendary of Llanbadarn Trefeglwys and Ystrad, both in Ceredigion. He was precentor of St David's Cathedral from 1562 to 1588.
In June 1608 he was collated to the rectory of Finchley, Middlesex. He was then given livings in Essex: in March 1615 the rectory of Packlesham; in May following the rectory of Lackington; and in December 1616 the rectory and deanery of Bocking. In 1615 he resigned the rectory of Finchley and in 1617 that of Packlesham. At Bocking he had as curate in the period 1627 to 1631 Nathaniel Rogers, who later emigrated to New England as pastor of Ipswich, Massachusetts.
Henry Lockwood, D.D. was a priest and academic in the sixteenth century.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p98 Lockwood was educated at Queens' College, Cambridge, graduating B.A. in 1516; MA in 1518; and B.D. in 1526. He held livings at Navenbyand Enfield.
Richard Pulham, D.D. was a priest and academic in the 14th century.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p404 Pulham became a Fellow of Gonville Hall, Cambridge in 1353; and of Corpus Christi in 1377. He held livings in Lincoln, Belton and Rochester.
Rundle was ordained deacon on 29 July, and priest on 5 August 1716, by William Talbot as bishop of Salisbury; his younger son Edward had been Rundle's close friend since Oxford days. Talbot made Rundle his domestic chaplain, and gave him a prebend of Salisbury Cathedral. Rundle became vicar of Inglesham, Wiltshire, in 1719, and rector of Poulshot, Wiltshire, in 1720, both livings being in the bishop's gift. Talbot appointed him archdeacon of Wilts (1720), and treasurer of Sarum (1721).
When first meeting Greta, Milhouse greets her by saying Whassup?. The scene is a reference to an advertisement campaign for the American Budweiser beer, in which several characters are seen calling each other and saying "Whassup?". In Moe's bar, Wolfcastle receives several questions from bar customers, prompting him to send in his "authorized look-alike" to give answers. In the DVD commentary for the episode, Jean stated that the scene was written at a time when celebrity look-alikes were making "excellent livings".
Church ministers were confronted with a stark choice: accept the new situation or lose their livings. Up to a third of the ministry refused. Many ministers chose voluntarily to abandon their own parishes rather than wait to be forced out by the government.. Most of the vacancies occurred in the south-west of Scotland, an area particularly strong in its Covenanting sympathies. Some of the ministers also took to preaching in the open fields in conventicles, often attracting thousands of worshippers.
The next 20 years of his life were spent in Shropshire, where he held in succession the livings of High Ercall, Roddington and Kenley. In 1800 he moved back to Edinburgh, having been appointed senior incumbent of St Paul's Chapel in the Cowgate. For 34 years he filled this position with much ability; his sermons were characterised by quiet beauty of thought and grace of composition. His preaching attracted so many hearers that a new and larger church was built for him.
He was instituted to the rectory of Talachddu, near Brecon, in 1793; and to Frilsham, Berkshire, in the same year. In 1809 he became vicar of Tortington, Sussex, but resigned the living soon afterwards on his institution as rector of Abbey Dore, Herefordshire (the Duke of Norfolk being patron of both benefices). In 1815 he obtained the vicarage of Mansel Lacy, Herefordshire, from Uvedale Price, and he continued to hold both livings – Abbey Dore and Mansel Lacy – until his death.
John Wardall was Master of St Catharine's College, Cambridge from 1487 until 1506. Wardall was born in Beelsby and educated at St Catharine's. After graduating MA he was ordained and held livings at Sparham and Lamport.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. The earliest times to 1752 Vol.
He became a Fellow of Corpus Christi in 1462; and Proctor in 1470. He served as chaplain to Elizabeth Talbot, Duchess of Norfolk and held livings at Denton, Norfolk, Kelling and Landbeach. He became Master of Corpus in 1487 where he is said to have "built the buttresses in the old court" amongst other constructions and benefactions to the college. He was Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1490 to 1494; and Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity from 1504 to 1506.
He was a son of William Buckeridge of Basildon, Berkshire, but was born in Draycot Cerne, Wiltshire. He was educated at the Merchant Taylors' School, Northwood and at St John's College, Oxford, his maternal grandfather being cousin to the founder, Sir Thomas White. He became a fellow of his college, and acted as tutor to William Laud, whose opinions were perhaps shaped by Buckeridge. After Oxford, Buckeridge held several livings, and was highly esteemed by King James I, whose chaplain he became.
Following the end of the war in June 1902, the battalion returned to the United Kingdom on board the SS Walmer Castle, which arrived in Southampton in September that year. He was a member of the Army and Navy Club. He was High Sheriff of Dorset in 1903, a Justice of the Peace for Somerset and Dorset, an Alderman of Dorset County Council, and from 1905 also served as Lord Lieutenant for Dorset and Poole. He was also patron of two livings.
Greenacres has long been the site of a Nonconformist chapel and congregation. Greenacres Congregational Church has a history which spans virtually the whole period of non-conformity in the United Kingdom. Reverend Robert Constantine, the Minister of Oldham Parish Church was ejected from his church and livings in 1662 by the Act of Uniformity 1662 for not subscribing to a nationalised system of Protestant beliefs and practices. In 1672 he began preaching to the people of Greenacres in a thatched cottage.
The Ven and Hon Augustus George Legge, MA (21 August 1773 – 21 August 1828) was Archdeacon of Winchester from 1814 until 1819. The fifth son of William Legge, 2nd Earl of Dartmouth, he was educated at Christ Church, Oxford, matriculating in 1790 and graduating B.A. in 1794, and taking his M.A. at Merton College in 1796. A Chaplain to George III he held livings at Wonston, Crawley, Hampshire and North Waltham. In 1820 he declined an offer to be the Bishop of Killaloe.
George Fulham, D.D. (b Hampton Poyle 14 December 1660 - d Southampton 23 November 1702) was an English priest in the late 17th and early 18th centuries."The Lives of the Bishops of Winchester: From Birinus to the present time", Volume 1 Cassan, S.H. p87: London; Rivington; 1817 Fulham educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Flooke-Fyrmin He was a Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford from 1682 to 1691. He held livings at Compton, Surrey, West Meon, Droxford and Southampton.
Fagin is a fictional character and a main antagonist in Charles Dickens' 1838 novel Oliver Twist. In the preface to the novel, he is described as a "receiver of stolen goods". He is the leader of a group of children (the Artful Dodger and Charley Bates among them) whom he teaches to make their livings by pickpocketing and other criminal activities, in exchange for shelter. A distinguishing trait is his constant—and insincere—use of the phrase "my dear" when addressing others.
Having entered holy orders and taken his master's degree, he became a frequent preacher. James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde, who was chancellor of the university, appointed him chaplain, and in that capacity he served both in England and Ireland. He gained the degree of D.D. in 1673; next month he had the prebend of Knaresborough in the church of York. The interest of his patron procured him the livings of St. Antholin's, London, and Beckenham, Kent, where he settled in 1676.
Abbas – Cutts, (1922) p364 > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p46] He became a Fellow of Pembroke in 1671; and was appointed Junior Proctor later that year.List of Cantabularian Proctors Coga held livings at Barton, Swaffham, FeltwellParish web site and FramlinghamBritish Isle Genealogy Framlingham Parish He was also Chaplain to Matthew Wren. He became Vice- Chancellor of the University of Cambridge in 1680, holding the office (as was customary at that time) for a year.
Over time, the national or ethnic identification by certain church associations lessened as descendants became more assimilated into general American society. Members across organizations began to have more in common as areas of the country urbanized and more people made their livings in suburbs and cities, rather than in rural farming areas. The ALC and LCA were already the result of earlier mergers among associated congregations once related to ethnic immigrant groups. In 1970, a survey by Strommen et al.
According to Raleigh a new type of precisian puritan objected feasts on the Sabbath. Historian Jonathan Barry has demonstrated that ritualism in Somerset linked some clergy and women in outdoor ceremonies to alleged witchcraft; ministers of ejected livings dabbling with Shamanism. The Personal Rule's policies made Piers very unpopular. Ship Money in 1635 collected inland became bitterly resented in puritan villages of North Somerset. In 1636 he decided to appoint his son William Piers as Rector of Buckland St Mary.
A Dull Day, privately printed (no date) and The Owl's Nest in the City published in 1876 under the pseudonym Edward Lovel. Her younger sisters also made their livings with their pens: Caroline Ashurst Biggs edited the prominent feminist newspaper The Englishwoman's Review and wrote frequently on women's rights. Maude Ashurst Biggs (1856-1933) was an advocate for Polish nationalism and translated Polish works into English, in addition to contributing 23 articles to The Englishwoman's Review. Kate Ada Ashurst Biggs (c.
John de Kirkby (died 1423) was an English scholar, cleric and Crown official who held high judicial office in Ireland, and ended his career as Archdeacon of Carlisle. He is first heard of at the University of Oxford, where he is said to have been Master of a College. He was in holy orders and is said to have held numerous livings, though no list of them survives. He entered the Royal service, and became a clerk in the English Court of Chancery.
Owen Owen was a Welsh Anglican priestBiographical Register of Christ's College, 1505–1905, Volume 1 p212 in the 16th century. Owen was born in Anglesey and educated at Christ's College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p290 He held livings at Burton Latimer and Llangeinwen.
Payne was born at Hutton, Essex, was educated at Brentwood free school, and went on to Magdalene College, Cambridge, in May 1665, graduating B.A. in 1669, and M.A. in 1672. He obtained a fellowship there on 6 July 1671, and retained it until 1675, when he married. He was in the same year presented to the livings of Frinstead and Wormshill (where he resided) in Kent. In June 1681, Payne received the rectory of Whitechapel, and speedily won a reputation among the London clergy as a preacher.
George Trevelyan (17 December 1765 – 13 October 1827) was an Anglican priest in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.UCL archives Trevelyan was educated at St Alban Hall, matriculating in 1789, and was ordained in 1797. He held livings at Nettlecombe, Somerset, Treborough and Huish Champflower. He was Archdeacon of Bath from 1815 to 1817;"Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541-1857": Volume 5, Pages 18-20, Bath and Wells Diocese Institute of Historical Research, London, 1979 and Archdeacon of Taunton from then until his death.
The Manchester Corporation Waterworks Act 1847 gave permission for the construction of the Woodhead and Arnfield reservoirs and the aqueduct of the Mottram Tunnel. The Manchester Corporation Waterworks Act 1848 allowed the construction of Torside and Rhodeswood Reservoir, and an aqueduct to convey the water from Rhodeswood to the Arnfield reservoir. These acts were important, as mill owners relied for their livings on water to power their mills and any potential reduction of supply was opposed. The acts guaranteed a flow of 121 million gallons a week.
The Reverends Francis Holcroft and Joseph Oddy were 17th century pioneers of the non-conformist movement, and known as the 'Apostles of Cambridgeshire'. It was by their heroic zeal that various non-conformist churches were established in Cambridgeshire. Ejected from their livings, persecuted and imprisoned for propagating their faith during their lives they became known as the 'Oakington Martyrs' in death. Along with their successor, the Reverend Henry Osland, the site of their graves is preserved today as a memorial to non-conformist Protestantism.
Returning to Stratford in April, he performed the title role in Richard II, Mouldy in Henry IV, Part 1 and Henry VI. At the Aldwych in October 1964, he was cast as Valentine Brose in the play Eh? by Henry Livings, a role he reprised in the 1968 film adaptation Work Is a Four- Letter Word. He first played the title role in Hamlet at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in 1965. This production was transferred to the Aldwych Theatre in December of that year.
Tooker traced the healing power back to (the legendary) Lucius of Britain; but he rejected the contemporary beliefs about touch pieces as superstitions.Marc Bloch, The Royal Touch: Monarchy and miracles in France and England, p. 23 and p. 182. In 1604 he published a treatise entitled Of the Fabrique of the Church and Churchmens Livings (London), dedicated to James I, whose chaplain he was, in which he attacked the tendency of puritanism towards ecclesiastical democracy, on the ground that it paved the way for spiritual anarchy.
Miller was born in Bridport, Dorset on 11 August 1704, the son of a clergyman who possessed two considerable livings in the county. He studied at Wadham College, Oxford, and while there wrote part of his famous comedy, The Humours of Oxford, which contained music by Richard Charke and was first performed on 9 January 1730, to great success. Miller's family was somewhat unsupportive of his theatrical endeavors. They had wanted him to pursue a career in business, but Miller showed a revulsion to such a path.
John Hume (1743–1818) was a Dean of the Church of Ireland. He was born in Oxford; educated at Westminster School and Trinity College, Cambridge; and ordained in 1769.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752-1900 Vol. ii. Chalmers – Fytche, (1944) p420 He held livings at Gillingham, Dorset and West Lavington, Wiltshire.
Caborrojeños Pro Salud y Ambiente, Inc. (CPSA, Caborrojeños for Health and Environment) is a non-profit environmentalist organization based in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico. The organization was founded in 1990 by a group of concerned residents who wanted to improve the livings standards of Cabo Rojo and Puerto Rico in general, and was incorporated as a non-profit in 1991. The organization's first president and main driving force was Efrén Pérez Rivera, an ecologist and retired professor of the University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez.
Elizabeth I decreed that the Kings Council of the North meet at the Friary site for 20 days of the year In 1539, the friary was seized by the crown along with five others in the area including the Dominican monastery of Blackfriars. At the time of its capture the friary had seven brethren and three novices including the prior, Andrew Kell. The monks and nuns were pensioned and the friars received gratuities. Some took jobs as chantry priests or accommodation in parish livings.
Richard Wilkes was a priest and academic in the mid sixteenth century.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius, (1927) p408 Watson was educated at Queens' College, Cambridge, graduating B.A. in 1524; MA in 1527; and B.D. in 1537. He held livings at Littlebury, Pulham and Fen Ditton.
Opposition was fomented by John Ashe, and disorders occurred that became known as the "Beckington riots". When the inhabitants of Beckington petitioned parliament about his innovations in the services, he was arrested as a delinquent in 1640, and was at one time imprisoned at Chalfield, near Bradford, Wiltshire. He was formally dispossessed of Beckington in 1650, when John After took possession. At the Restoration of 1660, Huish recovered both his livings, and received in addition, on 12 September 1660, the prebend of Whitelackington in Wells Cathedral.
His family hailed from Isell, Cumberland, and he was educated at Cambridge. After being ordained as a priest Leigh obtained several livings under the patronage of Cardinal Wolsey;The History of the Life and Times of Cardinal Wolsey, Joseph Grove, Vol. III, p. 322 despite Wolsey's fall he rose high in the esteem of Henry VIII and of Thomas Cromwell by pursuing the policy of suppressing the monasteries, and is believed to have been rewarded by officiating at Henry's secret marriage to Anne Boleyn in January 1533.
After the Reformation, parts of its property came into the hands of the Cecil family in 1549. St Paul's was one of the more modest livings in Stamford which may have contributed to the decision to close it. It may also have suffered at the hands of Lancastrian army which sacked Stamford in 1461. Following an Act of Parliament of 1548 permitting amalgamation of Stamford's parishes, St Paul's was amalgamated with St George's and the church, now redundant, was largely demolished, its fixtures and fittings sold.
In May 2013 the Western Cape department of correctional services announced that Staggie would be released on parole for good behaviour in late September 2013. Staggie has been called "one of the last of the Cape Flats' OG's (old gangsters)" and through his tenure, the Hard Livings gang had grown internationally, even being interviewed by the BBC. The Staggie brothers were the main subjects in a BBC documentary called Beloved Country - Cape of Fear. It is through this documentary that the brothers got international attention.
But shortly after 1645, on the discovery of a plot for the capture of Dover Castle by the royalists, he was arrested by command of Major John Boys, and hurried to Dover Castle, and next day to Leeds Castle. There he composed the “Guide to the Holy City.”’ He was at length discharged by the parliamentary committee for Kent, and the restitution of his goods was ordered; but his livings were sequestered. On 8 January 1647 he was a prisoner in the Fleet Prison.
However, the scheme was quashed in the royal cabinet by Cardinal Fleury, and Chavigny, some of whose activities had come to the attention of the British government, was recalled. Thereafter, Cornbury avoided Jacobite politics and devoted himself to the cultivation of taste. Cornbury was returned unopposed at the 1734 British general election. He was active in his university's campaign against the mortmain bill of 1736, which would restrict the number of livings owned by charitable bodies and also restrict bequests of lands to them.
Whittlesey was probably born in the Cambridgeshire village of Whittlesey, England. Whittlesey was educated at Oxford, and owing principally to the fact that he was a nephew of Simon Islip, archbishop of Canterbury, he received numerous ecclesiastical preferments; he held prebends at Lichfield, Chichester and Lincoln, and livings at Ivychurch, Croydon and Cliffe. Whittlesey was briefly appointed Master of Peterhouse on 10 September 1349 and resigned from that post in 1351. Later he was appointed vicar-general, and then dean of the court of arches by Islip.
The old parish was split in two on a north-south line and the new parish of Charles was to the east. It stretched much further than the town boundaries first envisioned for the new parish, north to Eggbuckland and further east: the Act also stipulated that no clergyman could hold both livings. The King insisted the church was named after himself. Given the climate before the English Civil War it is perhaps not surprising that Plymouth sided with Oliver Cromwell and the Parliamentarians.
Robert Edwards Hankinson (1798-1868) was Archdeacon of Norwich from 1 July 1857 until his death.British History On-line Hankinson was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. iii. Gabb – Justamond, (1947) p226 He held livings in Norwich, Hampstead, Kings Lynn, Halesworth and North Creake.
248–55 Karma theory of Buddhism, Hinduism and Jainism is not static, but dynamic wherein livings beings with intent or without intent, but with words and actions continuously create new karma, and it is this that they believe to be in part the source of good or evil in the world. These religions also believe that past lives or past actions in current life create current circumstances, which also contributes to either. Other scholarsUrsula Sharma (1973), Theodicy and the doctrine of karma, ‘‘Man’’, Vol.
He was then a master at Rossall School, during which period he was also a Curate at Thornton.Crockfords; 1908, p. 1509 ([London: Horace Cox, 1908) He was ordained in 1867CHELMSFORD The Essex Standard (Colchester, England), Friday, 27 December 1867; Issue 1932 and then held incumbencies in ElmsteadCOLLEGE LIVINGS The Times (London, England), Wednesday, 13 November 1867; p. 10; Issue 25967 and BrightonParish history before his appointment as a Residentiary CanonThom's Official Directory of Great Britain and Ireland, 1912, p. 265 at Ripon Cathedral in 1891.
The son Richard Potter, a prebendary of Worcester Cathedral, Hannibal Potter was educated at the King's School, Worcester under Henry Bright. He matriculated from Trinity College, Oxford, in 1607, was elected scholar in 1609, graduated B.A. in 1611, M.A. in 1614, B.D. in 1621, and D.D. in 1630; in 1613 he was elected Fellow of Trinity. He was presented to the livings of Over Worton, Oxfordshire, and Wootton, Northamptonshire, in 1620, and was preacher at Gray's Inn from 1635. He was tutor to Henry Gellibrand.
George Glover was an Anglican priest, Archdeacon of Sudbury"Accounts and Papers of the House of Commons, Volume 40" p34: London, HMSO, 1843 from his installation on 21 July 1823 until his death on 4 May 1862.'Births, Deaths, Marriages and Obituaries' Glasgow Herald (Glasgow, Scotland), Wednesday, 14 May 1862; Issue 6970 Glover was born on 26 April 1779 and educated at Brasenose College, Oxford, where he matriculated in 1797 and graduated in 1801. For many years he held the livings of Southrepps and Gayton.
Charles suspended the statute (5 May 1627) till such time as six new livings of £100 a year should be annexed to the college. Buckingham was now engaged with his ill-fated expedition (27 June 1627) to the Isle of Ré. In November Preston preached before Charles at Whitehall a sermon which was regarded as prophetic when, on the following Wednesday, news arrived of Buckingham's defeat (8 November) He was not allowed to preach again, but considered that he had obtained a moral victory for his cause.
George Berkeley. Her husband's livings during the first ten years of her married life were Bray, Acton, and Cookham. In 1763 at Bray, on 8 February, she gave birth to her son, George Monck Berkeley, having at this time ague, and being exposed to the danger of smallpox, which was then endemic. In 1766 she gave birth to her second son, George Robert, and after weaning him she was inoculated at Acton rectory by Mr. Sutton, and devoted herself to the education of these two sons.
Edward Samuel (Penmorfa, Caernarfonshire 1674 – ?Llangar 1748), Welsh clergyman, poet and translator, was encouraged by Humphrey Humphries, then bishop of Bangor, to train for the ministry, which he undertook at Oriel College, Oxford, from where, according to Thomas' History of the Diocese of St.Asaph, he graduated on 19 May 1693. He held in succession the Denbighshire livings of Betws Gwerfil Goch 1702–1721 and Llangar 1721–1748, with the latter holding concomitantly from 1735 to 1747 that of Llanddulas. His two sons followed him in the ministry.
He was incumbent at Laugharne and Llansadurnen from 1639 until 1644. In that year he was famously ejected from the church at pistol point by the Cromwellian cavalry and later deprived of his livings Antiquities of Laugharne p. 100 by Mary Curtis (1870) Throughout the Commonwealth period he kept a private school in the town, which continued until 1670. He was re-instated at the restoration of Charles II and remained as vicar until 1683 when he was transferred from his St Davids see.
They made their livings, instead, through extortion and petty crime. Rural members of the VSN, who wore blue denim uniforms, had received some training from the army, while the plainclothed members, with their dark glasses, served as Haiti's criminal-investigation force (see Public Order, this ch.). When Jean-Claude Duvalier ("Baby Doc") came to power in 1971, the country's security forces became less abusive, but they still used some brutality. During Jean-Claude's regime, the balance between the VSN and the armed forces changed.
3, Chapter 38: The College of St. Peter, Wolverhampton. This may be due to a certain insensitivity or lack of tact. When Victoria gave birth to the future Edward VII in November 1841, Hobart congratulated her on "thus saving us from the incredible curse of a female succession."All Saints, Nocton, website: History Even after his appointment at Windsor, Hobart acquired more livings. From 1823 to 1842 he was vicar of Fulmer, Buckinghamshire, and from 1828 he was Vicar of Wantage, then in Berkshire.
William Savage, D.D. was an academic in the second half of the 17th century and the first decades of the 18th."A History of Emmanuel College, Cambridge" Sarah Bendall, S; Brooke, C; Collinson, P: Woodbridge, Boydell, 2000 Balderston was born in Ickleford and entered Emmanuel College, Cambridge in 1686, graduating B.A in 1690 and M.A. in 1693. He was Fellow of Emmanuel from 1692 to 1702; and Rector of St Andrew-by-the-Wardrobe from 1703. He also held livings at Gravesend and Stone, Kent.
Thomas Bowdler was born on 13 March 1782, the eldest son of the lawyer and moral reformer, John Bowdler. His brother was John Bowdler the Younger, who became a lawyer. He was educated at Hyde Abbey School, Winchester, and at St John's College, Cambridge, where he proceeded B. A. in 1803, and M.A. in 1806. In 1803 he was appointed curate of Leyton, Essex; and after holding the livings of Ash and Ridley, and of Addington, Kent, he became in 1834 incumbent of the church at Sydenham.
He was the son of the Rev. Thomas Echard or Eachard of Barsham, Suffolk, by his wife, the daughter of Samuel and Dorothy Groome, and was born at Barsham. On 26 May 1687, at the age of seventeen, he was admitted a sizar of Christ's College, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. in 1692 and M.A. in 1695. Echard, having been ordained by John Moore, bishop of Norwich, was presented to the livings of Welton and Elkington, Lincolnshire, and was appointed chaplain to the Bishop of Lincoln.
An 18th-century congregation The late 18th and 19th centuries saw a fragmentation of the Church of Scotland that had been created in the Reformation. These fractures were prompted by issues of government and patronage, but reflected a wider division between the Evangelicals and the Moderate Party over fears of fanaticism by the former and the acceptance of Enlightenment ideas by the latter. The legal right of lay patrons to present clergymen of their choice to local ecclesiastical livings led to minor schisms from the church. The first in 1733, known as the First Secession, led to the creation of a series of secessionist churches. The second in 1761 lead to the foundation of the independent Relief Church.J. T. Koch, Celtic Culture: a Historical Encyclopedia, Volumes 1–5 (London: ABC-CLIO, 2006), , pp. 416–17. Gaining strength in the Evangelical Revival of the later 18th centuryG. M. Ditchfield, The Evangelical Revival (Abingdon: Routledge, 1998), , p. 91. and after prolonged years of struggle, in 1834 the Evangelicals gained control of the General Assembly and passed the Veto Act, which allowed congregations to reject unwanted "intrusive" presentations to livings by patrons.
According to Salam, low-skilled immigrants working menial jobs have an incentive to immigrate because even the lifestyle that can be supported by low-paid, physical work in the United States is often better than what they would have if they had stayed in their countries of origin. 24% of all children the U.S. are the children of immigrants, but 30% of children living in poverty are the children of immigrants. Most immigrants who succeed in earning good livings in America came from educated families and arrived in the United States with advanced educations.
American First Lady Bess Truman with Girl Scouts and their volunteer leaders An avocation is an activity that someone engages in as a hobby outside their main occupation. There are many examples of people whose professions were the ways that they made their livings, but for whom their activities outside their workplaces were their true passions in life. Occasionally, as with Lord Baden- Powell and others, people who pursue an avocation are more remembered by history for their avocation than for their professional career. Many times a person's regular vocation may lead to an avocation.
Robert Newell, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 17th century.Archbishops' Registers Morton was educated at St John's College, Cambridge;Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p248 and incorporated at Oxford in 1600.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Nabbes-Nykke He held livings at Wormley, Cheshunt, Islip, Clothall and North Crawley.
He was one of the best scholars of his day, and attained to the headship of his old school and college: he served as Headmaster of Westminster 1753–1765, and Dean of Christ Church 1767–1776. Between those headships, he held the deanery of Rochester 1765–1767. He held from time to time a number of livings, and in 1771 was made Bishop of Chester and tutor to the Prince of Wales (later George IV). In 1776 he became Archbishop of York, and also Lord High Almoner and privy councillor.
Shapurji Edalji was given the 'living' as vicar of St Mark's by Lonsdale's successor George Selwyn. Edalji obtained the position though the previous incumbent, his wife's uncle, who arranged it as a wedding present. 'Livings' were scarce, conferred valuable emoluments and were much sought after.International Commentary on Evidence, Volume 4, Issue 2 2006 Article 3, Boxes in Boxes: Julian Barnes, Conan Doyle, Sherlock Holmes and the Edalji Case, D. Michael Risinger Edalji moved into the vicarage, a large house with its own grounds, in late 1875; George, the first child, was born there soon after.
Francis Wanley, Doctor of Divinity (b Marske 25 April 1709; d Ripon 9 July 1791) was an eminent Anglican priest in the second half of the 18th century.University of Durham Wanley was educated at Christ's College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209–1751 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius (1927) p329 He held livings at Thirkleby, Aldborough and Stokesley.
William Piers, D.D. was an English Anglican priest in the 17th century."Catalogue of the Lansdowne Manuscripts in the British Museum" p253: London; British Museum ; 1819 The son of Bishop William Piers, Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University from 1621 to 1624, he was educated at Christ Church, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Peach-Peyton He held livings at Kingsbury Episcopi, Buckland St Mary, Cudworth, East Brent and Christian Malford. Piers was Archdeacon of Bath from 1638 to 1443 and Archdeacon of Taunton from 1643 until his death 4 April 1682.
He was born in Lleyn, the promontory of Carnarvonshire, the fourth son of Gruffydd ab Sion Gruffydd of Cevnamlwch. His mother was Catrin, the daughter of Sir Richard Bulkeley of Baron Hill, Anglesey. Griffith was admitted as an exhibitioner of Brasenose College, Oxford,Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Greenhill-Gysby on 8 April 1587, having been before, in Anthony Wood's opinion, of Jesus College. He proceeded M.A. in 1592. In 1599 he became rector of Llandwrog, in 1600 canon of Bangor, and in 1604 rector of Llanbedrog, both livings being in the diocese of Bangor.
Johannes Gossner Johannes Evangelista Gossner (14 December 1773 – 20 March 1858), German divine and philanthropist, was born at Hausen near Augsburg. He was educated at the University of Dillingen. He, like Martin Boos and others, came under the spell of the Evangelical movement promoted by Johann Michael Sailer, the professor of pastoral theology. After taking priests' orders, Gossner held livings at Dirlewang (1804-1811) and Munich (1811-1817), but his evangelical tendencies brought about his dismissal and in 1826 he formally left the Roman Catholic for the Protestant communion.
In this second autobiography, Sarmiento displays a stronger effort to include familial links and ties to his past, in contrast to Mi defensa, choosing to relate himself to San Juan and his Argentine heritage. Sarmiento discusses growing up in rural Argentina with basic ideologies and simple livings. Recuerdos discusses his Similar to Facundo, Sarmiento uses previous dossiers filed against himself by enemies to assist in writing Recuerdos and therefore fabricating an autobiography based on these files and from his own memory. Sarmiento's persuasion in this book is substantial.
While Mill's edition had included the most thorough critical apparatus up to its time, the actual text was a reprint of that of Stephanus. Wells' edition was thus the first to offer the complete Greek New Testament while moving away from the Textus Receptus and toward what is now considered the standard critical text, Nestle-Aland.Bruce M. Metzger, The Text of the New Testament Fourth Edition (Oxford University Press, 2005), pp. 154–155. Wells died, holding both his livings, on 11 July 1727, and was buried at Cotesbach.
He was born in Kent, and matriculated from Merton College, Oxford, on 26 January 1616. He became a demy of Magdalen College on 7 April 1619, graduated B.A. on 11 December 1619, and became fellow in 1620. He also proceeded M.A. on 3 July 1622, B.D. on 18 May 1631, D.D. on 29 April 1639. He was tutor to Edward Hyde, when he was at Oxford, became vice-president of his college in 1634, held several livings and was made canon of Winchester in 1638, chaplain to William Laud in 1640.
In the see of Norwich, at the time of Parkhurst's appointment, many of the livings were without incumbents. He did nothing to discourage 'prophesyings' in his diocese, and took measures against Catholics. Defrauded by a servant, Parkhurst moved from the bishop's palace, which he had repaired, to a small house at Ludham; and introduced a bill into parliament to prevent such abuses, which was accepted by the government. He died on 2 February 1575, aged 63, and was buried in the nave of his cathedral on the south side.
The Pendleton Surf Jacket expanded upon Fifties pop cultural fashions, however new in its relaxed, intangibly cool vibe. The surf jacket split from the tough guy rock 'n' roll teen, and mellowing leather's rock attitudes to woolen plaids. Following Rock n Roll's decline where rebels without causes, "Greasers" and "Beats"; dressed down in inappropriate daywear to denounce conformity, Sixties youth, inventors of Surf Fashion, expressed more nomadic and hedonically in this "dress down" style. Surf styles mainstreamed into fashion when Soul Surfers wanted to make livings in surfing associated careers.
In 2011, he performed well during training camp and preseason, before suffering a strained right posterior cruciate ligament on August 24. After contract restructuring negotiations fell through, Gurode was cut before the fourth preseason game and Costa became the starting center for the year. Because of his small size for the position, as the season wore on, he was exposed and struggled in his blocking assignments against bigger defenders. In 2012, the Cowboys signed free agents guards Mackenzy Bernadeau and Nate Livings to help protect Costa against stronger defensive fronts.
The committees worked on certain parts separately and the drafts produced by each committee were then compared and revised for harmony with each other. The scholars were not paid directly for their translation work, instead a circular letter was sent to bishops encouraging them to consider the translators for appointment to well-paid livings as these fell vacant. Several were supported by the various colleges at Oxford and Cambridge, while others were promoted to bishoprics, deaneries and prebends through royal patronage. The committees started work towards the end of 1604.
233 Peckham laid stress on discipline, which often resulted in conflict with his clergy. His first episcopal act was calling a council at Reading in July 1279 to implement ecclesiastical reform, but Peckham's specifying that a copy of Magna Carta should be hung in all cathedral and collegiate churches offended the king as an unnecessary intrusion into political affairs. Another ruling was on non- residence of clergy in their livings. The only exception Peckham was prepared to make on non-residence was if the clerk needed to go abroad to study.
In 1857 he was appointed High Sheriff of Berkshire, and was the Chairman of the County's Quarter Sessions in 1864. In 1860 he was elected the Member of Parliament for Berkshire, a position he held until his resignation in 1876. He was a patron of the Anti-Mendacity Society, the National Society for School Furniture and the Society for the Augmentation of Small Livings. By his wife Elizabeth Mary Clutterbuck he had three daughters, and upon his death in 1897, his estates were inherited by his nephew, James Herbert Benyon.
He became a scholar of Winchester College in 1809, and six years later was elected to a scholarship at New College, Oxford, where he became a Fellow in 1818. After his ordination on 7 August 1820, he took charge of the parish of Woodford, Northamptonshire, one of the livings held by his father. In 1821 he became curate of Parwich in Derbyshire. In 1822 he was appointed assistant lecturer of Ashbourne and curate of Atlow and was awarded the prize for the English essay at Oxford, the subject being the Study of Moral Evidence.
Mr. King makes Mrs. Pepper his housekeeper and does everything in his power to entertain and educate the children. Though the Kings surround the Pepper children with luxury--in 5 years Phronsie collects 200 dolls--the values of hard work, humility, and togetherness are still firmly enforced by their mother. This puts them in a curious position in society. Though they live with an upper- class father and son, the older children are aware they’ll someday work for their livings. This makes them willing to befriend anyone, from street girls to grocers’ sons.
He therefore was persuaded to follow in his father's profession as a minister, taking holy orders soon after he left Wadham. Miller became a lecturer at Trinity College, Conduit Street and a preacher at Roehampton Chapel. The livings for these positions however did not provide for the lifestyle that Miller was accustomed to, so he continued to write for the stage to supplement his income. This decision was met by some hostility by his colleagues in the church and his career as a clergyman suffered to some extent.
His first wife Laetitia van Lewen, born about 1709 in Cork and like him diminutive, was the eldest child of a prominent Dublin obstetrician, Dr John van Lewen. Three of their children died in infancy and the later life of their daughter Betty is unclear. Of the two surviving sons, William the elder became a Church of Ireland clergyman holding rural livings, while Jack (John Carteret Pilkington) had a short but colourful career as singer, soldier, actor and writer in Ireland and in England. Jack was an ancestor of Robert Baden-Powell.
From 1850 large immigration waves from middle-class families leaving mainly Italy and Spain moved to Buenos Aires and increased the population significantly. To make more efficient use of the space in the city, these types of houses were developed and built. Most of the houses originated between 1880 and 1930. The origin of these houses is based on Roman houses, Pompeyan houses and traditional colonial urban livings from Rio de la Plata. These patio houses are centered around square patios and split in 2 “L” shapes houses with each owning half the patio.
Bardsey Fisher (b Nottingham 17 February 1658 – d Cambridge 18 February 1723) was an 18th-century academic. Fisher graduated B.A. from Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge in 1678, and M.A. in 1681.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209–1752 Vol. ii. Dabbs – Juxton, (1922) p142 He was ordained in 1682 and held livings in Newmarket, Stowmarket and Withersfield.
The Venerable William Pearson LL.D (10 August 1662 – 6 February 1715) was Archdeacon of Nottingham from 1690 to 1715. The son of Rev John Pearson, Rector of Great Orton in Cumberland, He was educated at Queen's College, Oxford graduating MA in 1688.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Peach-Peyton In 1689 he was appointed to the Prebend of Ampleford in York Minster,National Archives and the following year to the Prebend of Sariston in Southwell Minster. He also held the livings at Barton, Bolton PercyUniversity of Leeds Library and Wheldrake.
National Archives After having held several livings in 1814 he became Archdeacon of Huntingdon;'Clerical intelligence' The Morning Post (London, England), Saturday, February 26, 1814; Issue 13448 and in 1817 Rector of Whippingham."Companion to the Isle of Wight" Albin,J: London Longmans 1831 An amateur mountaineer,Scottish Mountaineering Club novelist and composer, he died on 5 February 1828.The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle -- Volume XCVIII” Urban,S (Ed) April 1818 p11 (379 in bound annual collection) His brother Brief biography and son Trove also achieved eminence in their respective fields.
"Weavers of Twilight" was first published in 2004 in Agog! Smashing Stories, edited by Cat Sparks and published by Agog! Press. It was published alongside 19 other stories by the authors Robert Hood, Paul Haines, Claire McKenna, Jeremy Shaw, Deborah Biancotti, Dirk Flinthart, Sean McMullen, Bryn Sparks, Justine Larbalestier, Kim Westwood, Martin Livings, Grace Dugan, Ben Peek, Marianne de Pierres, Richard Harland, Simon Brown, Trent Jamieson, Brendan Duffy and Iain Triffitt. "Weavers of Twilight" joint-won the 2004 Aurealis Award for best fantasy short story along with Richard Harland's "Catabolic Magic".
Reginald Bainbrigge, D.D. was an academic in the sixteenth century.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209–1751 Vol. i. Abbas – Cutts, (1922) p68 Bainbrigge was born in Middleton, and educated at St Catherine's College, Cambridge, graduating BA in 1508, M.A in 1510 and B.D in 1526. He held Livings at Downham, Stambourne, Brightlingsea, Steeple Bumpstead and Great Oakley.
As Dean of one of the wealthiest Collegiate churches, Heydon was bound to encounter the elite of England. Prebendaries attached to, and positions as canons in, a collegiate church were well paid livings for a cleric, and an excellent way for those with power to dispense patronage. As an example, Elizabeth I herself had presented Heydon for the deanship in 1602, as was her right by royal prerogative.Catherine F. Patterson, Urban Patronage in Early Modern England: Corporate Boroughs, the Landed Elite, and the Crown, 1580-1640, (Stanford, CA: 1999), pp.
Thomas Thompson, D.D. was a priest and academic in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius, (1927) p74 Thompson was educated at Christ's College, Cambridge, graduating B.A. in 1489; MA in 1482; and B.D. in 1502. He held livings at Enfield and Gateley.
Born in Lasynys Fawr () near Harlech, Gwynedd, Wynne excelled at school and entered Jesus College, Oxford on 1 March 1692. There is historical debate as to whether or not he graduated and little evidence to support either claim, but local tradition suggests he was studying law before he was convinced to take holy orders by a friend, Humphrey Humphreys, Bishop of Bangor and afterwards of Hereford. Wynne married for the first time in Llanfihangel-y-traethau Church in 1698. He was ordained priest in December 1704 and held the livings of Llandanwg, Llanbedr and Llanfair.
Thomas Attwood was a 15th-century priest and academic.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. i. Abbas – Cutts, (1922) p54 Attwood was Master of Gonville Hall from 1426 to 1454."Biographical History of Gonville and Caius College" John Venn/John Archibald Venn p27: Cambridge; CUP; 1901 He held livings at Lolworth, Boxworth, Elsworth, Lopham and Mutford.
Before the 19th century what is now known as Warsash was a number of separate hamlets; Warsash itself; Hook to the south at the mouth of the River Hamble; Newtown between Hook and Warsash and Chilling on Southampton Water. Hook was of earlier importance, as a 'dockyard' during the Hundred Years' War. At the end of this war Hook's importance declined, and for the next 300 years it, Chilling and Warsash continued as hamlets making livings from fishing and smuggling. Newtown had in addition a number of salterns.
Lubbock graduated as a BA in 1721 and as an MA in 1724, and as a Bachelor of Divinity in 1732. He remained at Caius as a tutor in Classics and Divinity and was a Fellow of the college between 1724 and 1733. From 1732 to 1738, Lubbock was Rector of Bincombe and of Broadwey, both in Dorset. Resigning these livings, he purchased the Rectory of Lammas on 22 December 1738, and gained also the Vicarage of Stalham in 1739 and the Rectory of Scottow on 1 October 1741.
William Somersham, D.D. was a priest and academic in the late 14th and early 15th centuries.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius, (1927) p120 Somersham became a Fellow of Gonville Hall, Cambridge in 1376. He was ordained in December that year; and held livings at Hockwold cum Wilton and Hevingham.
New York: Library of America, 2006, p. 758 Based on Miller's own experiences, the play focuses on a group of desperate workers earning their livings in a Brooklyn automobile parts warehouse during the Great Depression in the 1930s, a time of 25 percent unemployment in the United States. Concentrating more on character than plot, it explores the dreams of a young man yearning for a college education in the midst of people stumbling through the workday in a haze of hopelessness and despondency. Three of the characters in the story have severe problems with alcoholism.
Meanwhile, as the first rumblings of the steam-powered Industrial Revolution began making noise across the land, the reiving way of life fell into folk story and legend while its former adherents pursued legal livings in every sort of new-age craft and profession in every part of Great Britain. A census taken in 1800 recorded Routledge and Rutledge families living in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, Massachusetts, New York as well as in the Carolinas and with the usual variety of odd spellings such as Ratledge, Ruttidge, Rudleage, and Ruthlidge.
He paid off the debts of others, supported education and missions, and in a year of food shortages, gave to charity more than his own yearly income. He was exceptionally hospitable, and could not bear to sack any of his servants. As a result, his home was full of old and incompetent servants kept on in charity. Although he was often months behind in his correspondence, Wilberforce responded to numerous requests for advice or for help in obtaining professorships, military promotions and livings for clergymen, or for the reprieve of death sentences.
The theatre staged seasons, including the first season of gay plays in Britain, the first women's season, a Jewish season, an anti-nuclear season and a season to mark the 1976 American Bicentennial. There were readings of John Arden and Margaretta D'Arcy's controversial The Non-Stop Connolly Show (1976) on Irish politics. Numerous individual new plays by writers Mike Stott, Henry Livings, Michael Stevens, Wolf Mankowitz and Edward Bond were performed. Tom Stoppard developed several of his key one-act plays here, including After Magritte and Dogg's Hamlet, Cahoot's Macbeth.
It is only fair, however, to add that in another passage Wood mentions Francis Babington as renowned for his philosophical and logical disputations. In 1559, Queen Elizabeth I's visitors removed Dr Wright from the mastership of Balliol College, Oxford, and appointed Dr Babington instead. Dr Babington had no objection to heaping together a plurality of livings and offices. Between 1557 and 1560, he was rector of at least four parishes: Milton Keynes, Twyford, Sherrington Aldworth, and Adstock; and two or three of these he must have held together.
Lee first came to public attention for her appearances during the 1980s on the morning television station TV-am. Following her initial successful period as a chef on TV-am in 1983, Lee took over from Sarah Kennedy on the second incarnation of ITV gameshow Game for a Laugh. In 2004, Lee appeared on Livings I'm Famous and Frightened! 2, a reality show featuring a number of celebrities staying in a castle over a weekend, taking part in various challenges and looking for paranormal activity, guided by a medium.
Francis Lockier, D.D. (b Norwich 9 May 1668 - d Peterborough 17 July 1740) was the Dean of Peterborough from 1725 until his death.British History On-line He was educated at Norwich School and Trinity College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209 to 1752–1900 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p98 He held the Yorkshire livings of Handsworth and Aston.
Immediately after his ordination he was appointed honorary chaplain to Edmund Law, Master of Peterhouse and Bishop of Carlisle. In 1769 he was presented to the vicarage of Swinderby, Lincolnshire, and soon afterwards to the rectory of Panton, in another part of the county; he held both livings, residing at Swinderby. Disney became an active member of the association formed on 17 July 1771 to promote a petition to parliament for relief of the clergy from subscription. The petition was rejected by the House of Commons on 6 February 1772.
Gordon-Reed argues in the book that much of the misery imposed on African Americans could have been avoided if they had been given portions of land to cultivate as their own. Without land, African Americans in the Deep South generally earned livings as sharecroppers, primarily (if not totally) under white land-owners. They had few economic resources or choices and, often illiterate, were forced to accept the owner's reckoning of accounts at the end of the year. They often had to buy supplies at his store, which became part of the reckoning.
William Stock, D.D. was an English priest and academic in the second half of the 17th-century and the first decade of the 18th."The History and Antiquities of the Colleges and Halls in the University of Oxford", Volume 3 p635 à Wood, A: Oxford; Clarendon; 1786 Stock was born in Herefordshire. A Fellow of Brasenose College, Oxford, he was the first Principal of Gloucester Hall and the third president of St Johns. He held Livings at Sherborne, Gloucestershire, Minety, Marston Sicca, Crick, Northamptonshire, Ilmington, Freckenham, Idlicote, Northampton St. Peter and, Upton St. Michael.
In 1638 he was on the commission of visitation for Merton College; the visit produced a report requiring reforms. During the years 1632–1639 he received the livings of Hackney (1633); Oddington, Oxfordshire; Ickford, Buckinghamshire (1636); and Newington, Oxfordshire; besides being a prebendary of Gloucester from 1632. Sheldon gravitated towards the Great Tew circle of Lucius Cary (Falkland), and was on friendly terms with Edward Hyde; he had no Puritan sympathies. He became a royal chaplain through Coventry, and the king intended preferment for him, plans interrupted by the political crises.
His father was Daniel Burgess, who, after holding the livings of Staines and of Sutton Magna, Wiltshire, was appointed rector of Collingbourn Ducis, Wiltshire, through the influence of his brother Isaac Burgess, High Sheriff of the county, was ejected in 1662, and was probably the author of the sermon on Eccl. xii. 1, mentioned by Watts and Allibone. Burgess was placed under Richard Busby at Westminster School in 1654, and entered commoner of Magdalen Hall, Oxford, in 1660. He studied hard, but did not graduate, declining to conform.
Little is now known of Walden's birth nor of his early years. He had some connection with the Channel Islands, and resided for some time in Jersey where he was rector of the Parish Church of St Helier from 1371 to 1378. He then held livings in Yorkshire and in Leicestershire before he became Archdeacon of Winchester in 1387. His days, however, were by no means fully occupied with his ecclesiastical duties, and in 1387 also he was appointed Treasurer of Calais, holding about the same time other positions in this neighbourhood.
During the Civil War more than one hundred priests of the Church of England referred to "as scandalous, malignant priests" were deprived of their livings for alleged treason or immorality by order of the Puritan Parliament. White, John (1575–1648) "The First Century of Scandalous, Malignant Priests" (London:1643), listed as number 9 on p.4 Retrieved 6 March 2013. In 1643 Washington was censored on trumped-up charges of being "a common frequenter of ale-houses" who "[encouraged] others in that beastly vice" and lost his benefice.
It was not paid directly to incumbents, but instead used to purchase land (generally £200-worth), the income from which augmented the living. The livings to be augmented were selected by lot from those with an annual income less than £10, or (in the early years of the bounty) those where augmentation by a third party was offered conditional upon augmentation by bounty funds. Parishes worth less than £20 a year were included in the ballot in 1747, those worth less than £30 a year in 1788, those under £50 in 1810.
Three of these were boys, who predeceased him, but he was eventually survived by three of his daughters. In 1759, he married a second wife, Margaret Underwood, but had no children by her. Jago had become vicar of Harbury in 1746, and shortly after of Chesterton, both in Warwickshire. Through aristocratic patrons, he was given the living of Snitterfield in 1754, and later was presented with his former father-in-law's living in Kimcote in 1771, after which he resigned the livings of Harbury and Chesterton, keeping the others.
This would make the soldiers dependent on the warlord for their livings, not the Emperor.As explained by Shiferaw Bekele, "Reflections on the Power Elite of the Wärä Seh Mäsfenate (1786–1853)", Annales d'Éthiopie, 15 (1990), pp. 172f Eventually Ras Haile was able to recruit Dejazmach Wolde Gabriel, the son of Ras Mikael Sehul to join him, and when it appeared Ali (who had managed by that time to obtain a promotion to Ras) was preoccupied with the rebellion of his relative Yasufe in Lasta, proclaimed Baeda Maryam emperor.Weld Blundell, Royal chronicle, pp.
Cudworth was appointed Vicar of Great Wilbraham, and Rector of Toft, Cambridgeshire Ely diocese (1656), but surrendered these livings (1661 and 1662, respectively) when he was presented, by Dr Gilbert Sheldon, Bishop of London, to the Hertfordshire Rectory of Ashwell (1 December 1662).Clergy of the Church of England database. The mid-seventeenth century Fellows' Swimming Pool, Christ's College, Cambridge Given Cudworth's close cooperation with prominent figures in Oliver Cromwell's regime (such as John Thurloe), Cudworth's continuance as Master of Christ's was challenged at the Restoration but, ultimately, he retained this post until his death.
A young Rockingham On 13 May 1751 (his 21st birthday), Rockingham inherited his father's estates. The rents from the land in Yorkshire, Northamptonshire and Ireland gave him an annual income of £20,000 (). He also controlled both of the borough parliamentary seats of Malton and one seat for the single-member borough of Higham Ferrers (Northants), along with twenty- three livings and five chaplaincies in the church. In July he was appointed Lord Lieutenant and custos rotulorum of the West Riding in Yorkshire, Lord Lieutenant of York city, and custos rotulorum of York city and county.
The right to make this appointment lay with the bishop, and the Reverend Edalji obtained the position through the previous incumbent, his wife's uncle, who arranged it as a wedding present. Livings were much sought after because they were scarce and conferred valuable emoluments. The Reverend Edalji moved into the vicarage in late 1875, it was a large house with its own grounds; George, the first child, was born there soon after. The Reverend Edalji was more assertive than his predecessor and was sometimes involved in controversy about parish business.
St Ippolyts Church On 28 February 1801 Lax was granted the livings as vicar of Marsworth, Buckinghamshire and squarson of Great Wymondley with St Ippolyts near Hitchin, Hertfordshire "after some years of teaching work". He lived at St Ippolyts where he erected a private observatory which he had transported from Cambridge and had originally belonged to Isaac Newton. Charles Hutton's 1815 list of England's 20 most notable private observatories (excluding the King's private observatory) included Professor Lax's. Evans pointed out 2 mistakes in Hutton's statements concerning private observatories.
SLHs have been shown to improve recovery outcomes when utilized in conjunction with 12-step programs. Residences providing a highly structured schedule of activities tend to dramatically improve the likelihood of long-term sobriety. In some cases, sober living homes will contract with licensed drug rehab centers and therapists as a means for providing an even greater level of care. These types of sober livings do tend to charge higher fees, however, they are often able to provide a very affordable alternative to what would otherwise constitute high-priced inpatient treatment.
Lancelot Lowther, rector of Long Marston and son of Sir Christopher Lowther (1557–1617). Rev. Lancelot founded the cadet branch of Lowther of Colby Leathes, the heads of which family were largely clerics with livings in the gift of the more senior branches of the Lowther family. James, however, took a more active role in the service of his fourth cousin, James Lowther, 1st Earl of Lonsdale. As one of "Lord Lonsdale's Ninepins", he was Member of Parliament for Westmorland from 1775 until 1812, and then for Appleby from 1812 until 1818.
In the reign of the Catholics Monarchs ordinances, in which services and rights of miner people were awarded, were signed. There are few information and knowledge about La Unión in the Early modern period. In spite of the fact that the mining in this area began to gain weight, it was not relevant until the 19th century. Before that century, the inhabitants of the future municipality made their livings with the cattle industry and the agriculture, but the mining activities were part of the economic activities of this territory.
Carver's father John Carver, of Westminster, was an illegitimate son of John Carver of St' George's, Hanover Square; whose daughter and heiress Mary married John Ward, 1st Viscount Dudley and Ward, as his second wife. Carver was educated at Oriel College, Oxford, where he matriculated in 1759. He held livings at Dudley, Himley, Hartlebury and Kingswinford; and was Archdeacon of Stafford from 1769 to 1782, and of Surrey from 1795 until his death on 1 August 1814. His daughter Elizabeth Carver married as his second wife, and survived, Charles Peter Layard.
Grove, on becoming chaplain to Humphrey Henchman, Bishop of London, was presented by him to the rectory of Wennington, Essex, on 21 February 1667, which he left before 27 January 1669. On 2 September 1669 he received from the crown the rectory of Langham, Essex and on 5 October following the rectory of Aldham, in the same county, from the bishop. These livings he resigned on obtaining from Henchman the wealthy rectory of St. Andrew Undershaft, London, on 18 February 1670. On 6 October 1679 he was made prebendary of Willesden in St. Paul's Cathedral.
In the latter year he was appointed to the rectory of Wilton in Wiltshire, which had attached to it the rectory of Bulbridge and the vicarage of Ditchampton. On 16 August 1841 he was nominated prebendary of Chardstock in Salisbury Cathedral, and made a domestic chaplain to the bishop of the diocese. His health failed in 1848, when he resigned his livings. After some years of rest he became in 1856 the perpetual curate of Rownhams, Southampton, where Lord Herbert, in conjunction with the widow of Major Colt, had built a new parish church.
Contemporary cartoon of Three Little Maids Three Little Maids is an English musical by Paul Rubens with additional songs by Percy Greenbank and Howard Talbot. The story concerns three simple curate's daughters who go to London to earn their livings serving tea in a Bond Street tea shop. They become the romantic rivals of three ladies of fashion but succeed because of their freshness. The musical opened at the Apollo Theatre in London on 10 May 1902 and later transferred to the Prince of Wales Theatre, running for a total of 348 performances.
In 1820, he was ordained deacon and priest, and in 1822 appointed succentor of York Cathedral, with the prebendal stall of Holme attached. He became Dean of Lichfield and rector of Tatenhill, Staffordshire (a preferment worth £1,524 a year with a residence), on 27 November 1833, and in the following year he also obtained the rectory of Donington, Shropshire, worth £1,000 per annum (). From 1822 to 1833, he held the livings of Slingsby and Sutton-on-the-Forest, Yorkshire. He was a finished scholar and an eloquent preacher.
He held livings at Salle and Chrishall;CCEd and was a Chaplain to William III.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1209-1751 Vol. ii. Dabbs – Juxton, (1922) p336 > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p46] He was also Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1707 to 1708.
In 1662, he could not take the oath, and so left his living. He resided for four or five years with two of his sons, Richard and Samuel, and his two sons-in-law, George Jones and Richard Shute, who had left their livings, in an old manor house called Sculpins at Finchingfield, Essex, which became ‘a little college.’ Father and sons preached by turns in the family. When they were dispersed Fairclough went to live with his youngest son, a conforming minister at Kennett, Cambridgeshire, and then with his daughters at Heveningham, Suffolk, and Stowmarket in the same county successively.
Santo André's inhabitants enjoy a higher-than-average living quality, for which the beaches, as well as the proximity of the Natural Park of Southwest Alentejo and Costa Vicentina, help contribute. Sines, only a few minutes from Santo André, by car, is one of the most dynamic cities of the Alentejo, having kept all its historical charm. It still represents a main center for development in the province of Alentejo, especially since the University was built in Santo André. Before Santo André was built the locals made their livings from fishing (in the sea and in the lagoon), agriculture (mainly rice) and fairs.
George Owen was a Welsh Anglican priest"An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Wales and Monmouthshire, Volume 4" 'Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments and Constructions in Wales and Monmouthshire' p328: London; HMSO; 1925 in the 17th century."The history and antiquities of the parish of Saint David, South-Wales" Manby, G.W. p186: London; Edward Harding; 1801 Owen was educated at Merton College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Mordaunt-Mytton He held livings at Lampeter Velfrey, Narberth and Stackpole. He was Archdeacon of St Davids from 1678 until his death on 20 October 1690.
Precipitated by separate personal tragedies, two families flee their rural livings to share a "great continent of a house", Cloudstreet, in the Perth suburb of West Leederville. The two families are contrasts to each other; the Lambs find meaning in industry and in God's grace; the Pickles, in luck. The Lambs' God is a maker of miracles; the Pickles' God is the 'Shifty Shadow' of fate. Though initially resistant to each other, their search and journey for meaning in life concludes with the uniting of the two families with many characters citing this as the most important aspect of their lives.
When the First English Civil War broke out, he followed the royal army, although he had been ordained and held two livings. In an engagement with the enemy he was taken prisoner and confined in Lambeth House. He managed to escape by the help of his wife, who conveyed a cord to him, by which he was to let himself down from a window, and then make for a boat on the River Thames. The rope was too short, and in dropping to the ground he broke one of his bones, but succeeded in getting to the boat.
The united livings of Iford and Kingston near Lewes in Sussex were conferred on him in 1765, and he became rector of Woollavington in 1774. But he lived at South Street, Lewes, where he died in 1812, aged 87. Delap used to visit Henry and Hester Thrale in Brighton or Tunbridge Wells, so knew Samuel Johnson and Fanny Burney, who found his conversation onerous- Johnson for Delap's obsession with his health, and Burney for the manner in which, despite being "commonly and naturally grave, silent, and absent", Delap would "work... threadbare" any subject raised in conversation on which he had anything to say.
William Smith (died 1673) was Archdeacon of Armagh from 1669 until his death in 1673."Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 3" Cotton, H. p46 Dublin, Hodges & Smith, 1848–1878 Smith was born at Cowling, Craven, educated at St John's College, CambridgeAlumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209–1751 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius, (1927) p248 and ordained on 30 October 1661. He held livings at Tydavnet, Kilmore and Drumsnat.
Reid was born in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife, the son of Thomas Miller Reid and his wife Lisette (née Livings). His father was the British Vice-Consul there. After passing out from the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Seaforth Highlanders (Ross-shire Buffs, The Duke of Albany's) regiment on 11 August 1915. Reid was granted Royal Aero Club Aviators' Certificate No. 1693 on 4 September, after soloing a Maurice Farman biplane at the Military School, Farnborough, and on 21 October he was appointed a flying officer, seconded to the Royal Flying Corps.
Despite swearing allegiance to George II, Murray also joined the '45, and died in the Dutch Republic in October 1760. However, new laws actively discriminated against Non-Juring clergy ie those who refused to swear allegiance to the Hanoverian regime. In 1690, more than half of the clergy were Non-Jurors and in theory deprived of their livings but many were protected by the local gentry. In 1673, Michael Fraser was appointed minister at Daviot and Dunlichty; despite being evicted in 1694, and joining the 1715 and 1719 Risings, he was still there when he died in 1726.
Venn EyreAlumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. ii Chalmers – Fytche (1944) p329 was Archdeacon of Carlisle"The Gentleman's and London Magazine" p 147 from 2 March 1756 until his death on 18 May 1777.British History on-line Eyre was educated at St Catharine's College, Cambridge.CCeD He held livings at Stambourne and Stambridge in Essex"East Barnet" Cass,F.
Charles Anson (born Adams; 1770 - 7 June 1827) was Archdeacon of Carlisle from 29 January 1805 until his death. He was born in Stepney, the third son of George Adams (renamed Anson in 1773) of Sambrooke of Shugborough Hall, and Mary, the daughter of George Venables-Vernon, 1st Baron Vernon. Anson was educated at Christ Church, Oxford. He was Rector of both Lyng (from 1794) and Mautby (from 1804) in Norfolk, having been presented to both livings by his elder brother Thomas Anson, 1st Viscount Anson before his appointment to the Archdeaconry by his uncle Edward Venables-Vernon-Harcourt, then Bishop of Carlisle.
Charles Buckeridge (b Lichfield 3 June 1756 – d Coventry 29 October 1827) was an English churchman, Archdeacon of Coventry from 14 March 1816 until his death.'Births, Deaths, Marriages and Obituaries' Berrow's Worcester Journal (Worcester, England), Thursday, October 04, 1827; Issue 6509. British Library Newspapers, Part II: 1800–1900 He was the son of Theophilus Buckeridge of Lichfield, a cleric and Master of St John's Hospital there, and was educated at St John's College, Oxford, matriculating in 1772, and graduating B.A. in 1776, M.A. 1781, B.D. 1791, and D.D. in 1807. He held livings in Pembrokeshire, Glamorganshire and the West Midlands.
He was born at Hardingstone, near Northampton, and was educated at the grammar school of Northampton, and at Lincoln College, Oxford. Here he came under the influence of John Wesley and the Oxford Methodists, especially since he was a member of the Holy Club. Ultimately, however, while retaining his regard for the men and his sympathy with their religious aims, he adopted a thoroughly Calvinistic creed, and resolved to remain in the Anglican Church. Having taken orders in 1737, he held several curacies, and in 1752 succeeded his father in the family livings of Weston Favell and Collingtree.
Thomas Chalmers statue, Edinburgh After prolonged years of struggle, in 1834 the Evangelicals gained control of the General Assembly and passed the Veto Act, which allowed congregations to reject unwanted "intrusive" presentations to livings by patrons. The following "Ten Years' Conflict" of legal and political wrangling ended in defeat for the non- intrusionists in the civil courts. The result was a schism from the church by some of the non-intrusionists led by Dr Thomas Chalmers known as the Great Disruption of 1843. Roughly a third of the clergy, mainly from the North and Highlands, formed the separate Free Church of Scotland.
Street-wise and poor, Amar Nath (Amitabh Bachchan) makes a living selling cinema tickets and fast-food snacks (Bhel Puri) outside cinema halls. He had done M.A in Political Science and had a good academic record, but could not find any job. He is taken under the wing of a politician and Chair of the "Garibon Ki Party", Shankar Narayan (Kader Khan), who insist that Amarnath join his party, but he refused and wished to have a job. Shankar, using his influence, arranged some livings for him because he had saved him from a chaotic public during his speech.
Slare had religious interests, was a founder member of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (SPCK) and Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, and was a friend of John Floyer. In 1714 and 1715 he made benefactions to two church livings. He was one of the Commissioners for Relieving poor Proselytes; the Society for Relieving Poor Proselytes, from 1717 to the end of the 1720s, directed funds mostly to immigrant converts from Catholicism, and was an initiative of Henry Newman of the SPCK. Anthony William Boehm, a friend, died in his Greenwich home in 1722.
Phineas Pett , D.D. (b Maidstone 1 June 1756 – d Christ Church, Oxford'Births, Deaths, Marriages and Obituaries' The Morning Post (London, England), Thursday, February 11, 1830; Issue 18461 4 February 1830) was Archdeacon of Oxford"John Henry Newman Sermons 1824-1843: Volume V" from 1797 until his death.British History On-line Pett was educated at Christ Church, Oxford, matriculating in 1774, and graduating B.A. in 1778. He held livings at Orton on the Hill, Cropredy, Wentnor, Chilbolton and Newington, Oxfordshire.The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, Volume 100, Part 1 pp657/8 He was Principal of St Mary Hall, OxfordNPG from 1801 until 1815.
His family was intermarried with the other academic and clerical families in the town. George was educated with and mixed socially with the local aristocracy, including Thomas Erskine, 1st Baron Erskine, later Lord Chancellor and The Earl of Kinnoul. Both of these were very influential in the Crown patronage networks operated by Henry Dundas, effective ruler of Scotland (and also Chancellor of St Andrews University, which itself had extensive patronage powers in the University and in appointments to clerical livings). He was educated at St Andrews Grammar School, then entered St Andrews University when he was eleven years old.
Hilary died in July 1169, probably on 13 July. The historian David Knowles described Hilary as "an extremely quick- witted, efficient, self-confident, voluble, somewhat shallow man, fully acquainted with the new canon law but not prepared to abide by principles to the end. His talents were great but he used them as an opportunist."Quoted in Mayr-Harting "Hilary" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography In Hilary's favour, he was heavily involved in providing livings for the vicars who resided at the parish churches and performed the actual cure of souls, or pastoral duties, in his diocese.
John Wedge was the son of Francis Wedge (1714–1784) and Elizabeth Knock (1713–1788) of Fernhill House, near Forton, Staffordshire, a prosperous farmer, and brother of Thomas Wedge of Chester and Charles Wedge of Shudy Camps. He established himself on the Church Farm, Bickenhill, in Warwickshire. Wedge was agent to the Earl of Aylesford, whose seat at Packington House was close by, and a friend of Rev John Jaques, the Rector of Bickenhill and Prebendary of Lincoln Cathedral, who left his estate to Wedge. He was churchwarden at Little Packington, one of the livings held by Jaques.
Edward Emily (24 May 1740 – 20 June 1792) was a Dean of the Church of Ireland."Memorials of Cambridge Vol 2" Cooper, C.H. p300: Cambridge: CUP; 1861 He was born in West Clandon; educated at Westminster School and Trinity College, Cambridge; and ordained in 1766.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752-1900 Vol. ii. Chalmers – Fytche, (1944) p420 He held livings at Chesham, Wilden, Motcombe and West Lavington.
After retiring from Parliament, he became a partner and manager of the Milton Park Stud, a member of the council of the Thoroughbred Breeders' Association, and joint master of the Fitzwilliam Hunt. He had maintained his lifelong love of racing and each evening before dinner, a glass of champagne in hand, he would watch the races of the day, prerecorded by his butler. Hastings was chairman of the Peterborough Cathedral Development and Preservation Trust and helped raise millions of pounds for the Cathedral's restoration. He was patron of 32 livings, and took his duty to help provide priests for his parishes seriously.
Lynford Caryl, D.D.National Archives was an English academic, Master of Jesus College, CambridgeCollege web site from 1758 until 1771.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752-1900 Vol. i. Abbas – Cutts, (1922) p304 Caryl was born in Cotgrave and educated at Jesus College, Cambridge, graduating B.A. in 1728; and M.A. in 1732. He was ordained on 13 June 1729 and held livings at Fordham, Cambridge and Barnburgh.
When Bishop John Williams was promoted from Bishop of Lincoln to Archbishop of York on 4 December 1641, Winniffe was selected to succeed him. Although the King supposedly thereby intended to gratify parliament (on the ground of Winniffe's supposed Puritan tendencies), on 30 December Francis Rous moved in the House of Commons for the postponement of Winniffe's consecration. A mob also destroyed Winniffe's house in Westminster, although its leader, Sir Richard Wiseman, was killed. Nonetheless, Winniffe was elected on 5 January 1642, and consecrated on 6 February; he retained the deanery of St. Paul's, but resigned his livings in Essex.
In 1669 Comber was inducted to the rectory of Stonegrave on Bennet's resignation. In 1672 appeared the first instalment of his major work, the Companion to the Temple, intended to reconcile Protestant dissenters to the church of England. On 5 July 1677 he was installed prebendary of Holme in the church of York, and on 10 January 1678 he was presented, by Sir Hugh Cholmeley, 4th Baronet, to the living of Thornton-le-Clay, ten miles from Stonegrave. He obtained a dispensation to hold both livings from the Archbishop of Canterbury, who created him D.D. by patent on 28 June 1678.
When Rosencrantz joined Living TV, the channel had already broadcast Jade's Salon, featuring Jade Goody, a contestant in the third series of Big Brother, and was in production with a second series, Just Jade, following Goody as she launched a perfume range. Then in the autumn of 2006 came Jade's PA and then Bigg Boss, the Indian version of Big Brother, in August 2008. Goody heard the diagnosis of her terminal condition, cervical cancer, on screen. The series of documentaries broadcast leading up to Jade's Wedding, transmitted on 12 March, brought the highest ratings in the history of the Livings channel.
He was ordained deacon in 1712 in Christ Church, Oxford and afterwards priested and presented to two family benefices in the Yorkshire villages of Dunnington and Settrington. In 1716 he became canon of Christ Church. He exchanged his Yorkshire parishes for two other family livings in north Shropshire, Whitchurch and Myddle. He also became deputy to the clerk of the closet in 1719, giving it up in 1723 when, after having been recommended for the vacant post of Bishop of Hereford by Edmund Gibson, Bishop of London and Robert Walpole's chief ecclesiastical adviser, he was consecrated at Lambeth Palace on 2 February 1724.
The Corporation of the Sons of the Clergy was established in 1655 in response to the distress of the large number of clergymen who were dispossessed of their livings under the regime of Oliver Cromwell. Those who were loyal to the crown and adhered to the traditional form of service were displaced. One of the main instigators of the charity was Edward Wake, who was uncle of William Wake, Archbishop of Canterbury. The founders were merchants of the City of London and priests of the Church of England, all of whom were themselves sons of clergymen.
Many of the actors in this film were also members of the Royal Shakespeare Company, including Elizabeth Spriggs in her first screen role, and it was directed by RSC founder Peter Hall. His Pongo plays, performed in England during the 1960s and 1970s, have been described as Kyogen adaptations in a music hall style. Livings also wrote short stories, plays and screenplays, and contributed to the TV series Juliet Bravo (1980) and Bulman (1985). He collaborated with his friend, songwriter Alex Glasgow, who wrote the songs and music for the successful musical play Close the Coal House Door by Alan Plater.
John Watson, D.D. was a priest and academic in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius, (1927) p348 Watson was educated at Christ's College, Cambridge, graduating B.A. in 1498; MA in 1501; and B.D. in 1513. He held livings at Elsworth, White Notley and St Mary Woolnoth in the City of London.
John Barly, D.D. was a priest and academic at the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. i. Abbas – Cutts, (1922) p88 Barly was educated at Gonville Hall, Cambridge graduating B.A. in 1461 and M.A. in 1465. He was a Fellow of Gonville from 1466 to 1483; and held livings at Barningham Wynter, Mattishall and Winterton.
Brimstone Press was established in 2004 by Angela Challis and Shane Jiraiya Cummings and was based in Western Australia. The first publication from Brimstone Press was Shadowed Realms, an online flash fiction horror magazine that was active from 2004 to 2007. Authors published in Shadowed Realms include Terry Dowling, Richard Harland, Robert Hood, Poppy Z Brite, Stephen Dedman, Kurt Newton, Martin Livings, Lee Battersby, Paul Haines, Steven Cavanagh and Kaaron Warren. Shadowed Realms gained professional status from the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) in 2005 and was nominated for the Best Collected Work Ditmar Award in 2006.
Usher, Reconstruction of the English Church, I, pp. 346-47 (Internet Archive). Earbury, being in possession of this knowledge, was released without further adverse consequences, and indeed managed to retain his position as prebendary rectory of Wherwell, while by 1605 Samuel Norden, Stephen Goffe and Stephen Bachiler were deprived or ejected from their livings for their unwillingness to conform.'Norden, Samuel (1582-1605)', CCEd Person ID: 72973; 'Goffe, Stephen (1600-1622)', CCEd Person ID: 106979; 'Frewen, John (1582-1613)', CCEd Person ID: 69517; 'Bachiler, Stephen (1587-1605)', CCEd Person ID: 83757 (Church of England Clergy database).
However, at his Restoration in 1660, the King renounced the terms of the Treaty and his Oath of Covenant, which the Scottish Covenanters saw as a betrayal. The Rescissory Act 1661 repealed all laws made since 1633, effectively ejecting 400 Ministers from their livings, removing patronage in the appointment of Ministers from congregations and allowing the King to proclaim the restoration of Bishops to the Church of Scotland. The Abjuration Act of 1662 …was a formal rejection of the National Covenant of 1638 and the Solemn League and Covenant of 1643. These were declared to be against the fundamental laws of the kingdom.
Kaye was noted both for his piety but also as a great pluralist holding many rich livings in the Church of England at the same time. Following graduation, in 1762 he was appointed chaplain to the Duke of Portland. Then in 1765 he became rector of Kirkby in Ashfield in 1765, a position he owed to the Dowager Duchess of Portland, and which he retained until his death. In this parish dissenters and methodists following John Wesley made up the greatest part of the population, but Kaye was able to bring most of the population to return to worshiping at the parish church.
Lukis is also remembered for his work on the megaliths of Great Britain and France; with his university friend Sir Henry Dryden he surveyed the megalithic monuments of Brittany. He was ordained in Salisbury in 1845, and after holding several livings in Wiltshire he moved to Wath in Yorkshire, where he carried out a number of excavations. He published a treatise on ancient church plate in 1845 and was a regular contributor to the journals of the British Archaeological Association and other learned societies. His collection of artefacts was bought by the British Museum after his death.
National Archives - Hull University Brynmor Jones Library - Journal and personal account book of Robert Carlisle Broadley of Hull He was High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1867 and was a JP and a D.L. for the East Riding of Yorkshire, and Lieutenant-Colonel of the Yorkshire Hussars. He was patron of the livings of Melton-cum-Welton, Sutton St James and Bempton Yorkshire.Debrett's House of Commons 1881 At the 1868 general election, Harrison-Broadley was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for the East Riding of Yorkshire. He held the seat until the constituency was divided under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885.
Bola Johnson (Lagos, 6 July 1947 — 30 April 2014)Oluwagbemiga, Ogboro-Cole "The significance of Bola Johnson’s Pidgin English, with his Wakabout column in Lagos Weekend Newspaper from 1970 – 1990" was a Nigerian musician and bandleader. He was born to a traditional musician family, had his primary school at Livings Stone Academy situated at Ijero, in Ebute-Metta, Lagos. After his primary school education, he gained admission into Eko Boys High School, Mushin, Lagos. In 1963 due to lack of finance, he stopped studying when he was in the fourth class of his secondary school education.
Burges declared that he had spoken in haste; his mature judgement was in favour of the right of the state to apply to its own purposes the lands which had been assigned for the support of offices since abolished. He had advanced £3,500 to the parliament, and took the lands in payment. The date of his resignation of one of his livings should be noticed: he ceased to be a pluralist within two months of his speech against useless dignities. In the conflict with the king, Burges disclaimed altogether the attitude of rebellion, and his 'Vindication' proves his case.
The marchioness's Scottish roots did not prevent her taking an interest in the city of Cardiff, where her husband had had vast commercial and industrial interests. Sophia was an early supporter of the Welsh language; seeking to learn it herself, giving money for the establishment of the Welsh college at Llandovery, and providing financial assistance for the Eisteddfod. She was also responsible for donating the land and financing the construction of All Saints Church for Welsh-speaking Anglicans, in Tyndall Street, Cardiff. She took a particular interest in the appointment of clergy to livings in South Wales.
While comparable to geisha, these women make livings entertaining business men, often spending large amounts of their work time with them. Hostesses, however, can choose this path, rather than being sold into it, like a brothel girl from the Meiji era. This type of work borders on the sex industry, with women being paid to amuse men who eat and drink at night clubs, salons, taverns, etc. Though the hours are irregular, the pay is very good for women willing to work in this sector, some of whom even aspire to own their own private establishments.
The rise of these movements was blamed partly on the lack of accommodation in the churches provided by the state church. A major impediment to increasing the number of churches in the newly expanded towns was the difficulty in providing a regular income for an incumbent parson. Most parish livings in the Church of England were then primarily supported from agricultural tithes collected from farms in the parish. In expanding towns and cities, new churches had tended to be provided in association with residential developments as proprietary chapels, whose licensed ministers received an income from pew rents.
Kosier played that year with a plantar fascia injury, before suffering a torn medial collateral ligament in his left knee in the last game of the regular season.2012 NFL free agency - Dallas Cowboys release Kyle Kosier after free-agent adds Throughout his Cowboys years, he always remained an important presence in the locker room, often getting recognition for the versatility, chemistry, and stability he provided to the offensive line. On March 19, 2012, he was released after becoming expendable with the signings of free agent offensive guards Mackenzy Bernadeau and Nate Livings. In his NFL career, he played in 143 games.
This Act virtually meant a return to Episcopacy, so that monarchy and Episcopacy came back together. After Bishops had been procured, consecrated, and seated in the Scottish Parliament, severities increased steadily against the Presbyterians, who formed the majority of the population, especially in the centre and south and west of Scotland. One result of the Rescissory Act was that all the ministers who obtained livings from 1649 to 1661 were held not to have been appointed at all, and therefore were at once thrust out of their jobs. They numbered nearly 400, and their expulsion caused great discontent in Scotland.
Wensley Bond (1742-1820) was an Irish Anglican priest in the second half of the 18th-century and the first two decades of the 19th. Bond was born in County Longford and educated at Trinity College, DublinAlumni Dublinenses : a register of the students, graduates, professors and provosts of Trinity College in the University of Dublin (1593-1860)Burtchaell,G.D/Sadlier,T.U p80: Dublin, Alex Thom and Co, 1935 "Clerical and Parochial Records of Cork, Cloyne, and Ross" Maziere Brady,W pp429/30: London, Longmans, 1864 He held livings at Sligo and Clough. He was Dean of Ross, Ireland from 1743 until 1772.
Greenhill was a nephew of Thomas Greenhill. His father, William (one of a family of thirty-nine children by the same father and mother), was a counsellor-at-law, who lived first in London and then retired to a family estate at Abbot's Langley, Hertfordshire, where Joseph was born and baptised in February 1703-4. He was educated at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, graduated B.A. in 1726, and was admitted M.A. in 1731. Greenhill was appointed rector of East Horsley in 1727, and of East Clandon in 1732, both livings in the county of Surrey, and small both as to population and emolument.
Lax was granted the livings of vicar of Marsworth, Buckinghamshire and of St Ippolyts near Hitchin, Hertfordshire, where he erected an observatory. Lax was best known for his Remarks on a Supposed Error in the Elements of Euclid (1807) and his work regarding the Nautical Almanac, which was an important reference for navigation in the period. An obituary claimed that "To whatever Professor Lax applied, he made himself completely master of it". His daughter married Andrew Amos and through that line Lax is the grandfather of Sheldon Amos and the great grandfather of Maurice Amos, a notable legal dynasty.
Sixty-one subscribed; thirty-seven did not and were immediately suspended with their livings sequestered. A three-month grace period was given for these clergy to change their minds before they would be fully deprived. The deprivations were to be carried out under the authority of Parker's Advertisements, which he had just published as a revised form of the original articles defining ecclesiastical conformity.The full title is Advertisements partly for due order in the publique administration of common prayers and usinge the holy sacramentes, and partly for the apparrell of all persons ecclesiasticall, by vertue of the Queenes maiesties letters commaunding the same.
He helped the poet Robert Bloomfield, he reconciled Thomas Moore with Francis Jeffrey and with Byron, and he relieved Sheridan's difficulties in the last days of his life. Moore, who refused help from all his friends, and would only owe debts to his publishers, found it possible to accept help from Rogers. He procured a pension for HF Cary, the translator of Dante, and obtained Wordsworth his sinecure as distributor of stamps. John Mitford, while maintaining his country livings, rented permanent lodgings in Sloane Street, where he enjoyed "the most perfect intimacy with Samuel Rogers for more than twenty years".
Laurence Chaderton, the first master of Emmanuel, had held that post with distinction for thirty-eight years. He had outlived his influential friends, and the fellows thought that to secure Preston's interest with Buckingham would be to the advantage of their college. In particular they wanted a modification of the statutes, which enjoined continuous residence, so cutting them off from chaplaincies and lectureships, and at the same time compelled them to vacate at the standing of DD, whether otherwise provided or not. From Preston's influence they hoped to gain more liberty, as well as to increase the number of college livings.
Robert Hall, D.D. was an Anglican priest in England during the 17th century.Clergy of the Church of England database The son of Bishop Joseph Hall, he was educated at Emmanuel College, CambridgeAlumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. ii. Dabbs – Juxton, 1922) p288 and Exeter College, Oxford. Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Haak-Harman Hall held livings at Stokeinteignhead and Clyst Hydon.
Some of the earliest effects were felt in the area of food. Japanese-run establishments began serving beef as early as 1869, butcher shops emerged shortly after, and from then on Japanese people made their livings working with beef. The drinking of milk and eating of bread spread around the same time.Shinshū Kōbe Shishi: Rekishi-hen 4, p. 33 Beginning in 1873, Hyōgo Prefecture promoted the construction of Western-style architecture in the town area near the settlement, and after the return of the settlement the building of Western-style designs proceeded well.Shinshū Kōbe Shishi: Rekishi-hen 4, p.
Cottingham, Thomas's birthplace Thomas de Cottingham ( 1300 – 1370) was an English-born cleric and judge who held the office of Master of the Rolls in Ireland. He took his name from his birthplace, Cottingham, in the East Riding of Yorkshire. He served as a clerk in the English Chancery for more than 30 years, and was Keeper of the Great Seal in 1349. He held the livings of several parishes, of which the names of three are known for certain: these are St. Mary the Great, Cambridge, St. Andrew, Holborn (1343), and Ashby St Mary, Norfolk.
After that he was for eight years vicar of Hayton, in Cumberland, and was then presented by the bishop of Carlisle to the vicarage of Warkworth in Northumberland, which he held till his death. Besides these small livings, Dixon received no preferment in the church, although the best years of his life were devoted to writing a church history, which took rank from the first moment of its appearance as a standard authority. His friends would have greatly valued for him the increase of leisure and opportunities for study which a cathedral stall would have afforded; but it was not to be.
Edward Abbott (died 11 August 1746) was a priest of the Church of England and academic."The History of the University of Cambridge, from Its Original, to the Year 1753;: In which a Particular Account is Given of Each College and Hall, Their Respective Foundations, Founders, Benefactors, Bishops, Learned Writers, Masters, Livings, Curiosities, &c.; Together with Accurate Lists of All the Chancellors, Vice-Chancellors, Proctors, Taxers, Professors, Orators, and Members of Parliament" Carter, E. p296: London, Davis & Woodyer, 1753 Abbott was born in Middlesex and educated at Eton College and Magdalene College, Cambridge.Cunich, Hoyle, Duffy and Hyam (1994).
The son of a woodturner and householder of St Katherine by the Tower, a precinct of St Botolph Aldgate, he was probably born in 1637. He was admitted as a student of Pembroke College, Oxford, in 1654, then under presbyterian influence, where he took a B.A. Afterwards he obtained the livings of Norwood and Southam, from which he was ejected in 1662.:s:Hall, Timothy (DNB00) In 1667, having complied and signed the articles (11 January), he was presented to the small living of Horsendon, Buckinghamshire. He became perpetual curate of Princes Risborough in 1669, and vicar of Bledlow in 1674.
R. Mitchison, Lordship to Patronage, Scotland 1603–1745 (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1983), , pp. 127 and 145. In the countryside, where the majority of the population lived, it relied on funds raised and distributed by the kirk session, usually led by the parish minister and reliant on the generosity of local landholders, particularly the local laird. The role of the minister was undermined by the results of the change of regime in the Glorious Revolution in Scotland, which meant that many episcopalian ministers had been ejected from their livings and had not been replaced by the time of the famines.
Other sources say that Ursula and her sister Frances were cousins of Cornelius Launder (c. 1720–1806), the previous lord of the manor,University of Nottingham mss catalogue..., who had founded in about 1800 a charity for the benefit of clergy with livings near Nottingham.A Short Guide to the Parish Churches of the Bingham Rural Deanery. Among many interests, Norton was a director of the Nottingham Canal Company, which owned the Grantham Canal, and chairman of the Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire Fire & Life Assurance Company and of the Ambergate, Nottingham, Boston and Eastern Junction Railway, which opened the Nottingham–Grantham line through Elton in 1850.
William Hutchinson was an English priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries."The Writings of John Greenwood and Henry Barrow 1591-1593" Carlson, L.H. (Ed) p258: London; Rotledge; 1970 Hutchinson was educated at St John's College, Oxford.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Horrobin-Hyte He held livings at St Mary, Rickmansworth; St Christopher le Stocks, City of London; St. Botolph, Bishopsgate, City of London; All Saints', Hutton; St Michael Bassishaw, City of London; All Saints', Castle Camps; St Mary, Cheriton Bishop; and St Andrew, Kenn. He was Archdeacon of St Albans from 1581 until 1602 and Archdeacon of Cornwall from 1603 until his resignation in 1616.
B. Reichenbach (1998), Karma and the Problem of Evil, in Philosophy of Religion Toward a Global Perspective (Editor: G.E. Kessler), Wadsworth, , pp. 248–255 Karma theory of Buddhism, Hinduism and Jainism is not static, but dynamic wherein livings beings with intent or without intent, but with words and actions continuously create new karma, and it is this that they believe to be in part the source of good or evil in the world. These religions also believe that past lives or past actions in current life create current circumstances, which also contributes to either. Other scholarsUrsula Sharma (1973), Theodicy and the doctrine of karma, ‘‘Man’’, Vol.
Frohnlach must have possessed the municipal rights around 1400, because in 1467 and in the following years, the people of Frohnlach resisted the restrictions of their trading rights. Over the centuries, even individual craftsmen, such as coopers [Weißbüttner], butchers [Metzger], bakers [Bäcker] and innkeepers [Gastwirte] worked for the monastery. The inn, now House No. 43, is especially worth noting. It was already, in the days of the monastery, a tavern, and belonged to the Cloister. So the inhabitants of Frohnlach were making their livings with the Monastery, and we can sum up everything with the old quote: “Under the Crosier was the good life []”.
William Fullarton was Archdeacon of Armagh from 1633"Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 3" Cotton, H. p44 Dublin, Hodges & Smith, 1848–1878 until 1655. Fullarton was ordained in 1628. He was a Prebendary of Carncastle in the Diocese of Connor he held livings at Termonfeckin, Derrykeighan, and Ahoghill."Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 3" Cotton, H. p271Dublin, Hodges & Smith, 1848–1878 He married Jeane, daughter of Bishop Robert Echlin:"A genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry of Great Britain" Burke, B p498: London; Harrison;1879 they had 9 children (Robert, William, John, Jeane, Margaret, Euphiam, Isobel, Mary, and Agnes).
The residents of Colleton County, elaborated and written about his "grievous circumstances" and gave it to the Lords Proprietors with order that they remove the law. It was enacted, that twenty lay-persons be constituted a corporation for the exercise of ecclesiastical jurisdiction, with full power to deprive ministers of their livings at pleasure, not for immorality only, but also for imprudence, or on account of unreasonable prejudices taken against them. He ended his term in 1709 and died 1 July 1712 in Berkley County SC. Johnson had, at least, two children: Robert, also a future Governor of South Carolina, and Ann (who married Gov. Thomas Broughton).
Swete was educated at King's College London, and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and in 1858 was ordained. After some years of work in various country curacies and livings he became in 1869 theological lecturer and tutor at Caius College. In 1881 he became examining chaplain to the Bishop of St. Albans, and the following year was appointed professor of pastoral theology at King's College London. In 1890 he succeeded Brooke Foss Westcott as regius professor at Cambridge, and retained this position until 1915, when he retired with the title of emeritus professor. In June 1901, he received an honorary doctorate of Divinity from the University of Glasgow.
The Venerable Josiah Playdell was an Anglican priest in England during the 17th Century.Sussex people ; 1819 Playdell was born in Newnham on Severn and educated at Queen's College, OxfordAlumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Peach-Peyton and King's College, CambridgeAlumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p365 Playdell was ordained in 1663 and became curate at Chipping Norton. He held livings at Cocking, Bristol, Lyminster and Nuthurst .
First-fruits (annates) and tenths (decimae) originally formed part of the revenue paid by the clergy to the papal exchequer. The former consist of the first whole year's profit of all spiritual preferments, the latter of one-tenth of their annual profits after the first year. The proceedings of the court relate to a variety of aspects of the collection of these dues for the Crown and include, for example, accountings, sheriffs' returns to writs concerning livings and their incumbents and appearances and hearings in cases of first fruits. The income derived from first-fruits and tenths was annexed to the revenue of the crown in 1534 (26 Hen. VIII. c.
T. S. Eliot, by no means an admirer of Shaw, admitted that the epilogue of Murder in the Cathedral, in which Becket's slayers explain their actions to the audience, might have been influenced by Saint Joan. The critic Eric Bentley comments that Eliot's later play The Confidential Clerk "had all the earmarks of Shavianism ... without the merits of the real Bernard Shaw". Among more recent British dramatists, Crawford marks Tom Stoppard as "the most Shavian of contemporary playwrights"; Shaw's "serious farce" is continued in the works of Stoppard's contemporaries Alan Ayckbourn, Henry Livings and Peter Nichols. Shaw's complete plays Shaw's influence crossed the Atlantic at an early stage.
John Sturges DCL was a priest in England during the late 17th and early 18th centuries."Catalogue of the Lansdowne Manuscripts in the British Museum" p241: London; British Museum ; 1819 Sturges was educated at Christs College, CambridgeAlumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius, (1927) p329 and was incorporated at Oxford in 1682.Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Stermont-Synge He held livings at Kimbolton, Hartford, Kings Ripton and Glatton.
On the eastern side of the city was the Norman Cathedral (founded in 1096), the Benedictine Hospital of St. Paul, the Carmelite friary, St. Giles' Hospital, the Greyfriars monastery, and to the south the priory at Carrow, located just beyond the city walls. The priory's income was mainly generated from 'livings' it acquired for renting its assets, which included the Norwich churches of St. Julian, All Saints Timberhill, St. Edward Conisford and St. Catherine Newgate, all now lost apart from St. Julian's. Where these churches had an anchorite cell, they enhanced the reputation of the priory still further, as they attracted legacies and endowments from across society.
In Scotland, the split within the kirk made William more important because his Calvinism meant Presbyterians saw him as a natural ally, while the Episcopalian minority could only retain control with his support. The Scottish Convention that convened on 14 March in Edinburgh was dominated by the Presbyterians. On 4 April, it passed the Claim of Right and the 'Articles of Grievances', which held James forfeited the Crown by his actions; on 11 May, William and Mary became co- monarchs of Scotland. The kirk's General Assembly meeting in November 1690 was the first since 1654 and even before it convened, over 200 Episcopalian ministers had been removed from their livings.
Thomas Chalmers statue in George Street, Edinburgh After prolonged years of struggle, in 1834 the Evangelicals gained control of the General Assembly and passed the Veto Act, which allowed congregations to reject unwanted "intrusive" presentations to livings by patrons. The following "Ten Years' Conflict" of legal and political wrangling ended in defeat for the non-intrusionists in the civil courts. The result was a schism from the church by some of the non- intrusionists led by Dr Thomas Chalmers known as the Great Disruption of 1843. Roughly a third of the clergy, mainly from the North and Highlands, formed the separate Free Church of Scotland.
Her dramatisations for radio include Love Story, The Marseilles Trilogy, and Lynne Reid Banks's The L-Shaped Room. Juliet Ace tutored theatre undergraduates at Dartington College of Arts as a visiting playwright in 1985–87, and postgraduate students of writing and directing in the Media and Communications Department at Goldsmiths College in 1995–2005. She served as a judge of the Koestler Awards, for writing by prisoners, in the 1990s, and is a BAFTA jury member. In 1988, her play A Slight Hitch was included in the Oxford University Press collection, New Plays, Volume 1, edited by Peter Terson, which included work by Terson, Arnold Wesker and Henry Livings.
Francis Mears was an English priest in the 17th-century."Bibliotheca Topographica Britannica: Antiquities in Leicestershire, Volume 7" p502: London; J.Nichols; 1790 Meres was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge,Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, 1924) p171 He was ordained in 1632. Meres was Headmaster of Uppingham School from 1641 to 1666;University of Leicester and held the livings at Wardley Teigh and Misterton.
Cayley Illingworth, DD, FRS (b Nottingham 11 April 1759 - d Scampton 23 August 1823)Deaths 'Jackson's Oxford Journal' (Oxford, England), Saturday, September 6, 1823; Issue 3671 was Archdeacon of Stow from 1808 until his death.British History on-line Illingworth was educated at Pembroke College, CambridgeAlumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. iii. Gabb – Justamond, (1947) p514 and ordained in 1782. He held livings at Barrow upon Humber, Epworth and Scampton.
Following the Great Ejection of 1662, about a tenth of Church of England ministers gave up their livings, and many of them contributed to various forms of Rational Dissent which evolved via English Presbyterianism into, among others, Unitarianism, which still has more than 100 congregations in the 21st century. Methodism developed from the 18th century onwards. The Methodist revival was started in England by a group of men including John Wesley and his younger brother Charles as a movement within the Church of England, but developed as a separate denomination after John Wesley's death. The primary church in England is the Methodist Church of Great Britain.
The only U.S. Government mention of the Tunica from 1803 to 1938 was made in 1806 by an Indian Commissioner for Louisiana, who remarked that the Tunica numbered only about 25 men, lived in Avoyelles Parish and made their livings by occasionally hiring out as boatmen. Documents from the early 19th century record a second Tunica village with its own chief, located on Bayou Rouge, during the Tunica's early years in Avoyelles Parish. Some Tunica moved west to Texas and Oklahoma, where they were absorbed by other Native groups. Although the Tunica were prosperous at this time, eventually problems with their white neighbors would take its toll.
Plan Colombia sent hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid, training and equipment to Central and South American countries, thereby militarizing the region and local and national governments' responses to coca production. Cocaleros who make their livings growing and selling coca were the most negatively affected by the policies, as their crops were burned, ripped up, or sprayed with herbicide. Coca producers are left with few alternatives for subsistence, and therefore call for the legalization of coca. Also the anti- drug militancy has targeted left wing guerrilla groups like the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and gangs who are involved in the drug trade.
Bullingham was in favour as domestic chaplain to Stephen Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester, and rector of Boxwell and Withington in Gloucestershire. On the accession of Elizabeth I he remained Catholic and lost his livings. He was subsequently appointed by Edmund Grindal to the prebendal stall of Wenlocks-barn in St Paul's Cathedral on 1 August 1565 and admitted to the degree of B.D. at Oxford under the new reformed regime on 8 July 1566. The next year, on 27 December 1567, he was appointed Archdeacon of Huntingdon by his namesake and probable relation, Nicholas Bullingham, Bishop of Lincoln. He held the post until 1576.
Thomas Hearne noted that this appointment was not due to any skill in the subject, but to allow him to pay his debts to the college; while bursar, he had deputized Barzillai Jones to execute the functions of the office, and was held responsible when Jones absconded with college funds. Bertie was presented as Rector of Kenn, Devon on 27 August 1726 by his brother-in-law, Sir William Courtenay, 2nd Baronet, and resigned his fellowship in 1727. Courtenay likewise presented him to the livings of Wolborough in 1739 and Honiton on 15 November 1740. Bertie died on 15 February 1746/7 and was buried at Kenn.
Forbes Trevor Horan was the Anglican Bishop of Tewkesbury from 1960 to 1973. The son of a clergyman,His first wife, Veronica Bateman-Champlain, was a daughter of the Bishop of Knaresborough Who's Who 1970 London, A & C Black, 1971 Horan was educated at Sherborne and Trinity Hall, Cambridge. After a short military career in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry he studied for ordination at Westcott House, Cambridge and from 1933 embarked on curacies in Newcastle upon Tyne before wartime service in the RNVR. Livings in Shrewsbury and Huddersfield followedCrockfords, (London, Church House 1995) before his elevation to the suffragan bishopric of TewkesburyThe Times, Wednesday, 3 August 1960; pg.
On 5 May 1608 he was admitted to the rectory of Willingale-Doe, Essex, and on 15 June following to that of Lambourne in the same county, and on 30 June 1609 he resigned his fellowship at Exeter, having livings above the statutable value. After Prince Henry's death Winniffe became chaplain to Prince Charles. However, on 7 April 1622, when the Spaniards were overrunning the Electorate of the Palatinate, Winiffe preached a sermon denouncing Gondomar, and comparing Spinola with the devil. Sent to the Tower of London, Winiffe repented and appealed to the Spanish and imperial ambassadors, whose intercession caused his release a few days later.
He was incorporated at Oxford on 10 March 1606. Between 1611 and 1621 he was secretary for nine years to John King, bishop of London, as well as professor of music at Gresham College from 1610 to 1638 (drafts of some of his lectures survive, as British Library, Sloane MS 2329). His ordination as deacon followed in London on 24 December 1620, then as priest on 13 March 1625. In 1624 he became vicar of Tillingham, Essex, but resigned that benefice in 1629 to become vicar of Hexton and rector of Stoke Newington, and he still held both livings at his time of death.
On 24 September 1485, one month after the battle of Bosworth and the consequent accession to the throne of Henry VII, Smyth was given the benefice of the deanery of Wimborne, Dorset, where Lady Margaret's parents were buried. On 20 October 1485 he was made a canon and prebendary of St Stephen's Chapel in the Palace of Westminster, where he became dean in 1490. He later obtained the livings of Combe Martin, Devon, of Great Grimsby and on 14 June 1492 he was instituted as rector of Cheshunt, Hertfordshire.Poole, p25 It is not possible to be sure about all his preferments because of his common name.
"Toother" was first published in the United States in 2007 in the science fiction and fantasy anthology Eclipse One, edited by Jonathan Strahan and published by Night Shade Books. In 2008 "Toother" was republished in The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror 2008: Twenty-First Annual Collection edited by Kelly Link, Gavin J. Grant, Ellen Datlow. "Toother" won the 2007 Australian Shadows Award beating works by Matthew Chrulew, David Conyers, Rick Kennett, Martin Livings, and Jason Nahrung. "Toother" was also a short-list nominee for the 2007 Aurealis Award for best horror short story but lost to Anna Tambour's "The Jeweller of Second-Hand Roe".
He later became vicar of Teston and rector of Nettlestead, Kent, the livings being in the gift of Middleton. Ramsay's pamphlet Essay on the Treatment and Conversion of African Slaves in the British Sugar Colonies, published in 1784, especially affected Lady Middleton. Feeling inadequate to take up the issue of the slave trade in Parliament himself, and knowing that it would be a long, hard battle, Sir Charles Middleton suggested the young Member of Parliament William Wilberforce as the one who might be persuaded to take up the cause. (Whether this was the first time that the issue had been suggested to Wilberforce is debatable).
Rupert Gordon Strutt (known as Gordon;Vicars of St Mary Magdalene, Addiscombe 15 January 1912 – 1 October 1985) was the Anglican Bishop of Stockport from 1965 to 1984. Strutt was educated at the London College of Divinity and Wycliffe Hall, Oxford. Ordained in 1943 he embarked on a curacy at Carlton, Nottinghamshire before wartime service as a Chaplain to the Forces. Livings in Normanton on Soar, Leicester and Addiscombe followed before a spell as Archdeacon of MaidstoneCrockford's Clerical Directory 1975-76 London: Oxford University Press, 1976 and finally appointment to the episcopate Ecclesiastical News Consecration Of Two Bishops Suffragan (Official Appointments and Notices) The Times Wednesday, Nov 03, 1965; pg.
Frederick Hamilton (1728-1811) was an Anglican priest during the late 18th and early 19th centuriesArchives Hub, JISC Hamilton was born in London and educated at Westminster School then Clare College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209–1751 Vol. ii. Dabbs – Juxton, (1922) p292 He held livings at Wellingborough and Stanton;CCEd and was the Archdeacon of Raphoe from 1752 to 1772."Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 3" Cotton,H.
Midleton contested the East Surrey parliamentary seat in 1865 but was unsuccessful. Midleton was returned to Parliament as one of two representatives for Surrey Mid in 1868. He served on two commissions, the Noxious Vapours Commission (1875) and the Sale of Exchange of Livings (1877) although his blindness limited his ability to do more in public life. Midleton's son later wrote of him: > My father, whose courage and self-denial were conspicuous, suffered from > serious defects of sight and hearing, partly due to an accident, but mainly > to his father and mother having been first cousins, from which source a > disability affected several of my grandfather's family in different ways.
She has no blemishes. She represents the vocal form of the four Vedas, which the text asserts comes from 21 schools of Rigveda, 109 schools of Yajurveda, 1000 schools of Samaveda, and 40 schools of Atharvaveda. She is ethics, tradition, law, legend, and the five minor Vedas, asserts the text, naming these as architecture, archery, music, medicine and Daivika (divinity). She is the basis of the whole world, is composed of Brahma Vishnu and Shiva, and she is the soul (inner self, Atman) that resides in all livings. Her name Sita, signifies Pranava or “Aum”, and she is the first cause of the universe.
Memorial to John Hacket in Lichfield Cathedral He was born in London and educated at Westminster and Trinity College, Cambridge. On taking his degree he was elected a fellow of his college, and soon afterwards wrote the comedy, Loiola (London, 1648), which was twice performed before King James I. He was ordained in 1618, and through the influence of John Williams became rector in 1621 of Stoke Hammond, Buckinghamshire, and Kirkby Underwood, Lincolnshire. In 1623 he was chaplain to James, and in 1624 Williams gave him the livings of St Andrew's, Holborn, and Cheam, Surrey. He was Archdeacon of Bedford from 1631 to 1661.
Mansell was the son of Arthur Mansell of Briton Ferry by his wife Jane Price, daughter of William Price of Britton Ferry. He was the grandson of Sir Thomas Mansell, 1st Baronet, MP. He had an income of £1,100 per annum and was patron of three livings in 1645.W R Williams The Parliamentary History of the Principality of Wales The Mansel family -- the senior line of which was seated at Margam Abbey in Glamorgan (see Mansel Baronets and Baron Mansel) -- played a major role in the early settling of the Gower Peninsula. Their canting arms were: Argent, a chevron between three maunches sable.
The Committee for Plundered Ministers met in London, but it delegated much of its work to its sub-committees of which there was one for each county. It was initially envisaged that the committee would help ministers who were evicted from their livings by Royalists for supporting the Parliamentary cause (hence the name).Foster, xiii However, as Parliament gained the upper hand in the war, so the work of the committees became less to do with supporting clerics who supported their cause and more to do with suppressing those who supported the monarchy. The committee would hear evidence, often from local parishioners, of the errors in doctrine of the parish priest.
William Powell (circa 1681 - 13 April 1751) was an eighteenth century British Anglican priest."The history and antiquities of the conventual & cathedral church of Ely: from the foundation of the monastery, A.D. 673, to the year 1771", Volume 1 Bentham, J p268: Norwich; Stevenson, Matchett & Stevenson; 1812 Powell was born circa 1681 at Hampton Court. He was educated at Eton and St John's College, Cambridge He held livings at Lambourn, Langwmdinmael and Llanyblodwel. He was Dean of St Asaph"British Magazine and Monthly Register of Religious and Ecclesiastical Information, Parochial History, and Documents Respecting the State of the Poor, Progress of Education" Hugh James Rose,H.
The bounty was originally funded by the annates monies: "first fruits" (the first year's income of a cleric newly appointed to a benefice) and "tenths" – a tenth of the income in subsequent years traditionally paid by English clergy to the pope until the Reformation, and thereafter to the Crown. Henry VIII, on becoming the recipient of these monies had had them carefully valued and specified as sums of money. This valuation was never revised, and in 1920 the income from First Fruits and Tenths was between £15,000 and £16,000. The bounty money was to be used to increase the income of livings yielding less than £80 a year.
S.H. Grimm's depiction of Tortington Priory Barn, 1782. For the 'Black Canons' who lived there it was a small establishment, not unlike other Augustinian priories founded nearby at Pyneham (de Calceto) just to the east of Arundel and at Hardham, further up the Arun valley. Occupied by only a Prior and four or five Canons at any one time, the Priory was given the advowson of church livings in Sussex, Dorset and London, including for a time that of St Mary Magdalene in Tortington. But successive visitations in the 15th and early 16th centuries reported a house in decay, lacking in books and whose servants were incompetent and unskilled.
Blethyn was reputed to have been born at Shirenewton Hall, a large country house at Shirenewton in Monmouthshire,"Shirenewton at Kelly's Directory of Monmouthshire", 1901 although his descendants were also said to have resided at Dinham, in a mansion on the site later occupied by Great Dinham Farm."Llanvair Discoed and Dinham" from Kelly's Directory of Monmouthshire,1901 at caerwentcom.com He was educated at Oxford, at either New Inn Hall or Broadgates Hall. He took orders, became archdeacon of Brecon in 1567 and also bishop of Llandaff in 1575, holding several livings at the same time in order to boost the scanty endowments of the see.
Wigan remained at Christ Church as a tutor. One of his students was John Wesley who wrote to his mother on 23 September 1723 reporting that “Mr Wigan had resigned his pupils and was retired into the country to one of his livings.” Wesley goes on to note that “The small-pox and fever are now very common in Oxford; of the latter a very ingenious young gentleman of our College died yesterday, being the fifth day from the beginning of his illness. There is not any other in the College sick at present, and it is hoped that the approach of winter will stop the spreading of the distemper.” .
Wachenheim itself is still said to be a classic wine village with five winemaking businesses whose main work lies in this pursuit, and four others who pursue it as a sideline. Moreover, there are still seven agricultural operations whose only work lies in this pursuit, with mixed structure, as well as a professional farm with nothing but cropraising. All together, field farming stretches across 311 ha, of which winegrowing takes up 80 ha. Wachenheim's inhabitants mainly earn their livings at jobs in the Worms area and the greater Ludwigshafen-Mannheim-Heidelberg area (Rhine-Neckar area), as well as in the Mainz-Wiesbaden area and on to Frankfurt am Main.
Thomas Chalmers statue in George Street, Edinburgh After prolonged years of struggle, in 1834 the Evangelicals gained control of the General Assembly and passed the Veto Act, which allowed congregations to reject unwanted "intrusive" presentations to livings by patrons. The following "Ten Years' Conflict" of legal and political wrangling ended in defeat for the non- intrusionists in the civil courts. The result was a schism from the church by some of the non-intrusionists led by Dr Thomas Chalmers known as the Great Disruption of 1843. Roughly a third of the clergy, mainly from the North and Highlands, formed the separate Free Church of Scotland.
Allen was born in Oxford 25 December 1681, and educated at New College School and Wadham College, Oxford, where he took the degree of B.A. on 2 July 1705. He was for a time a clerk in Lincoln's Inn; then became a schoolmaster; was ordained in 1705; in February 1706 he became vicar of Irchester, Northamptonshire, which he resigned in 1715 to take the less valuable rectory of Kettering. He married Dorothy Plowman, who, disliking the exchange of livings, murdered her infant son and cut her own throat, but recovered, and was tried and acquitted at the next assizes. Allen died, while reading prayers, 31 May 1755.
Subsequent Broadway/National Tour/Production credits include Shenandoah with John Raitt (1984), Joseph And The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (1984), Roza (1987) and Starlight Express (1989-1990). He directed and choreographed a production of My Way, for the Riverside Center Theatre in Virginia and It Shoulda Been You starring Kim Zimmer and 8 Track: The Sounds of the 70's for Gretna Theatre in July and August 2016. In early 2017, he directed and choreographed Kiss Me, Kate at Kent State. In March 2017 he directed the pre-Broadway workshop production of The Last Adam, a new musical by George Alex Livings and Jonathan Hickey.
Following the devastation of the Jewish communities of the Rhineland during the People's Crusade, Jews who had formerly made their livings as itinerant merchants could no longer travel safely, and had to find careers in the cities which they lived. Many became local merchants; others became moneylenders. This drastically increased the rate of commerce between Jews and non-Jews, and, thus, litigation both internally amongst Jews and between Jews and non- Jews. Simultaneously, heavy taxes were being levied on the Jewish communities by the local government, taxes which many Jews at the time felt were being unfairly distributed by the leaders of the local kehilla.
He was born in London, and educated at Eton College where he was a King's Scholar. He later attended King's College, Cambridge, where he was admitted a scholar on 13 August 1564; there is no record that he took a degree. After taking holy orders and holding many livings in England, he was promoted to the see of Armagh and primacy of all Ireland in July 1584, on the nomination of Sir John Perrot, Lord Deputy of Ireland. He was made a member of the Irish privy council in 1585, and died at Drogheda in 1589, being buried in Primate Octavian's vault at St Peter's, Drogheda.
Egan then gained access to the Spanish court at Valladolid, travelling there with Mansoni, and influenced Philip III of Spain, in the direction of sending men and money to Kinsale in 1601, to support the rebellion which Tyrone had raised in the south of Ireland. Pope Clement VIII summoned Egan back to Rome, appointed him apostolic vicar, created him D.D., and conferred on him livings in Munster. Egan arrived at Kilmakilloge in Kenmare Bay in June 1602, in a ship bringing troops and finance from Spain. Charles Blount, 8th Baron Mountjoy had enjoyed success in the field against Tyrone's rebellion, and Kinsale was closely invested.
Bright afterwards abandoned the medical profession and took holy orders. In 1588 he dedicated his treatise Characterie to Queen Elizabeth, who on 5 July 1591 presented him to the rectory of Methley in Yorkshire, then void by the death of Otho Hunt, and on 30 December 1594 to the rectory of Barwick- in-Elmet, in the same county. He held both these livings till his death; the latter seems to have been his usual place of abode; there, at least, he made his will, on 9 August 1615, in which he leaves his body to be buried where God pleases. It was proved at York on 13 November 1615.
In 1632 or 1633 he became rector of Baldwin- Brightwell, Oxfordshire, and about that time was also made chaplain to Charles I of England, and canon-residentiary of Chichester, holding the prebend of Seaford. After the outbreak of the First English Civil War the House of Lords resolved (5 October 1642) that he should be allowed to attend the king as chaplain in ordinary. When the war ended he lost his prebend of Chichester as a delinquent, but he was discharged by the committee for sequestrations; under the Commonwealth he lent out money. After the Restoration he again became royal chaplain, and recovered his Seaford prebend and his Oxford livings.
The largest and best known gang type in Cape Town are the street gangs that are mostly associated with poorer coloured communities. They tend to have hierarchical command structures and are thought to derive most of their income from the illicit drug trade. In Cape Town the two largest gangs are The Americans and the Hard Livings which function as umbrella organisations for many smaller gangs that are allied with the two super gangs. Smaller gangs in Cape Town that might be allied to one of the two larger umbrella gangs include Young Dixie Boys, Clever Kids, Naughty Boys, the Junky Funky Kids, Respectable Peacefuls, Wonder Kids, School Boys and Yuru Cats.
George Cotton (b Combermere 21 May 1743 – d Bath 10 December 1805) was an English Anglican priest, most notably Dean of ChesterBritish History on-line from 1787 until his death.'Births, Deaths, Marriages and Obituaries' Liverpool Mercury(Liverpool, England), Friday, December 1, 1815; Issue 231 Cholmondeley was born in Cheshire and educated at Westminster and Trinity College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part II. 1752–1900 Vol. ii Chalmers – Fytche (1944) p148 He held livings at South Reston, Stowe, Stoke-upon-Trent and Davenham.
Thomas Brooke (4 June 1684 – 17 August 1757) was an English Anglican priest, most notably Dean of ChesterBritish History on-line from 1732 until his death."The history of the county palatine of Chester" Hanshall, J. H p101: Self published, Chester, 1823 Brooke was born in Brereton, Cheshire and educated at St Catharine's College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. Earliest times to 1752 Vol. i Abbas – Cutts, (1922) p228 He held livings at Winslow, Nantwich and Dodleston.
Most inhabitants were descendants of the original Puritan colonists, but there was also a small elite of Anglican "worthies" who were not involved in village life, made their livings from estates, investments, and trade, and lived in mansions along "the Road to Watertown" (today's Brattle Street, still known as Tory Row). Coming north from Virginia, George Washington took command of the volunteer American soldiers camped on Cambridge Common on July 3, 1775, now reckoned the birthplace of the U.S. Army. Most of the Tory estates were confiscated after the Revolution. On January 24, 1776, Henry Knox arrived with artillery captured from Fort Ticonderoga, which enabled Washington to drive the British army out of Boston.
Residents of Wigtown and the surrounding area earned their livings in a variety of ways. An 18th-century observer, Samuel Robinson commented that from its 'peculiar position in relation to the sea', the county of Wigtown offered 'many singular advantages to the landing of smuggled goods and smugglers were not slow in taking advantage of this'. Wigtown town council in July 1774 recognised the 'pernicious and fatal consequences' of smuggling all types of prohibited goods, particularly tea, from the Isle of Man. The council further denounced the drinking of tea and brandy as their purchase drained specie from the county which could be more naturally employed in the manufacture of their own wool.
In May 1637, Hyde became subdean and prebendary of Salisbury Cathedral, stall of South Grantham (4 March 1639). Like other members of his family, he was a staunch royalist and was sequestered from his livings under the Commonwealth, but reoccupied them at the Restoration. According to his epitaph, he gave generously to the repairs of the Cathedral after its desecration by the soldiers of the parliament. Due to the influence of the Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon (his first cousin), he was at the Restoration rewarded by the deanery of Winchester (installed 8 August 1660) and, on the death of John Earle in 1665, was appointed to the See of Salisbury.
Richard Thompson, D.D. (b Wakefield 11 March 1648; d Bristol 29 November 1685) was Dean of Bristol"Cathedral Antiquities: Historical and descriptive Accounts, with 311 illustrations of the following English Cathedrals, Volume 5" Britton, J. p67: London, M.A. Nattali, 1836 from 1684 until his death.British History On-line Thompson was born in Wakefield and educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209–1752 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius, (1927) p226 He held livings at Duston, BedminsterBristol Archives and Redcliffe.
Scottish minister and his congregation, c.1750 The late eighteenth century saw the beginnings of a fragmentation of the Church of Scotland that had been created in the Reformation. These fractures were prompted by issues of government and patronage, but reflected a wider division between the Evangelicals and the Moderate Party over fears of fanaticism by the former and the acceptance of Enlightenment ideas by the latter. The legal right of lay patrons to present clergymen of their choice to local ecclesiastical livings led to minor schisms from the church. The first in 1733, known as the First Secession and headed by figures including Ebenezer Erskine, led to the creation of a series of secessionist churches.
The tale is a satirical and somewhat bitter attack on the profession of summoner—an official in ecclesiastical courts who summons people to attend—and in particular The Summoner, one of the other people on the pilgrimage. Unlike the Miller and the Reeve who tell tales that irritate the other and do not get on for that reason, the Friar and the Summoner seem to have a longstanding hatred between them. The Friar is of one of the mendicant orders which traveled about preaching and making their livings by begging. Part of the animosity between the two characters may be due to these orders of friars, which had been formed relatively recently, interfering with the work of the summoners.
Bartholomew Lloyd at the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive He had been ordained into the Church of Ireland in 1790, and two of his sermons (preached in the college chapel in 1798 and 1799) formed form the basis of his Discourses on the Scriptural Doctrines of Atonement and Sacrifice (1801), a polemic against Unitarian theology, which was answered by Lant Carpenter. In 1812 he had resigned from TCD to undertake the charge of the livings of Cappagh, County Tyrone, and Killyleagh, County Down. In 1813 he became Dean of Cork. He was well known as a preacher and promoter of the Irish Second Reformation, and in 1819 he was consecrated Bishop of Raphoe.
Squire began his church career in 1739 when he was ordained a deacon of the Church of England; he was ordained priest in 1741, in which year he was appointed vicar of Minting, Lincolnshire. In 1743 was made a canon of Wells Cathedral, and Archdeacon of Bath, holding both preferments until 1761. Adding to his growing number of parish livings, he was appointed rector of Toppesfield, Essex (1749–50) and subsequently of St Anne's Church, Soho (1750–66), and vicar of St Alphege's, Greenwich (1751–66), where William Paley, who later achieved fame as a theologian and philosopher, served as his curate. He was briefly Dean of Bristol (1760) and was finally appointed Bishop of St David's in 1761.
Sponge-diving, conch diving, crabbing, lobstering and other commercial fishing have been important parts of conch culture. Commercial fishing is now less important to conch culture than it has been in the past, and recreational fishing is more important, as some conchs now make their livings from charter fishing and other tourism-related businesses. Regarding government-sponsored organizations, the Florida Keys Council for the Arts is the primary cultural umbrella for the Florida Keys, and serves the population from Key Largo to Key West. A non-profit local arts agency, it makes grants, operates the Monroe County Art in Public Places program, sponsors seminars, and manages the on- line cultural calendar for the region.
A portrait of Owen from around 1810 Edward Pryce Owen (3 March 1788 - 15 July 1863) was an English artist. He was the only son of Archdeacon Hugh Owen (1761–1827)by his wife Harriett née Jeffreys. He was the twent fifth in male descent from Edwin of Tegeingl, founder of the noble tribe of Powis. He was educated at St. John's College, Cambridge, where he graduated with a B.A. in 1810 and an M.A in 1816. After officiating for some time at Park Street Chapel, Grosvenor Square, London, he became vicar of Wellington, and rector of Eyton-upon-the-Wildmoors, Shropshire, holding these livings from 27 February 1823 (Foster, Index Eccles.) till 1840.
By 1164 Ralph had acquired the livings of Aynho, Northamptonshire, and Finchingfield, Essex, and served them both by vicars.Biography of Ralph de Diceto (August, 2016) Although Ralph's narrative is colourless and although he was one of those who showed some sympathy for Becket at the council of Northampton in 1164, his correspondence shows that he regarded the archbishop's conduct as ill-considered and that he gave advice to those whom Becket regarded as his chief enemies. Ralph was selected in 1166 as the envoy of the English bishops when they protested against the excommunications launched by Becket. But, apart from this episode, which he characteristically neglects to record, he remained in the background.
The economic reality proved his point positively. His son, King Lý Thái Tông (1000–1054), added further encouraging policies for economic development such as tax reduction, while trying to remain budget balance and even budget surplus. He enthusiastically encouraged local production by advising people to use local-made handicraft products and even order imperial mades to weave silk and fabrics themselves, so that they would not later have to rely on imports from the Chinese merchants. The fourth king of Lý Nhân Tông (1066-1127)–was highly regarded as the most capable one in all kings of Lý was also the one that further concentrated on improving economic conditions for people to make their livings.
After Norris's death, Constantine was made the vicar of Llawhaden in Pembrokeshire, but some unguarded remarks to John Barlow in 1539 led to his imprisonment by Thomas Cromwell in the Tower of London. By 1546, Constantine had been released from imprisonment, and had regained favour with the church. He became the registrar of St David's in Wales, then gained the position of royal visitor of the diocese in 1547, ascending to Archdeacon of Carmarthen and Prebendary of Llangammarch in 1549. Although Constantine was stripped of his registrarship and livings during Mary's reign, he was back in favour by 1559 when he was appointed one of the visitors for the Western circuit of dioceses.
A common PAGAD modus operandi was to set fire to drug dealers' houses and kill gangsters. PAGAD's campaign came to prominence in 1996 when the leader of the Hard Livings gang, Rashaad Staggie, was beaten and burnt to death by a mob during a march to his home in Salt River. South Africa's police quickly came to regard PAGAD as part of the problem rather than a partner in the fight against crime, and they were eventually designated a terrorist organization by the South African government. Changes within the organisation following the incidences of 1996 increased the influence of more highly politicised and organisationally experienced people within it associated with radical Islamic groups such as Qibla.
John Nevill, 3rd Earl of Abergavenny (25 December 1789 – 12 April 1845), styled Hon. John Nevill until 1826 and Viscount Nevill from 1826 to 1843, was an English peer. He was wounded while on active service in the Peninsular War, and after the close of the Napoleonic War, took holy orders, holding family livings in Norfolk and Suffolk. The deaths of his two elder brothers made him heir to his father's earldom, to which he succeeded in 1843, but he was in delicate health and died in 1845. The third son of Henry Nevill, 2nd Earl of Abergavenny and his wife Mary Robinson, he was born on 25 December 1789 and baptised on 27 February 1790 at Isleworth, Middlesex.
An Australian single "Now"/"Will My Lady Come" [Decca Y-8977] was released in 1969. The A-side is credited to Terry Britten; the B-side to Trevor Spencer, Alan Tarney and Peek. For a time, following their move to London, he and his fellow Adelaide-born bandmates—guitarist Terry Britten, bassist Alan Tarney, and drummer Trevor Spencer—made their livings as session musicians together, playing with everyone from the New Seekers and Mary Hopkin (Earth Song, Ocean Song) to Cliff Richard, whose regular backing band they became on stage and on record during the 1970s. Peek also worked with Manfred Mann, Lulu, Tom Jones, Jeff Wayne (War of the Worlds), and Shirley Bassey, among others.
In the Marches of Wales these processes towards a "high medieval" authority were staunchly resisted. Protests of the border lords surviving in the Royal records throw some light upon the nature and extent of the privileges whose normal operation has left no record. On the local side, the able-bodied population was more directly essential to the local Lord and was able to extract from him carefully defined and highly local liberties. A point of friction was in the Lords' funded churches where they appointed churchmen to livings held tightly under hierarchic control in the manner that had developed in Normandy, where a highly organised church structure was well in the hands of the Duke.
He was educated at Sherborne and graduated from Christ Church, Oxford with a BA in 1783 (where he had got to know Lord Grenville), he was appointed to be a prebend and precentor in the diocese of Bath and Wells by his father (then its bishop) along with the livings of Wookey and Castle Cary. He then won the chaplaincy of the House of Commons in 1789 via Grenville, who also gained him the nomination to be Bishop of Oxford in 1807. He was also a Canon of Westminster (1792–1797) and Canon of St Paul's (from 1797). He returned the favour by backing Grenville's campaign to become Chancellor of Oxford University.
Reynolds was the son of a baker from Windsor, Berkshire, and became a clerk, or chaplain, in the service of Edward I. Reynolds held several livings and, owing perhaps to his acting skill, he became a prime favourite with the prince of Wales, afterwards Edward II, whom he served as Keeper of the Great Wardrobe. Just after the prince became king, on 22 August 1307 Reynolds, was appointed Treasurer of England. On 13 November 1307 Reynolds, who had the living of St Mary's Wimbledon was elected Bishop of Worcester and consecrated on 13 October 1308. He was also on 6 July 1310 named Keeper of the Great Seal and Lord Chancellor of England.
After standing unsuccessfully for the headship of the college in 1569, he became chaplain to Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, and received from him the livings of Warley, in Essex, and Dennington in Suffolk. In 1578 he was elected master of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge. As a Puritan controversialist he was remarkably active; in 1580 the bishop of Ely appointed him to defend puritanism against the Roman Catholics, Thomas Watson, ex-Bishop of Lincoln (1513–1584), and John Feckenham, formerly abbot of Westminster, and in 1581 he was one of the disputants with the Jesuit, Edmund Campion, while in 1582 he was among the clergy selected by the privy council to argue against any Roman Catholic.
Born in London to a Dutch father and English mother, Bouyer was educated at Leyden in Holland before being admitted to Trinity College, Cambridge in 1761. Migrating to Jesus College in 1763, he graduated LL.B. in 1769. However, his studies had been interrupted for a time while he acted as a tutor to Robert Bertie, second son of the third Duke of Ancaster, who was at Eton. After graduating he was appointed perpetual curate of Edenham in Lincolnshire, near the Grimsthorpe Castle seat of the Bertie family, and following his ordination in 1771 he was presented by them to the valuable Lincolnshire livings of Willoughby-cum- Sloothby and Theddlethorpe St Helen, which he held until 1811.
It consists almost entirely of obituaries and of notices relating to events which concerned his own monastery or the town of Gloucester; but in the early part it includes matter which is not contained in the Historia S. Petri Gloucestriæ, printed in the Rolls Series. His compilation is thought to have been a source for Walter Froucester's later revision of the Gloucester chronicle. A Gregory of Karewent was dean of the arches in 1279; for the same year the livings of Tetbury, Gloucestershire, and Blockley, Worcestershire, are mentioned as vacant through the death of Gregory de Kerewent. A Philip de Kayrwent was prior of Gloucester in 1284, and Richard de Kayrwent was infirmarer in 1275 and 1284.
Their "right goodly lordship", as John Leland called it, extended over the parishes of Illogan, Redruth, and Camborne, the advowsons of which churches pertained to the manor of Tehidy, and the livings of which were occasionally held by some member of the family; but their wealth in later times was mainly derived from the enormous mineral riches of this part of Cornwall, although they also held considerable property in the north-eastern part of the county. The names of the earlier Bassets are little known in history, save that in the time of Henry VII (1485-1509) John Basset, Sheriff of Cornwall, found his posse commitatus too weak to suppress the Cornish rebellion of 1497 ("Flammock Rebellion").
March 1566 brought the peak of enforcement against nonconformity, with the Diocese of London targeted as an example, despite Parker's expectation that it would leave many churches "destitute for service this Easter, and that many [clergy] will forsake their livings, and live at printing, teaching their children, or otherwise as they can." The London clergy were assembled at Lambeth Palace. Parker had requested but failed to gain the attendance of William Cecil, Lord Keeper Nicholas Bacon, and the Lord Marquess of Northampton, so it was left to Parker himself, bishop Grindal, the dean of Westminster, and some canonists. One former nonconformist, Robert Cole, was stood before the assembly in full canonical habit.
Brick Gothic church in Gressow, Mecklenburg Thomas Aderpul was a preacher of the Protestant Reformation who taught an extreme form of egalitarian religious polity; consequently, the German Democratic Republic admired him as a proto- communist. Aderpul came to public notice in 1529 in the Klützer Ort, a district between Wismar and Lübeck, which was on Mecklenburg territory but fell within the Bishopric of Ratzeburg, and was mostly owned by the von Plessen family who had built up considerable debts to the diocese. They saw the Reformation as an opportunity to evade their financial obligations. Appointments to livings on estates were generally made by the lord of the manor with the approval of the diocesan bishop.
The Times, 25 February 1888, p. 10, "Consecration Of Suffragan Bishops" As Bishop of Marlborough, he was suffragan to Frederick Temple and Mandell Creighton as successive Bishops of London, and was given charge of the western part of the Diocese of London. Alongside his bishopric, he also held two successive livings: Rector of St Michael, Cornhill (1888–1895), and Rector of St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate and a Prebendary of St Paul's (1896–1900). Earle was often in ill-health during this period, and Alfred Barry (former Primate of Australia) frequently deputised for him; when Earle resigned his responsibilities for West London in June 1900, Barry took these up (but not the See).
In his younger days Kett was grave, but he afterwards became a beau, learnt dancing, and sought a reputation for gallantry. He rejected many college livings, and twice missed the college headship. Through Joseph Chapman, President of his college, he held the incumbency of Elsfield, near Oxford, from 22 May 1785 to 28 June 1804; from July 1812 to 1820 he was vicar of Sutton Benger, Wiltshire, and in 1814 he was nominated by Bishop George Tomline as perpetual curate of Hykeham in Lincolnshire. He was also king's preacher at Whitehall; but these appointments did not compel him to leave Oxford, and he resided in college until his marriage at Charlton Kings, Gloucestershire, in December 1823, to Miss White.
He was not required to prove his worth as a curate but went straight into remunerative and responsible positions. Almost as soon as he was ordained to the priesthood, Hobart became rector of Chipping Warden in Northamptonshire. In 1801, he became rector also of the nearby parish of Edgcote. Both of these rectories he held until 1815, being appointed prebendary of Canterbury Cathedral in 1804, a post he held until 1816. In 1815, he was appointed to three lucrative livings in one year: Vicar of Nocton, a parish in the gift of his family; Rector of St Dionis Backchurch in the City of London, a post he held until 1828; and Rector of Great Haseley, Oxfordshire.
On his return to England, he was offered the livings of Teston and Nettlestead, Kent in 1781. Other significant campaigners who became part of the Teston circle were Hannah More, philanthropist and writer; anti-slavery campaigner Beilby Porteus, Bishop of Chester, who also held the living of the nearby village of Hunton, Kent and had been influenced by Ramsay's writings; as well as Middleton and his wife, Lady Middleton. Their activism was instrumental in "channel[ing] the reform currents that shaped the cultural landscape in Britain",Brown, p. 346. and, through the influence they exerted on such men as Thomas Clarkson, they were indirectly responsible for the founding of the Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade in May 1787.
Though this formulary only applied to the province of Holland, and the clergy (mindful of their livings) complied with discreetly gnashing teeth, the other provinces erupted in a furore. The States of Friesland took this opportunity to challenge the doctrine of provincial sovereignty head-on, and claimed that the formulary went contrary to the Acts of the Dort Synod, that had settled the church in 1619. Zeeland almost supported Friesland, but De Witt managed to get the Zeeland States (who always had to mind their volatile Calvinist base) to prevaricate.Israel (1995), pp. 761–763 This incident illustrates that in the Republic the relationship between Church and State always remained problematic, even though it had seemed to be settled in favor of the church in 1619.
On 14 March 1573 he became rector of Festiniog, with its chapelry of Maentwrog. He became Rector of Ludlow in March 1576 and on 5 November 1576 archdeacon of Merioneth. On 16 April 1580 there was added to the livings he already held the rectory of with its chapelry of Llanddwywe, and on 8 October 1602 he was made a canon cursal (a subsidiary canon) of St Asaph Cathedral. He was twice married: first, to Elin, daughter of John ap Lewis of Pengwern, Ffestiniog, by whom he had two sons, John and Robert, and a daughter Jane; secondly, to Gwen, daughter of Morgan ap Lewis of Fronheulog (his first wife's cousin), by whom he had three sons, Ffoulk (Ffowc), Morgan and Edmund.
By 1408 as the rebellion was experiencing setbacks he made his own future plans. Outside events were leading towards the Council of Constance which soon brought the schism of two competing Popes to an end with the election of Pope Martin V. The Pennal Policy was to become redundant. Young instead was appointed as Bishop of Ross in the Kingdom of Scotland, by Pope Martin V, but he was never really in firm control of his diocese and was transferred to become titular Bishop of Hippo in North Africa along with two livings in Rheims and Tours in France. He was appointed abbot of the abbey of Le Thoronet, in the south of France, by Pope Martin V in 1430.
The army used the area for military exercises and the few farmers who inhabited the Flats eked out a living by growing vegetables in pockets of relatively poor soil between the barren dunes. Modern amenities were unknown; telephones were unknown, drinking water was collected in tanks from roofs and at night the rooms were lit by oil lamps. West Side and Thug Life murals in the Coloured township of Manenberg, in Hard Livings gang territory Street scene in Bonteheuwel township Cape Flats train station Cape Flats scrap collectors Shantytown in Cape Flats The era of sand and antelopes vanished completely in little more than a generation. Vegetable farming persisted, but to a much lesser extent, because urbanisation enveloped vast tracts of land in short order.
Archbishop Sharp; his killing in May 1679 was symptomatic of the deep divisions within the Scottish kirk Conflicts between Protestors and Resolutioners during the Protectorate, then Episcopalians and Cameronians after 1660 had left deep divisions while also normalising the eviction of defeated opponents. The kirk's General Assembly meeting in November 1690 was the first since 1654 and even before it convened, over 200 conformist and Episcopalian ministers had been removed from their livings. This meant the Assembly was overwhelmingly composed of radical Presbyterians who rejected any measure of Episcopalianism or the reinstatement of those already evicted. Despite being a fellow Calvinist, William was more tolerant towards Episcopalians, seeing them as potential allies while recognising the dangers of alienating an important political constituency.
121-140, As Chairman of an Expert Group of the European Research Area on international collaboration in science and technology, he has pointed out that the demographic decline in Europe, combined with the lack of vocation of youngesters for hard sciences, will generate a dramatic shortage of qualified workers in less than a generation.Daniele Archibugi (Chair) Opening to the World. Opening to the World: International Cooperation in Science and Technology, European Research Area, 2008, This will jeopardize the standard of livings of Europeans in key areas such as medical research, information technologies and knowledge intensive industries. Archibugi has urged for substantial revisions to European immigration policy in order to accommodate at least two million qualified students in science, engineering from developing countries in a decade.
Washington, D.C. cast member Emily Schromm was voted as the winner of Women's Healths America's Next Fitness Star in August 2014, and will be featured in a series of fitness DVDs. Portland cast member Jordan Wiseley appeared on the OWN Network original series, Tyler Perry's If Loving You Is Wrong. Dozens of former cast members from The Real World and its sister production Road Rules have appeared on the spin-off series The Challenge, which pays $100,000 or more to its winners. Various cast members have also earned livings as public speakers, since Bunim-Murray Productions funded their training in motivational speaking by the Points of Light Foundation in 2002, allowing them to earn between $1,500 and $2,000 for an appearance on the college lecture circuit.
The Parish of Alnham is situated in the northwest of Northumberland, and the small village lies within of the Scottish border. The Oliverian Survey of Church Livings, 1650, says:— "That the Parish of Alneham was formerly a Viccaridge, the Earle of Northumberland Patron thereof, Mr. Thompson Viccar, and the value of the said Viccaridge worth twenty pounds p'annu," while the Rentals and Rates of 1663 show that the neighbouring landowners then held the rectorial tithes. Amongst the papers belonging to the parish now in the possession of the Vicar is:—"A Terrier of the Gleeb Land belonging to the Vicaridg of Alneham in the County of Northumberland and Diocese of Durham. Imp".—There is a vicarage house which is an old ruined tower.
Grey was the son of an Anglican priest and graduated from Trinity Hall, Cambridge, getting his LL.B. in 1709 and LL.D. in 1720. He was ordained a priest by the Bishop of London in 1711, and he left Cambridge to take up two livings: Houghton Conquest in Bedfordshire in 1725, and the parish of St Giles' and St Peter's in Cambridge. He served in Cambridge during the winter months and lived most of the year in the town of Ampthill, which put him near Houghton Conquest. Grey had a first marriage that ended quickly, and then he married Susanna Hatton, daughter of a Cambridge tavern keeper, in 1720, and the couple had two daughters to survive, and both of these married clergy.
Adam Wickmer (died 1384) was an English priest and academic in the 14th century.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1752 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius, (1927) p400 Wickmer (some sources Walker)The Masters of Trinity Hall, Cambridge became Master of Trinity Hall, Cambridge in 1355."Trinity hall; or, The college of scholarsof the Holy Trinity of Norwich, in the University of Cambridge" Malden, H.E. p46: London; F.E. Robinson; 1902 He held livings at South Malling The source says South Malling, but there is no modern place with that name.
Samuel Smith, Dean of Christ Church Samuel Smith (20 September 1765, Westminster – 19 January 1841, Oxford) was an English clergyman and academic administrator at the University of Oxford. The eldest son of Samuel Smith (Headmaster of Westminster School 1764–1788) and his first wife Anna Jackson, Smith was born on 20 September 1765 and baptised in Westminster Abbey on 15 October. Smith was educated at Christ Church, Oxford, matriculating on 30 May 1782, aged 16, and graduating B.A. 1786, M.A. 1789, B.D. 1797, D.D. 1808. Smith was ordained a priest in the Church of England in 1790. He held livings at Daventry (1795) and Dry Drayton (1808), prebendaries at Southwell Minster (1800) and York Minster (1801), and became Chaplain to the House of Commons (1802).
A dispensation for the holding of these two livings at the same time was needed, and it was obtained with difficulty from Thomas Secker, the Archbishop of Canterbury. Peckard was considered heterodox upon the question concerning an intermediate or separate state of conscious existence between death and the resurrection, and his examination was several times adjourned. He obtained his dispensation at last, but only after he had signed four articles to some extent modifying his views, and it was given at a date when the second benefice was within a day or two of lapsing.His own narrative of these proceedings and the Latin essays which he wrote for the archbishop are in Francis Blackburne's Works (vol. i. pp. xciv–cvii).
He himself was a man of substantial means, appearing in the 1690s as a significant creditor of Macleod of Dunvegan. 'The Great Song of Scorrybreac', a Gaelic ballad composed in celebration of the marriage of Donald's son Malcolm to a daughter of MacLeod of Raasay records the affluence and splendour of the Nicolson household, and the success of the young men of the clan in 'wooing maidens' and 'winning wagers'. In 1689, the settlement following the Glorious Revolution remodelled the Scottish Church in a Presbyterian form and required ministers to swear an oath of loyalty to the new king, William III. Those Episcopalian 'Non-Jurors' who refused were branded as Jacobites and ejected from their livings, and Skye tradition records Rev.
DNB p.384 With Mary's accession in 1553, and the re-establishment of Roman Catholicism in Ireland, Dowall was reappointed to the see of Armagh, this time with the Pope's approval, and he held the position until his death, some three months before Mary's. He was energetic in attempting to undo the effects of the Reformation, holding two provincial synods at Drogheda to restore the constitution of the pre-Reformation Church. He was particularly zealous in depriving married clergy of their livings, and as a result was accused of taking the opportunity to persecute his personal enemies, such as George Browne, Archbishop of Dublin.DNB p.384 He was made a member of the Privy Council of Ireland. He died in London while on official business there.DNB p.
The incident inspired Rogovin to turn to photography as a means of expression; it was a way to continue to speak to the worth and dignity of people who make their livings under modest or difficult circumstances, often in physically taxing occupations that usually receive little attention. In 1957, a collaboration with William Tallmadge, a professor of music, to document music at storefront churches set Rogovin on his photographic path.Michael Collins, "Milton Rogovin obituary", The Guardian, 1 February 2011. Accessed 18 February 2012. Some of the photographs that Rogovin made in the churches were published in 1962 in Aperture magazine, edited by Minor White, with an introduction by W.E.B. Du Bois, a founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
Despite criticism from many orthodox Calvinists, Foster was becoming a celebrated preacher and academic, winning increasing recognition from many moderates within Protestant and Roman Catholic dissent, as well as from within the radical Deist wing of the Church of England. He was awarded the degree of Doctor of Divinity (DD) from the Marischal College in Aberdeen in December 1748 and was on several occasions offered livings in the conformist Church of Ireland by Bishop Thomas Rundle. Alexander Pope wrote in one of his Satires: :Let modest Foster, if he will, excel :Ten Metropolitans in preaching well. He also attracted freethinkers and London wits to his Old Jewry meetings and was respected - though disliked - by the orthodox Congregationalist Philip Doddridge of Northampton.
A few weeks after their arrival, on 23 October 1794, Prior Martin Firmenich was ordered to vacate the charterhouse within 24 hours, as it was required for use as a military hospital. Despite desperate efforts to save the most valuable pieces of the church treasures, looting, theft and vandalism enured that the irreplaceable collections of archives, books and artworks were irretrievably dispersed. Until 1802, when all religious houses were finally dissolved in the secularisation, the Carthusian monks lived in temporary accommodation in what is now Martinstraße 19–21, made available to them by the Bürgermeister of Cologne, Johann Jakob von Wittgenstein. Thereafter they had either to look for livings as parish priests or to support themselves in whatever way they could.
John Jaumard was Anglican priest in Ireland in the mid 18th century."The Gentleman's Magazine, Volume 95" p202: London; Sylvanus Urban; July-December 1825 Of French descent,"Protestant Exiles from France" Cranegie, D.C.A. Volume 2 - Book Third - Chapter 27- page 506 ;Edinburgh,Turnbull & Spears; 1886 Jaumard was born in Arundel and educated at Clare College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1751 Vol. ii Dabbs – Juxton, (1922) p463 He was ordained deacon on 20 December 1719, and priest on 13 March 1720... He held livings at Frome St Quintin, Ardmore and Ringagonagh.
The Abbey of St Valeri in Picardy held the livings (benefices) and revenues of several English parish church lands and, responding to growing disquiet over these foreign holdings, in 1391 it transferred those of Isleworth (for a fee) to William of Wykeham, who endowed them to Winchester College, which he founded. The Wardens and Scholars of Winchester College therefore became proprietors of productive rectory (which had glebelands). This lasted for 150 years, then in 1543 King Henry VIII exchanged with Winchester certain manors elsewhere for five churches in Middlesex, including All Saints. Four years later he gave the Isleworth rectory and advowson to the Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, but they returned to the crown when the Duke was executed in 1552.
Queen Anne, when instituting "Queen Anne's Bounty" to augment poor Anglican livings, also added another £800 pa to assist Presbyterian clergy in the rest of Ireland (an offer of similar assistance to English Dissenting Ministers was declined). The Irish Church Act 1869, whose main purpose was to disestablish the Anglican Church of Ireland, also discontinued the Irish Regium Donum (and the grant to the Roman Catholic St Patrick's College, Maynooth) from 1871; existing ministers continued to receive equivalent payment from the Church Temporalities Commission.Irish Church Act 1869 ss. 38–41 The English Regium Donum was instituted in 1723, originally £500 pa to allow the payment of pensions of widows of Dissenting Ministers, but later increased to £1,000 pa to also cover augmentation of income of living ministers.
While it is true that players, then as now, preferred old instruments, Stradivari made one of the handsomest livings of all violin makers during his lifetime. It is also customary to conflate Stradivari and Guarneri in this regard, but even the Hills hinted that such was not the case in their styles, the Guarneri always bearing traces of Amati, and even Stainer, the latter Stradivari "would have none of."Hill, p. 33 Moreover, Guarneri's instruments were recognized by a world-class soloist three decades before Stradivari's were likewise championed; by the 1750s, Gaetano Pugnani is known to have acquired and preferred a Giuseppe Guarneri del Gesù violin, but it is not until the 1780s that his pupil, Giovanni Battista Viotti, became an advocate of Stradivari instruments.
In 1854, Browne was appointed to the Norrisian chair of divinity at the University of Cambridge but held his livings in the Diocese of Exeter concurrently. (The Cornish benefice was the vicarage of Kenwyn and Kea.) On 29 March 1864 he was consecrated Bishop of Ely by Charles Longley, Archbishop of Canterbury (assisted by Connop Thirlwall, Bishop of St David's and Henry Philpott, Bishop of Worcester) at Westminster Abbey; he was enthroned at Ely Cathedral on 26 April. During his time at Ely he returned to his hometown for the re-opening of a newly refurbished church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aylesbury in 1869. In December 1873, he was translated to the see of Winchester; he was enthroned at Winchester Cathedral on 11 December.
The consequence of refusal was either imprisonment or banishment, or a heavy pecuniary fine. Conviction of the offence libelled was invariably followed with the utmost severity of punishment, even when the accused was induced to confess by the promise of being dismissed with impunity. upper part of the Covenanters' Memorial Some of the parishioners of Ancrum, after the banishment of their minister, because he declined taking the oath of supremacy, except with an explanation, remonstrated against the admission of a curate of infamous character, who at the same time enjoyed two other livings. They were brought before the High Commission, and confessed that they had expressed their dissatisfaction at the intrusion of a man whom they thought unworthy of the charge.
Son Hayes (Michael Shannon) wakes up and gets dressed, revealing that he has scars from a shotgun blast on his back. He meets his younger brothers, Boy (Douglas Ligon) and Kid (Barlow Jacobs), who live in a van and a tent respectively, saying that his wife Annie has left him over his gambling habit and inviting them to live in his house. Son and Kid earn meager livings at a fish farm, where workers take bets on how Son received his scars; Boy is an unsuccessful basketball coach at the local middle school. One night, while Son is researching his gambling system, the boys' estranged mother arrives to announce that their estranged father (from whom she has long been divorced) has just died.
It was followed by The True Gospel of Jesus vindicated, and An Enquiry into the Ground and Foundation of Religion, wherein it is shown that Religion is founded on Nature. He persisted in stating that true Christianity consisted of a belief that morality alone could make men acceptable to God, that repentance for sin would secure God's mercy, and that there would be future retribution. His Enquiry into the Ground and Foundation of Religion (1740) includes a controversy with Henry Stebbing. Chubb argues against interpreting literally the command to give all to the poor, noting that Stebbing himself was a pluralist with two livings, a preachership and an archdeaconry, and due to be chancellor of the Diocese of Salisbury, so that he could hardly interpret the command literally to himself.
It also had significant influence on the abbeys of Alpirsbach (1099), Ettenheimmünster (1124) and Sulzburg (ca 1125), and the priories of Weitenau (ca 1100), Bürgeln (before 1130) and Sitzenkirch (ca 1130). A list of prayer partnerships, drawn up about 1150, shows how extensive the connections were between St Blaise and other religious communities. During the course of the 12th century however the zeal of the monks cooled, as their attention became increasingly focussed on the acquisition, management and exploitation of their substantial estates, which by the 15th century extended across the whole of the Black Forest and included not only the abbey's priories named above, but also the nunnery at Gutnau and the livings of Niederrotweil, Schluchsee, Wettelbrunn, Achdorf, Hochemmingen, Todtnau, Efringen, Schönau, Wangen, Plochingen, Nassenbeuren and many others.Dom St. Blaise.
Robert Inerarity Herdman It was not, however, till after the Reformation that 'conventicle' became a term with a legal connotation, according to which it was descriptive of the meeting-place or assemblage for worship or consultation of those who departed from the Established Church of England. Queen Elizabeth, in her contest with Puritanism, strenuously asserted the royal supremacy in matters religious and ecclesiastical, and insisted upon the rigorous application of the Act of Uniformity, which demanded that all subjects of the realm must conform to the usages and tenets of the Church established by law. Clerical nonconformity was punished by deposition. As the result of the inquisition that followed, so many ministers were deprived of their livings that their places either could not be filled at all or were filled by incompetent and unpopular substitutes.
At some point, two side chapels were added to the chancel, adjoining the transepts, but its in unclear whether these dated from the 12th or 13th centuries. A significant amount of building work took place between 1255 and 1260, aided by gifts of timber from the King's forest by Henry III, who visited the priory on at least five occasions between 1251 and 1261. The Benedictine priory was conventual, as it did not have an abbot, and the community was autonomous. However, because it was an offshoot of the Abbey of St Vigor and was therefore classed as an alien priory, it was viewed with suspicion by the civil authorities, but less so by the Bishops of Winchester, who accepted the monks as patrons of the livings from the churches at Church Oakley and Bramley.
On the verge of graduation, college senior Wang Yuhang (Leo Ku) has to face the harsh reality of an extremely competitive job market. Struggling to rise above the crowd to win their places in the workforce, Yuhang and his roommate Liao Bohan (Deep Ng) throw themselves at every opportunity that may get their careers going. Pu Xiaotang (Jiang Mengjie) a headstrong tomboy who earns her own livings and is a pro at video games, Ning Hao (Yang Yang), Dong Qianqian (Ma Su), the group of young friends will have to grit their teeth and brave any challenges ahead in order to pursue their dreams. Shen Tai Yi (Heechul) is a gamer/chess player who everyone thinks is a poor Korean farmer boy when he's actually the son of a wealthy landlord.
He was instituted by Bishop Thomas Sprat, but his installation was put off when it was discovered that he had taken no higher degree than M.A., and the statutes required that he should be at least B.D. Although he took the degree of D.D, 18 January 1689, he was not installed, and William III shortly afterwards appointed Henry Ullock in his place. Lowth declined the oath of allegiance to William, and was in consequence suspended from his functions in August 1689, and in the following February deprived of both his livings; he made a fraudulent agreement with his successor in the vicarage. He probably lived the rest of his life in London, and died there 3 July 1720, aged nearly 90, He was buried in the new cemetery, St. George's parish, Queen's Square.
He was born in Derry on 13 April 1824, the third child of the Revd Robert Alexander. He was educated at Tonbridge School and Brasenose College, Oxford. During his time in Oxford he came under the influence of the Oxford Movement. Due to illness his academic record failed to live up to his promise, but he nonetheless displayed a solid scholarship which was to stand him in good stead in later life. Bishop Alexander as caricatured by Spy (Leslie Ward) in Vanity Fair, November 1895 After holding several livings in Ireland, including the Rectories of Fahan and later Camus-juxta- Mourne (Strabane), he was Dean of Emly from 1864 to 1867, resigning it on becoming bishop of Derry and Raphoe, to which see he was nominated on 27 July and consecrated on 6 October 1867.
For over a century there had been a dispute within Scotland's presbyterian national church about whether the church minister should be appointed by its heritor – its patron or proprietor – or whether the congregation should decide. For churches with full parish status the heritor – the local landowner (laird) or sometimes the town council – had this privilege by right of patronage, generally without consulting the congregation. For churches that only held religious status the congregations had always been able to make their own appointments. In May 1843, about one third of the ministers across Scotland "came out", that is to say they stopped attending their previous churches so forfeiting their livings and they conducted services as and where they could with individual members of their congregations deciding how they would respond.
He took the degree of LL.D. at the University of Oxford. On the vacancy of the archdiocese of Canterbury in 1500, he became commissary of the chapter and of the prerogative court. That same year he obtained the livings of East Peckham in Kent, and of Beaconsfield in Buckinghamshire; in 1501 that of Gedney in Lincolnshire; in 1502 that of Bosworth in Leicestershire; and in 1503 that of Tharfield in the archdeaconry of Huntingdon. In 1501, at the marriage of Arthur, Prince of Wales, and Catherine of Aragon, when the banns were asked in St. Paul's Cathedral, it was arranged that the king's secretary should 'object openly in Latin against the said marriage,' alleging reasons why it could not be lawful, and that he should be answered by Barons, who was to produce the dispensation.
Stroker and Hoop are a pair of private investigators from Los Angeles, who act and dress as if it is still the 1970s. In spite of each man's high opinion of himself, they're both completely inept losers: Stroker fancies himself a suave ladies man, but is generally unpopular and perceived by virtually every woman he meets as a repulsive chauvinist; and Hoop considers himself a crime-solving ace and master of disguise, when in fact he's a gullible nerd and all of his disguises are failures. Their only "advantage" over their competition is C.A.R.R., a talking AMC Pacer with its own neurotic personality. Because of their abysmal track record and less-than-stellar capabilities, the two men eke out livings solving crimes for people who can't afford to hire more competent detectives.
Despite the loss of the Thame benefice, Maunsell probably obtained more benefices than any other contemporary clergyman as he amassed his plurality. Maunsell's benefices included the livings of Haughley, Howden and Bawburgh and prebends of Tottenhall, South Malling and Chichester. He was also Provost of Beverley (1247), Chancellor of St. Paul's, London, Dean of Wimborn, Rector of Wigan, Papal chaplain, and King's chaplain. He fought with a contingent of English under Henry de Turbeville in the aid of Frederick II, King of Germany in the north of Italy in 1238. Frederick II was married to Henry's sister Isabella in 1235. He fought alongside Henry III in the Battle of Taillebourg during the Saintonge War (20–24 July 1242) and took Peter Orige, seneschal of the Count of Boulogne, prisoner.
Although William wanted to retain bishops, the role played by Covenanters during the Jacobite rising of 1689, including the Cameronians' defence of Dunkeld in August, meant their views prevailed in the political settlement that followed. The General Assembly met in November 1690 for the first time since 1654; even before it convened, over 200 Episcopalian ministers had been removed from their livings. The Assembly once again eliminated episcopacy and created two commissions for the south and north of the Tay, which over the next 25 years removed almost two-thirds of all ministers. To offset this, nearly one hundred clergy returned to the kirk in the 1693 and 1695 Acts of Indulgence, while others were protected by the local gentry and retained their positions until death by natural causes.
On 22 December 1808 he was ordained as a Church of England priest by Henry Bathurst, the bishop of Norwich, and was licensed to the curacy of Kelsale in Suffolk, though he was not a natural cleric. Within months he obtained through Lord Redesdale's interest the vicarage of Benhall, near Saxmundham, to which he was instituted on 17 February 1810, and in August 1815 he became domestic chaplain to Redesdale. In the same month he was appointed to the rectory of Weston St. Mary, and a few years later he was nominated to the rectory of Stratford St. Andrew, both in Suffolk, and then in crown patronage. All these livings were united, during his incumbency, in 1824, when he was reinstituted, and he retained them until his death.
Francis Lister Hawks (June 10, 1798 – September 26, 1866) was an American writer, historian, educator and priest of the Episcopal Church. After practicing law with some distinction (and a brief stint as politician in North Carolina), Hawks became an Episcopal priest in 1827 and proved a brilliant and impressive preacher, holding livings (a church benefice including revenues) in New Haven, Philadelphia, New York City and New Orleans, and declining several bishoprics. However, scandals during the 1830s and 40s led him to posts on the American frontier and rejection of his selection as bishop of Mississippi, although Hawks then became the first president of the University of Louisiana (now known as Tulane University), then moved to Baltimore, Maryland, and eventually returned to New York City. Hawks's major contributions now seem literary.
The station was seized by the government outright after war was declared in 1917. President Woodrow Wilson sent a contingent of Marines to seize the wireless station, making it the first hostile action taken by the United States against Germany during World War I. The elaborate home of the late "Father Divine" on Macon Avenue in Sayville From 1919 to 1932 Sayville was home to Father Divine, a controversial African American religious leader who claimed to be God. His religious movement, which came to be called the International Peace Mission movement, managed a commune-like house on 72 Macon Avenue, which was the first black-owned residence in Sayville. At that time Sayville was predominantly a seasonal resort, and Father Divine's followers made good livings as native house sitters.
The Very Rev Nicholas Penny (18 September 1674 - 18 January 1745) was Dean of Lichfield from 1730"The Present State of Great Britain and Ireland" Miege, G p66: London, J.Brotherton, 1738University of Reading until his death."Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541-1857- Volume 10, Coventry and Lichfield Diocese" Deans of Lichfield, Pages 5-8: Institute of Historical Research, London, 2003 Penny was born in St Dunstan-in-the-West, City of London and educated at Queens' College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1752 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, 1924) p322 He held livings at Hardwick, Cambridgeshire, Hickling, Nottinghamshire and Beddington, Surrey.
The Very Rev William Walmsley, DD (5 April 1687, in Lichfield – 18 September 1730, in Packington) was Dean of Lichfield from 1720"A Political Biography of Samuel Johnson" Hudson, N: Abingdon, Routledge, 2016 until his death."Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541-1857- Volume 10, Coventry and Lichfield Diocese" Deans of Lichfield, Pages 5-8: Institute of Historical Research, London, 2003 Walmesley was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209-1752 Vol. iv. Saal – Zuinglius, (1927) p322 He was Chaplain to Edward Villiers, 1st Earl of Jersey; and also held livings at Mavesyn Ridware and Packington.
Until the 1930s, with the decline of silk industry in the Pearl River Delta, young women heard that they could get the higher income if they worked in South Asia, so they called their friends to go there for earning a living. In order to earn more money, many women who have worked in South Asia for many years have never talked about the marriage. Ever since The revolution of 1911 and the establishment of the Republic of China, the feudal system and customs broke down, and the custom of comb sister had declined. In the early years of the Republic of China, the whole China's silk industry collapsed, which resulted in that the comb female cannot earn their livings, therefore, some of them chose to go to Hong Kong as house maids.
Robinson was born at St Anne's in Dublin, the son of the English portrait painter Thomas Robinson (d.1810) and his wife, Ruth Buck (d.1826). He was educated at Belfast Academy then studied Divinity at Trinity College Dublin, where he was elected a Scholar in 1808, graduating BA in 1810 and obtaining a fellowship in 1814, at the age of 22. He was for some years a deputy professor of natural philosophy (physics) at Trinity. Having been also ordained as an Anglican priest while at Trinity, he obtained the church livings of the Anglican Church at Enniskillen and at Carrickmacross in 1824. Armagh Observatory, 1883 Robinson in the 1850s by James Simonton In 1823, now aged 30, he additionally gained the appointment of astronomer at the Armagh observatory.
In February 1704, they were granted by Queen Anne to the assistance of the poorer clergy, a scheme since known as "Queen Anne's Bounty". The 1535 valuations were still in use in 1704, and their continued use was inherent in the Act setting up Queen Anne's Bounty; consequently the 'first fruits' payments did not increase to reflect the true value of livings; by 1837, the Ecclesiastical Commissioners reported first fruits to bring in £4,000-5,000 a year whereas church income was around £3m a year and the true value of first fruits would therefore have been over £150,000 a year. In Scotland, the annat or ann is half a year's stipend allowed to the executors of a minister of the Church of Scotland above what was due to him at the time of his death.
John Yonge was born at Upper Heyford, Oxfordshire, and educated at Winchester and New College, Oxford, where he became a fellow in 1485. Probably the son of John Yonge, Lord Mayor of London (elected 1466), he was ordained in 1500 and held several livings (and the office of Archdeacon of Barnstaple) before receiving his first diplomatic mission to arrange a commercial treaty with the archduke of Austria in 1504, and in the Low Countries in 1506 in connection with the projected marriage between Henry VII and Margaret of Savoy. In 1507 he was made Master of the Rolls, and in the following year was employed in various diplomatic missions. He was one of the ambassadors who arranged the Holy League in 1513, and accompanied Henry VIII during the ensuing campaign.
The presbyterian inhabitants of Woodchurch petitioned against him in 1640 for having acted as a justice of the peace, and he was ejected from both his livings. He then returned to Oxford, where he was created D.D. on 1 July 1646, shortly before the surrender of the garrison to the parliamentary forces; he later lived at Chartham in Kent. Anthony Wood wrote: "This Dr. Boughen, as I have been informed, lived to see his majesty restored, and what before he had lost, he did obtain" ; and Baker also states that "Boughen died soon after the Restoration, aged 74, plus minus". It is not improbable that he is identical with the Edward Boughen, prebendary of Marden in the church of Chichester, whose death occurred between 29 May and 11 August 1660.
Elizabeth Finn Care: Our History at Elizabeth Finn Care Both McCaul and his daughter worked closely with Lord Shaftesbury.See for example a letter to The Times, 27 April 1939; p. 12; Issue 48290 from Constance Finn referring to correspondence from Lord Shaftesbury to McCaul in 1841 regarding Lord Palmerston's instructions to the Consulate at Jerusalem to give protection to any Jews there who might require it. In 1890 it was reported that the Bishop of London was to hold an inquiry as to the desirability of uniting the benefices of St George Botolph Lane and St Magnus. The expectation was a fusion of the two livings, the demolition of St George’s and the pensioning of "William Gladstone’s favourite Canon", Malcolm MacColl. Although services ceased there, St George’s was not demolished until 1904.
In the late 18th century the nave was abandoned and the chancel was restored in neoclassical style, with four Doric columns forming a square. The roofline of this modification was clearly visible from the south east or north east.Cf. The photograph of watercolour illustration by Edward Williams at Shropshire Archives: St Mary Magdalene Church, Battlefield: North and east Elevation and Tower Philip Morgan gives credit for renewing interest in Battlefield Church and its history to two 18th century clerics: Leonard Hotchkiss and Edward Williams, who held the livings of both Battlefield and nearby Uffington and completed several watercolours. An illustrated contribution to the Gentleman's Magazine from David Parkes in 1792 also spread both information and misinformation, ascribing the foundation of the church to Henry IV and misrepresenting the pietà as a Madonna and child.Gentleman's Magazine, volume 62, part 2, p. 893.
Woods was born in Rock Hill, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis. She explored many different career options as an adolescent but ultimately decided to study education and subsequently enrolled at Howard University in pursuit of that goal. However, Woods discovered during her time teaching in Missouri and in Jamaica that education was not her true passion and returned home to Rock Hill to weigh other professional options. While back home in Missouri, Nikki began to pay more attention to how people earned their livings and which of those career fields overlapped with her strengths. This period of introspection coincided with Nikki’s increased exposure to Magic 108 in St. Louis and sparked her interest in the world of broadcast journalism; Woods was fascinated by the opportunity Disc Jockeys had to regularly speak to so many people on such an intimate level.
When Hereford garrison was taken by the parliamentary army in 1646, he retreated to Sudeley Castle to shelter with the Chandos family, to which he acted as chaplain in the opening years of the civil war. Later he found refuge at Hawling, Gloucestershire, in the Cotswold district, where he taught at a private school with success and had several pupils of rank. There he composed his Nympha Libethris, or the Cotswold Muse, presenting some extempore Verses to the Imitation of yong Scholars (1651). At the Restoration he was presented to the livings of Naunton near Hawling, and of Stow-on-the-Wold in Gloucestershire, which he retained until his death in January 1687 in his 79th year, when (says Anthony à Wood) he left behind him "the character of a frequent and edifying preacher and a good neighbour".
Granville then vacated his stall, but held at the same time the deanery and archdeaconry of Durham, and the rectory of Sedgefield, described in his own words as "the best deanery, the best archdeaconry, and one of the best livings in England." He managed, however, to get into debt, and while Archdeacon of Durham and one of the king's chaplains in ordinary, he was arrested within the cloisters of the cathedral and imprisoned, though claiming his privileges. The matter was brought before the king in council, when he was freed, and the offending officials were punished. His wife suffered from "occasional attacks of mental excitement"; Granville was estranged from her father and her sister, Lady Gerrard. During 1678 and 1679 he retired with his sister, Lady Joanna Thornhill and her family to Tour D'Aigues in Provence.
In addition, St Mary the Virgin is the parish church of East Barnet and St John of Friern Barnet. The parish church of St Mary the Virgin, Monken Hadley (rebuilt 1494) also has parish boundaries that include a significant part of High Barnet, including much of Barnet High Street. St John the Baptist Church Tomb of Thomas Ravenscroft in Chipping Barnet Church The living of Barnet is a curacy, held with the rectory of East Barnet till the death of the last incumbent in 1866, when the livings were separated. The parish of Chipping Barnet, served by St John's Church, was provided with a chapel-of-ease in Victorian times; subsequently Chipping Barnet parish was split in two, and the chapel-of-ease (on Bells Hill, Barnet) raised to the status of a parish church, dedicated to St Stephen.
The placard did not prohibit all discussion about the controversy, but limited it to the universities and learned treatises written in Latin; Cf. Den Tex, p. The preachers were dismissed from their livings (paid for by the local authorities), but then simply moved to neighboring congregations where they attracted large audiences of church-goers with the same doctrinal convictions. Instead of averting the feared schism the placard therefore seemed to promote it, also because opposing preachers refused to recognize each other's qualification to administer the Lord's Supper. Soon the followers of either side demanded their own churches, whereas the authorities wanted them to use the same ones. This eventually led to Counter-Remonstrants using mob violence to occupy their own churches, like the Cloister Church in the capital of Holland and the Republic, The Hague in the Summer of 1617.
One consequence of the Napoleonic Wars was a series of Acts of Parliament giving bishops powers to compel absent incumbents to reside in their parishes; but it was acknowledged that this would create hardship amongst displaced assistant curates deprived of access to the more attractive cures. In this context, the status of perpetual curate began to appear less as a historical anomaly, and more as a potential solution. If chapels-of-ease, endowed with sufficient regular income, could be re-established as perpetual curacies; this would provide livings for displaced assistant curates, while greatly improving the quality of pastoral care provided to these cures. Crucially, there would be no need to change ancient parish boundaries or disrupt rights of tithe or glebe; while the incumbents of the ancient parish churches could continue as joint patrons with the trustees of the new perpetual curacies.
The party's current president, McKenzie, has explained that the inspiration for the formation of the party came from his mediation, with Kunene and others, in extraordinary levels of gang violence during 2013 in the Western Cape, particularly in Manenberg. The imminent release of Rashied Staggie, a former head of the Hard Livings gang, was in part blamed for the increase in tension and violence among gangs on the Cape Flats. This gang war had already claimed so many lives that Western Cape Premier Helen Zille had at one point asked for the army to be sent into Manenberg, though this request was turned down by national government. McKenzie has said he met with Staggie in prison ahead of the latter's release on day parole and he claims he obtained an assurance from Staggie that he would actively work to promote peace.
Thomas Leverous (1487-1587) was a 16th Century Roman Catholic priest."The History and Antiquities of the Collegiate and Cathedral Church of St. Patrick Near Dublin, from it Foundation in 1190, to the Year 1819: Comprising a Topographical Account of the Lands and Parishes Appropriated to the Community of the Cathedral, and to Its Members, and Biographical Memoirs of Its Deans" Mason, W.M. p160:Dublin, W.Folds, 1820 Leverous was a foster brother to Gerald FitzGerald, the 9th Earl of Kildare. He held livings at Laraghbrine, Kerdiffstown and Maynooth. Queen Mary I appointed him Archdeacon of Armagh in 1554 (held to 1456);"Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 3" Cotton,H. p44 Dublin, Hodges & Smith, 1848-1878 Bishop of Kildare on 1 March 1555; and Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin on 30 August 1555.
In February 1518, King Henry VIII granted him the deanery of Wimborne Minster, Dorset; after which he was Prebendary of Salisbury and Dean of Exeter in 1527. He was also a canon in York, and had several other livings, although he had not been ordained a priest. Assisted by Bishop Edward Foxe, he represented Henry VIII in Paris in 1529, researching general opinions among theologians of the Sorbonne about the annulment of Henry's marriage with Catherine of Aragon. In 1521, Pole went to the University of Padua, where he met leading Renaissance figures, including Pietro Bembo, Gianmatteo Giberti (formerly Pope Leo X's datary and chief minister), Jacopo Sadoleto, Gianpietro Carafa (the future Pope Paul IV), Rodolfo Pio, Otto Truchsess, Stanislaus Hosius, Cristoforo Madruzzo, Giovanni Morone, Pier Paolo Vergerio the younger, Peter Martyr Vermigli and Vettor Soranzo.
The Disruption Assembly of 1843, painted by David Octavius Hill The late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries saw a fragmentation of the Church of Scotland that had been created in the Reformation. These fractures were prompted by issues of government and patronage, but reflected a wider division between the Evangelicals and the Moderate Party over fears of fanaticism by the former and the acceptance of Enlightenment ideas by the latter. The legal right of lay patrons to present clergymen of their choice to local ecclesiastical livings led to minor schisms from the church. The first in 1733, known as the First Secession, led to the creation of a series of secessionist churches. The second in 1761 lead to the foundation of the independent Relief Church.J. T. Koch, Celtic Culture: a Historical Encyclopedia, Volumes 1–5 (London: ABC-CLIO, 2006), , pp. 416–17.
Later editions saw a further return of the retired clergy, together with details of those overseas clergy who had originally been licensed or trained in the UK, or who occupied senior positions within their respective church hierarchies. Details which had also become obtainable from the Church of England Yearbook or from similar sources were generally excluded. For a time too clergy who made their livings though secular jobs were excluded from the biographies section, with the abbreviation NQ (Non-Qualifying Position) being used to cover such periods when clerics returned to parish work and were again eligible for inclusion. In that many such clergy retained diocesan licences or episcopal "Permissions to Officiate" during their periods of secular employment, this approach may have caused a degree of difficulty for clerics who needed to prove their clerical status.
Samuel Browne, was born about the year 1598 and was the eldest son of a vicar, Nicholas Browne of Polebrook in Northamptonshire, and Frances, daughter of Thomas St. John, of Cayshoe, Bedfordshire (who was the grandfather of Oliver St John, the chief justice of the Common Pleas during the Protectorate). Browne was admitted pensioner of Queens' College, Cambridge on 24 February 1614, and was entered at Lincoln's Inn on 28 October 1616, where he was called to the Bar in October 1623, and elected reader in Autumn 1642. Browne, along with a number of other men who would support Parliamentary cause in the Civil War, had connections to the Feoffees for Impropriations, a body set up in 1625 to purchase livings for Puritan preachers, or the Massachusetts Bay Company. Brown was both a feoffee and a lawyer for the company.
The empire of Khokarsa was centered on the shores of prehistoric Africa’s two great landlocked seas, the Kemu to the north in the Chad Basin and the Kemuwopar to the south in the Congo Basin. Around 13,000 B.C., a group of tribes called the Khoklem (the People of Kho) emigrated from the temperate savannas of what would later become the Sahara Desert after the end of the Ice Age, reaching the shores of the Kemu and pushing the Neanderthals and Neanderthal-human hybrids (the Klemqaba, or People of the Goat) to the south, and possibly assimilating some of them. Another group called the Klemsuh (the Yellow People) arrived in the area at approximately the same time. These peoples made livings fishing and hunting and gathering until the appearance of Sahhindar, the Gray-Eyed God, who taught them agriculture and advanced their culture dramatically.
He was ultimately buried in the Anglican parish church at Stanmore, Middlesex. He was a member of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland from 1818 to 1828 and exercised his existing rights to present ministers to parishes on his Scottish estates through a time when the right of churches to veto the appointment or 'call' of a minister became so contentious as to lead in 1843 to the schism known as "the Disruption" when a third of ministers broke away to form the Free Church of Scotland. In the House of Lords, in 1840 and 1843, he raised two Compromise Bills to allow presbyteries but not congregations the right of veto. The first failed to pass (and was voted against by the General Assembly) but the latter, raised post-schism, became law for Scotland and remained in force until patronage of Scots livings was abolished in 1874.
Simon Robson, DD was Dean of Bristol"The Progresses, Processions, and Magnificent Festivities of King James the First, His Royal Consort, Family and Court: Collected from Original Manuscripts, Comprising Forty Masques and Entertainments, Ten Civic Pageants, Numerous Original Letters, and Annotated Lists of the Peers, who Received Those Honours During the Reign of King James from 1598 to 1617" Nichols, J p646: London, Society of Antiquaries, 1828 from 1598 to 1617.British History On-line Robson was born in West Morton and educated at St John's College, Cambridge.Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, John Venn/John Archibald Venn Cambridge University Press > (10 volumes 1922 to 1953) Part I. 1209–1752 Vol. iii. Kaile – Ryves, (1924) p329 He held livings at Stainton, County Durham, Birkin, Blyborough and Weare, Somerset.
Born in London, according to John Strype, he was a scholar of Christ's College, Cambridge, where he proceeded BA in 1529. In 1530 he was elected fellow of Pembroke Hall; was ordained subdeacon 24 February 1532, and priest 21 September 1534; and commenced MA(Cantab) in 1532 and BD in 1540. He supported Sir John Cheke in the controversy on Greek pronunciation. He received over time the livings of Halford, Warwickshire (1547), Maids Moreton, Buckinghamshire (1558), and Bishop's Hampton, Herefordshire (1559), of Plainsford, Gloucestershire, and . He was a court in Edward VI's reign, and on 3 February 1552 he was appointed archdeacon of Hereford, and afterwards one of the keepers of the spiritualities of the see of Hereford during a vacancy. As archdeacon he attended the convocation of Canterbury at the beginning of the reign of Queen Mary (October 1553); according to Heylyn few of the Edwardian clergy were present.
Rev. Charles Bertie (c.1679 – 15 February 1746/7) was an English clergyman and legal scholar. He was for some time the Sedleian Professor of Natural Philosophy, but this appointment was made for financial reasons, as he had no particular skill in natural philosophy. Bertie was later presented to a series of livings in Devon by his brother-in-law. The sixth and youngest son of James Bertie, 1st Earl of Abingdon, Bertie matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford on 29 October 1695 and graduated with a BA on 18 December 1699. He entered the Middle Temple on 1 November 1700, but was not called to the bar. On 6 July 1703, he was awarded his MA, and was appointed to a fellowship of All Souls College in that year. He received a BCL on 17 December 1706 and a DCL on 23 October 1711.
Born in Florence, he was the son of a da Andrea Carnesecchi, a merchant who under the patronage of the Medici, and especially of Giulio de' Medici as Pope Clement VII, rapidly rose to high office at the papal court. He came into touch with the new learning at the house of his maternal uncle, Cardinal Bernardo Dovizi, in Rome. At the age of twenty-five he held several rich livings, had been notary and protonotary to the Curia and was first secretary to the pope, in which capacity he conducted the correspondence with the nuncios (among them Pier Paolo Vergerio in Germany) and a host of other duties. By his conduct at the conference with Francis I of France at Marseille he won the favour of Catherine de' Medici and other influential personages at the French court, who in later days befriended him.
The attempt to impose in Scotland a Prayer Book on the English model, drove the three kingdoms into civil war. However, the Puritan sympathies of the victorious Parliamentary armies in the English Civil War, and the consequential abolition during the Commonwealth of English bishoprics and cathedral chapters with the suppression of the Book of Common Prayer, resulted in English churchmen beginning to recognise Anglican identity as being distinct from and incompatible with the traditions of Presbyterian Protestantism. This distinction was formalised at the Restoration of Charles II, when the proposals of Puritan divines for further reform of the Prayer Book were thoroughly rejected; and 1,760 clergymen were deprived of their livings for failing to subscribe to the 1662 Book. From this date onwards dissenting Protestant congregations were to be found throughout England, and the established church no longer claimed or sought to comprehend all traditions of Protestant belief.
St Mary's Church, Putney, showing the arms of the See of Ely impaling West (shown here as: Argent, a chevron sable between three roses gules slipped and leaved vert), with heraldic badges below, the Tudor Rose of King Henry VIII and the Pomegranate of Queen Katherine of AragonThomas Willement, Regal Heraldry: The Armorial Insignia Of The Kings And Queens of England, from Coeval Authorities, London, 1821, pp.67-8 Nicholas West (146128 April 1533), was an English bishop and diplomatist, born at Putney in Surrey, and educated at Eton and at King's College, Cambridge, of which he became a fellow in 1486. He also had periods of study at Oxford and Bologna.Jesus College, Cambridge: Pen Portraits - Nicholas West Accessed 4 May 2015 He was soon ordained and appointed rector of Egglescliffe, Durham, receiving a little later two other livings and becoming chaplain to King Henry VII.
An emergency pull string located in a New Jersey hospital bathroom. A bathroom emergency pullstring is a cord found in some bathrooms and restrooms that can be pulled in the event of an emergency suffered by the bathroom's user, such as a fall or lock-in. They are often found in the bathrooms of healthcare facilities, such as hospitals, nursing homes, assisted livings, and doctor's offices, in places frequented by senior citizens or disabled people, such as senior centers, places of worship, or in senior housing, and in other places where trouble may arise, such as the lavatories on aircraft or trains and in hotels."There also is an emergency pull string in the bathroom and bedroom of the units should the residents find themselves in trouble." in These pull cords are part of a communication system where, when pulled, a light outside the bathroom flashes, which notifies a nurse or someone who is around to help the person in need.
He was curate (from 1783 to 1803) of St. Bride's, Fleet Street, where the rector was non-resident; vicar of Little Wakering, Essex (1788); chaplain to Earl Powlett (1789); priest in ordinary of his majesty's Chapel Royal (1795); and minor canon of Westminster Abbey. He was vicar of Caddington, Bedfordshire, from 1797, when he resigned his Essex livings; and finally was rector of the united parishes of St. George, Botolph Lane, and St. Botolph, Bishopsgate. Excursions into architecture resulted in a design for the sea-bathing infirmary at Margate, of which Pridden was joint founder with John Coakley Lettsom, and for many years honorary secretary; a new vicarage at Caddington in 1812, and a plan for joining Snow Hill and Holborn Hill, which he submitted to the Corporation of London. Pridden died on 5 April 1825 at his house in Fleet Street, and was buried on 12 April at St Mary's, Islington, beside his first wife.
Thomas Chalmers began as a Moderate, but increasingly became an evangelical, emerging as the leading figure in the movement.J. D. Mackie, B. Lenman and G. Parker, A History of Scotland (London: Penguin, 1991), , pp. 303-4. After prolonged years of struggle, in 1834 the evangelicals gained control of the General Assembly and passed the Veto Act, which allowed congregations to reject unwanted "intrusive" presentations to livings by patrons and the Chapels Act, which put the ministers of Chapels of Ease on an equal footing with ordinary parish ministers. The following "Ten Years' Conflict" of legal and political wrangling ended in defeat for the non-intrusionists in the civil courts, reaching the Court of Session and then finally the House of Lords in 1839, which declared the acts unconstitutional. In 1842 evangelicals presented to the General Assembly a Claim, Declaration and Protest anent the Encroachments of the Court of Session, known as the Claim of Right, that questioned the validity of civil jurisdiction over the church.
Since Hurricane Katrina, Baria has introduced several bills to cap the premiums that insurance companies can charge for homeowners and flood insurance, stating: "There are those who would say the free-market system is designed to work that way and that what we should do is make the entire Gulf of Mexico region a large national park and no one should live there. However, for centuries people have raised their families and made their livings out of the Gulf of Mexico and its surrounding environs. And I don't think you can write off an area by simply saying they have a lot of hurricanes down there so people shouldn't live there." Baria has also repeatedly introduced legislation to create a "Policy Holder's Bill of Rights," which would prohibit "anti- concurrent causation clauses," which allow insurance companies to avoid paying for any damage to homes where wind acts concurrently with flooding to cause damage to the insured property.
Moreover, on 1 July he wrote to Cromwell, sending him two books which he had prepared, one for his clergy to read and "extend" to their congregations, the other a brief declaration to the people of the royal supremacy, adding that the livings in his diocese were so poor that no learned man would take them, that he did not know in it more than twelve secular priests who could preach. New cause of suspicion arose against him, and a few months later, he was examined by the king's visitor, Richard Layton, concerning words he was alleged to have used to the general confessor of Syon Abbey, and concerning the supremacy. He wrote his defence to the king on 14 January 1536. On 23 April, he interceded with Cromwell for two religious houses in his province: Hexham Abbey, useful as a place of refuge during Scottish invasions, and Nostell Priory, which he claimed as a free chapel belonging to his see.
No definitive documentation exists in either location to provide clear evidence of his birthplace. Aside from Standish's will, the earliest source describing Standish's family and early life is a short passage recorded by Nathaniel Morton, secretary of Plymouth Colony, who wrote in his New England's Memorial, published in 1669, that Standish: > was a gentleman, born in Lancashire, and was heir apparent unto a great > estate of lands and livings, surreptitiously detained from him; his great > grandfather being a second or younger brother from the house of Standish. In > his younger time he went over into the low countries, and was a soldier > there, and came acquainted with the church at Leyden, and came over into New > England, with such of them as at the first set out for the planting of the > plantation of New Plymouth, and bare a deep share of their first > difficulties, and was always very faithful to their interest.Stratton, 357.
William Holden Hutton, "Mews, Peter", in Dictionary of National Biography (1885-1900), volume 37 Before this Mews had been ordained. Taking the degree of DCL and regaining his fellowship at Oxford after the Restoration, he became Archdeacon of Huntingdon, vicar of St Mary's, Reading, and chaplain to the King; then, having obtained two other livings, he was made canon of Windsor, canon of St David's, and Archdeacon of Berkshire (1665–1672). In 1667, when at Breda arranging peace between England and the Dutch Republic, he was chosen President of St John's College, Oxford, in succession to his father-in-law, Richard Baylie, afterwards becoming Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford and dean of Rochester. Appointed Bishop of Bath and Wells in 1672, Mews resigned his presidency in 1673, and in 1684 he was elected Bishop of Winchester, a position which this "old, honest cavalier," as Thomas Hearne calls him, filled until his death.
He was for some time tutor of his college; but the most characteristic reminiscence of his university life is the mention made by Anthony Wood that in the musical gatherings of the time Thomas Ken of New College, a junior, would be sometimes among them, and sing his part. Ordained in 1662, he successively held the livings of Little Easton in Essex, St. Mary's Church, Brighstone"Three famous men of Brighstone" Sibley,P Brighstone, Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Brighstone in the Isle of Wight, and East Woodhay in Hampshire; in 1672 he resigned the last of these, and returned to Winchester, being by this time a prebendary of the cathedral, and chaplain to the bishop, as well as a fellow of Winchester College. He remained there for several years, acting as curate in one of the lowest districts, preparing his Manual of Prayers for the use of the Scholars of Winchester College (first published in 1674), and composing hymns.
Hengham was one of the many justices dismissed and disgraced between 1289 and 1290, with his dismissal coming in Hilary term 1290 due to misconduct in only a single case, and there on what appears to be a technicality. He was forced to pay 10,000 Marks over the next five years for his release from prison and pardon, far more than any of the other disgraced justices.. The fine was not a reflection on his crimes or his high standing, but rather on his ability to pay; Hengham is known to have held three Cathedral canonries at Hereford, Lichfield and St Paul's, as well as prebends in five collegiate churches and livings in ten counties. He received annual pensions from seven religious corporations, and had land holdings in Cambridgeshire, Essex, Kent, and Warwickshire. There is a story that the money went to pay for a London clock tower, which eventually became Big Ben, but there is no contemporary evidence for this.
The sermon was printed next year at Hampton's request, as 'a treatise tending to unity'; Leslie had proposed that no one should be allowed to go beyond seas for education, and that no popish schoolmaster should be allowed at home. Leslie did curate's duty at Drogheda from 1622 to 1626. He preached before Charles I at Windsor on 9 July 1625, and at Oxford the same year; and on 30 October, being then one of his majesty's chaplains in ordinary, he delivered 'a warning to Israel' in Christ Church, Dublin, dedicated to Lord-deputy Falkland. In 1627 Leslie again preached before the king at Woking, and in the same year he was made Dean of Down. In 1628 he was made precentor of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, three other livings being added to the dignity, and in 1632 he became treasurer also, and he seems to have held all these preferments in addition to his deanery. Leslie was prolocutor of the Lower House during the Irish convocation of 1634, and came into immediate contact with Lord-deputy Wentworth.
He remained a Canon of Oxford until he was installed as Dean of Canterbury on 6 October 1770; while there he obtained the lucrative livings of Lydd and Bexley, both of which he retained while at Lichfield. North left Canterbury for Lichfield in 1771, when his half-brother the Prime Minister's recommendation saw him elected Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry. His election to that See having been confirmed on 26 August 1771, he was consecrated a bishop by Frederick Cornwallis, Archbishop of Canterbury (with Richard Terrick, Bishop of London; Zachary Pearce, Bishop of Rochester; and William Markham Bishop of Chester) on 8 September 1771 at Lambeth Palace chapel North was Bishop of Lichfield for three years before his election as Bishop of Worcester was confirmed on 27 December 1774; he then remained in Worcester for six and a half years until his election to the See of Winchester was confirmed on 5 June 1781. Throughout the period of his appointments to these two Sees his half-brother remained Prime Minister.
1841 saw the beginning of a large downward trend in the total population levels. In 1901 we see a 'pause' in the total population changing - in 1911 the total population has increased by 1 to 223. The next census data collection showed Poughill's total population had fallen lower than ever at the time, recorded at 154 residents in 1931 (-69) . A minimal rise was shown again, increasing the population back up to 165 residents however this positive up rise was reduced when the 1951 census data was collected and the lowest population levels for Poughill were collected. 147 residents were recorded, as shown on the total population graph. There is a national school, with a small endowment from Pyncombe's charity; a charity of £1,013 a year for schools, small livings, and the poor. Out of the whole population, 39 of Poughill's residents were of school age in 2011. Census data from 2011 shows that residents aged 45–59 years made up the highest percent of the total population, accounting for 28.2%.
USA, 2003 The courtier and poet Girolamo Muzio in a letter of 1550 to Ferrante Gonzaga, governor of Milan, wrote: "They write many bad things about this new pope; that he is vicious, proud, and odd in the head",Hor di questo nuovo papa universalmente se ne dice molto male; che egli è vitioso, superbo, rotto et di sua testa", Lettere di Girolamo Muzio Giustinopolitano conservate nell'archivio governativo di Parma, Deputazione di Storia Patria, Parma 1864, p. 152 and the Pope's enemies made capital of the scandal, Thomas Beard, in the Theatre of God's judgement (1597) saying it was Julius' "custome ... to promote none to ecclesiastical livings, save only his buggerers". In Italy, it was said that Julius showed the impatience of a "lover awaiting a mistress" while awaiting Innocenzo's arrival in Rome and boasted of the boy's prowess in bed, while the Venetian ambassador reported that Innocenzo Del Monte shared the pope's bed "as if he [Innocenzo] were his [Julius'] own son or grandson." "The charitably-disposed told themselves that the boy might after all be simply his bastard son.
Holmes was born on 5 April 1689 in the parish of St Swithin, in the City of London, the son of Thomas and Margaret Holmes of London, England. He began his education at Merchant Taylors' School, London, on 12 September 1701 and went up to St John's College, Oxford, on 11 June 1707, matriculating on 2 July. In 1710, he became a Fellow and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree on 16 May 1711, and was awarded the Master of Arts degree on 9 April 1715. In 1721 Holmes was appointed as a proctor of the University. He took the Bachelor of Divinity degree on 13 April 1722 and the Doctorate of Divinity on 5 March 1725. Holmes held two college livings; between 1725 and 1726 that of North Leigh, near Oxford, and of Henbury, Gloucestershire from 1726 to 1728. He was elected President of St John's College on 3 June 1728. Holmes became the Rector of Boxwell, Gloucestershire, on 24 September and was given the college living of Hanborough, a few miles north of Long Hanborough, Oxfordshire, and between 1731 and 1737, he was proctor for the clergy of the diocese of Oxford in convocation.
Charles Knox (10 January 1770 – 30 January 1825)"MPs in Dublin: Companion to History of the Irish Parliament, 1692-1800" Johnston-Liik, E.M. p100: Belfast; Ulster Historical Foundation; 2006 was Archdeacon of Armagh from 1814 until his death."Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 3" Cotton, H. p236 Dublin, Hodges & Smith, 1848–1878 The 6th son of the 1st Viscount Northland, he was born in Dublin and educated at Trinity College there."Alumni Dublinenses : a register of the students, graduates, professors and provosts of Trinity College in the University of Dublin (1593–1860 George Dames Burtchaell/Thomas Ulick Sadleir p474: Dublin, Alex Thom and Co, 1935 He was Member of Parliament for Dungannon from 1798 to 1799.Parliamentary Memoirs of Fermanagh and Tyrone, from 1613 to 1885 He was ordained in 1799 and held livings at Dunkerron, Drumachose and Urney."The Monthly Review, Volume 125, Griffiths, G.E;Griffiths,R (Eds) p479: London, G.Henderson,1831 He was a Prebendary of Derry from 1807"Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae: The succession of the prelates Volume 3" Cotton, H. p344 Dublin, Hodges & Smith, 1848–1878 and St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin from 1817.
After the Restoration of the Stuart dynasty, established Episcopacy once more became intolerant under the aegis of Charles II. An Act of Uniformity was promulgated in 1662, which ordained the expulsion from his charge of any clergyman who refused to subscribe to everything contained in the Book of Common Prayer and to the doctrine of the King's supremacy in matters ecclesiastical, and held by the Solemn League and Covenant of 1643, prohibiting such from exercising his religious functions in private houses. 2000 clergymen were ejected from their livings in one day for declining to comply with these tests. This enactment was reinforced in 1664 by a statute called 'the Conventicle Act,' which rendered illegal any gathering in a private house for religious worship attended by a number exceeding by five the regular members of the household, under penalty of fine, imprisonment, or transportation. A second version of this Act deprived these outed ministers of the right of trial by jury, and empowered any justice of the peace to convict them on the oath of a single informer, who was to be rewarded with a third of all fines levied.
George Hedgeland's stained glass (1853) seen from Turl Street In 1853, Henry Foulkes (principal 1817–1857), the fellows of the college and the incumbents of most of the livings within its gift donated £350 10s for stained glass by George Hedgeland to be added to the east window; the final cost was £399. It shows various biblical episodes, including three instances of Christ raising people from the dead: the daughter of Jairus, the son of the widow of Nain, and Lazarus. There are also pairs of scenes from the New Testament and the Old Testament to demonstrate the typological relationship between them: for example, the Passover is paired with the Last Supper, Jonah escaping from the whale with the Resurrection of Jesus, and the ascension of Elijah with the ascension of Jesus. Pevsner described it as "a busy, somewhat gloomy piece with many small scenes". A copy of Guido Reni's painting St Michael subduing the dragon, which had been presented to the college by Thomas Bulkeley, 7th Viscount Bulkeley (a student who matriculated at the university in 1769), had previously been hung in front of the east window.
The Disruption Assembly, painted by David Octavius Hill After prolonged years of struggle, in 1834 the Evangelicals gained control of the General Assembly and passed the Veto Act, which allowed congregations to reject unwanted "intrusive" presentations to livings by patrons and the Chapels Act, which put the ministers of Chapels of Ease on an equal footing with ordinary parish ministers. The following "Ten Years' Conflict" of legal and political wrangling ended in defeat for the non-intrusionists in the civil courts, reaching the Court of Session and then finally the House of Lords in 1839, which declared the acts unconstitutional. In 1842 Evangelicals presented to the General Assembly a Claim, Declaration and Protest anent the Encroachments of the Court of Session, known as the Claim of Right, that questioned the validity of civil jurisdiction over the church. When the Claim of Right was rejected by the General Assembly the result was a schism from the church by some of the non-intrusionists led by Thomas Chalmers, known as the Great Disruption of 1843.A. Roger, The Courts, The Church, and The Constitution: Aspects of the Disruption of 1843 (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2008), , pp. 27-8.
This started with a quarrel between two professors of theology at Leiden University, Franciscus Gomarus and Jacobus Arminius, about the interpretation of the dogma of the Predestination. Soon other ministers of the public church, the Dutch Reformed Church took sides, and with them their flocks in the local congregations of that church. As the Dutch authorities felt a duty to keep the peace in the church, so as to avoid a schism, the States of Holland and West Friesland got involved when the followers of Arminius in 1610 presented a remonstrance (petition) to them, that was soon followed by a counter-remonstrance from the other side. The States were reluctant to take sides in the doctrinal quarrel, but when the quarrel flowed over into the public sphere, and ministers of either side refused to recognize the qualifications of the others to administer the Lord's Supper and congregations split into warring parties, they felt constraint to issue the so-called "For the Peace of the Church" Resolution in January 1614 (drafted by the Rotterdam pensionary Hugo Grotius), which prohibited preaching about the quarrel from the pulpit on pain of losing their livings for the preachers.
In October 1533 he was entrusted with the task of suggesting to Clement VII (while he was the guest of Francis I at Marseille) Henry's appeal from the pope to a general council; but there seems to be no good authority for Gilbert Burnet's story that Clement threatened to have him burnt alive. For these and other services Bonner had been rewarded by successive grants of the livings of Cherry Burton (Yorks), Ripple (Worcester), Blaydon (Durham), and East Dereham (Norfolk). In 1535, he was made Archdeacon of Leicester. During the following years he was much employed on important embassies in the king's interests, first to the pope to appeal against the excommunication pronounced in July 1533, afterwards to the Emperor to dissuade him from attending the general council which the pope wished to summon at Vicenza. Towards the end of 1535 he was sent to further what he called "the cause of the Gospel" (Letters and Papers, 1536, No. 469) in North Germany; and in 1536 he wrote a preface to Stephen Gardiner's De vera Obedientia, which asserted the royal and denied the papal supremacy, and was received with delight by the Lutherans.
The Abbot of Walden received two marks from the profits of the benefice, and the Prior of Hurley in Berkshire half a mark. In 1291 the church was valued at £5; the Prior of Hurley still received his annual pension, and no payment to Walden is recorded. Presumably the vicar then enjoyed the rectorial estate. An agreement made in 1518 between the Bishop of London and the Vicar confirmed the latter's right to great and small tithes in consideration of £4 annually to this bishop. In 1535 Henry VIII through Thomas Cromwell saw all livings' annual value noted, in a compilation named the King's Books, finding it worth £15. Twelve years later the 'parsonage' was worth £26 and the vicar held (farmed out) 31 acres in the common fields. There were then no charities, obits (obituary legacies), or lights (stained glass), and the vicar furnished the cure himself. By 1610 the vicarage was a house with two barns, stable, orchard, garden, three closes of meadow containing 20 acres, lands in the Northolt common fields, and houses and land in Greenford parish. In 1650 general assets stood at 48 acres of glebe, the great and small tithes were valued together at £170, the total of these being £205.

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