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Thomas, Earl

The speech or declaration of John Pym, esquire after the recapitulation or summing up of the charge of high treason against Thomas, earl of Strafford, 21 April 1641 (1641). See below n. 34. [Pg.184]

A Philosophical Riddle The Answer of Bemardus Trvisanus to the Epistle of Thomas of Bononia The Prefatory Epistle of Bernard, Earl of Tresne to Thomas of Bononia A Brief Rehearsal of the Preparation of the Philosophers Stone... [Pg.18]

Trevisan, Bernard. "The prefatory epistle of Bernard Earl of Tresne, to the noble doctor and most learned philosopher Thomas of Bononia." In Aurofontina chymica, 82. R.A. M.S., 1981. [Pg.193]

Calvert, A. H. Thomas, H. Colombo, N. Gore, M. Earl, H. Sena, L. Camboni, G. Liati, P. Sessa, C. European Journal of Cancer 2001, 37 (supp6) Poster Discussion 965. Phase II Clinical Study of BBR3464, a Novel, Bifunctional Platinum Analogue, in Patients with Advanced Ovarian Cancer, 2001. [Pg.837]

Kruschke, Earl R. The Right to Keep and Bear Arms A Continuing American Dilemma. Springfield, 111. Thomas, 1985. Explores the legal history of firearms law and cases in the United States. [Pg.196]

MICHAEL W. THOMAS, JEANNE E. RUDZKI, EARL F. WALBORG, JR., and BRUNO JIRGENSONS1... [Pg.67]

Submitted by Leo A. Paquette, Martyn J. Earle, and Graham F. Smith.1 Checked by Thomas Kirrane and Albert I. Meyers. [Pg.36]

El. Earl, C. J., Anatomical distribution of copper in human brain. In Wilson s Disease, Some Current Concepts (J. M. Walshe and J. N. Cumings, eds.), pp. 18-23. Thomas, Springfield, Illinois, 1961. [Pg.54]

Committee on Opportunities in the Nutrition and Food Sciences, Opportunities in the Nutrition and Food Sciences, Thomas, P.R. Earl, R., Eds., National Academy Press, Washington, D.C. 1994, p. 40. [Pg.11]

The literature on the Overbury poisoning is enormous. For records of contemporary accounts, for example, see Andrew Amos, The Great Oyer of Poisoning The Trial of the Earl of Somerset for the Poisoning of Sir Thomas Overbury, in the Tower of London (London Richard Bentley, 1846), and Francis Bacon, A True and Historical Relation of the Poysoning of Sir Thomas Overbury (London, 1651). For a recent scholarly analysis, see David Lindley, The Trials of Frances Howard Fact and Fiction in the Court of King James (London Routledge, 1993). [Pg.151]

Amos, Andrew. The Great Oyer of Poisoning The Trial of the Earl of Somerset for the Poisoning of Sir Thomas Overbury, in the Tower of London. London Richard Bentley, 1846. [Pg.187]

With the emphasis on a general education, students could attend lectures on a variety of subjects including what we would now call physical sciences. However, the emphasis was on astronomy and natural philosophy (physics) rather than chemistry. There were several reasons for this. Natural philosophy (including mathematics and astronomy) was part of the traditional curriculum for the Master of Arts degree chemistry was not. In the early eighteenth century, astronomy and natural philosophy were the leading sciences as a result of the work of Newton. Astronomy and the concept of an ordered universe appealed to a clerical (and conservative) audience in a way that was not possible for chemistry with its materialist implications. And in Oxford, astronomy and natural philosophy benefited from two excellent teachers, who were both Savilian Professors of Astronomy James Bradley (1693-1762) between 1721 and 1762 and Thomas Hornsby between 1763 and 1810 (and also Sedleian Professor of Natural Philosophy between 1782 and 1810). Both men also enjoyed the support of the second Earl of Macclesfield (1697-1764), President of the Royal Society between 1752 and 1764, and the owner of an excellent observatory at Shirburn Castle near Oxford. Bradley - who became Astronomer... [Pg.57]

Randal Thomas Mowbray Rawdon Berkeley, Earl of Berkeley (1865-1942), ODNB-, H. Hartley, Obit. Not. Fell. Roy. Soc., 1942, 4, 167. [Pg.130]

With his fortune, Anson created a magnificent seventeenth century house and garden at Shugborough Hall, in rural Staffordshire. Shugborough was the home of his elder brother Thomas, the Earl of Lichfield. [Pg.362]

Butler, Thomas I. and Veazey, Earl W., Eds. (1992) Film Extrusion Manual Process, Materials, Properties, Atlanta, TAPPI... [Pg.452]

William Earl Dobbins attended the Massachusetts Institute of Teehnology MIT, receiving the degrees BSe in sanitary engineering in 1934, MS in 1935 and PhD in 1941. The latter, made under Thomas R. [Pg.238]

Dahnas, D. A., Scicchitano, M. S., Mullins, D., Hughes-Earle, A., Tatsuoka, K., Magid-Slav, M., Frazier, K. S., and Thomas, H. C. (2011). Potential candidate genomic biomarkers of drug induced vascular injury in the rat. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol 257, 284-300. [Pg.404]

Davy s botanical information was partly acquired from his friend Thomas Andrew Knight (1759-1838), whom he met at Sir Joseph Banks s house. Earlier English works on agricultural chemistry are by Francis Home and Archibald Cochrane, ninth Earl of Dundonald. ... [Pg.39]


See other pages where Thomas, Earl is mentioned: [Pg.8]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.419]    [Pg.420]    [Pg.293]    [Pg.579]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.580]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.415]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.414]    [Pg.567]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.632]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.404]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.580 ]




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