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"quondam" Definitions
  1. FORMER, SOMETIME

125 Sentences With "quondam"

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

As it might have been expressed in Latin, "Brexit quondam, Brexitque futurus" — our once and future Brexit.
But Republicans, in a fit of cultural pique, nominated him, and Americans decided that they had had their fill of Hillary Rodham Clinton (a little of her goes a very long way), and so the free people of these United States installed a quondam game-show host and failed casino operator as their chief executive.
John Sutton, 3rd Baron Dudley (1494 – 1553), commonly known as Lord Quondam, was an English nobleman.
A source from 1212 attests that the jurors of Cumberland remembered Ranulf as quondam dominus Cumberland ("sometime Lord of Cumberland").
Zanzoni A, Montecchi- Palazzi L, Quondam M, Ausiello G, Helmer-Citterich M, et al. (2002). "Mint: a molecular interaction database". FEBS Lett 513: 135–140.
An epitaph records the death of Marieta mater quondam Jacobi Cypri Regis. Through her son's illegitimate children, she has numerous descendants in the 21st century.
By 1947, the Quondam had 6 hockey fields and began to construct a recreational swimming pool. An Autumn Fair was held in 1949 and raised 3 000 pounds towards the construction of the clubhouse. The new headquarters of the clubhouse were opened on 24 September 1950. Jeppe Quondam Club consisted of a Drama Society, Hockey, Tennis, and Swimming section including Waterpolo as well as a Cricket section started by the Old Girls.
While Ottokar married Kunigunda of Halych, a grand-daughter of King Béla IV of Hungary, the repudiated Queen Margaret left Bohemia and returned to her Austrian homeland. She took her residence in Krumau am Kamp, spending the winters in Krems. After the annulment she was called Romanorum quondam Regina ("former Queen of the Romans"); however, she maintained the title ducissa Austrie et Stirie (Duchess of Austria and Styria). In 1266 she changed her title to quondam filia Livpoldi illustris ducis Austrie et Stirie et Romanorum Regina as a reference to her father.
Eleanor Robson is a Professor of Ancient Middle Eastern History at the Department of History, University College London, former chair of the British Institute for the Study of Iraq and a Quondam Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
155 A.D. 1428 [page heading] [section covering the county of Sussex] Rapus Cicestrie Hundredum de Manewode WILLELMUS de ERNLE tenet iiijtam partem j.f. in ERNLE quondam JOHANNIS ERNLE, subsidium xx.d. [translated from Latin to English as] The Rape of Cicestrie [i.e.
In 706 he granted land to Bishop Ecgwine . In this charter Æthelweard is styled subregulus, Osheri quondam regis Wicciorum filius. Possibly he is also the Æþeluuard dux who in 716 or 717 witnessed a charter issued by Æthelbald, King of Mercia .
In 1979, Lewis returned to England and joined the Department of Social Policy and Administration at the London School of Economics (LSE) as a lecturer. She was promoted to Reader in 1987 and appointed Professor of Social Policy in 1991. In 1996, she joined the University of Oxford as Director of the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine and was elected a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. She was made a Quondam Fellow of All Souls College in 1998: a Quondam Fellow is a former fellow and not part of the College's governing body.
In the necrology of the Carmelite monastery in Boxmeer is recorded: "6. December obiit P. Benedictus à Sancto Josepho alias Buns, Gelriensis, quondam subprior, organista ac Musiciae componista famosissimus." In France, Buns was granted with a title of honour ”le grand Carme”.Wennekes p.
Harry Sidebottom is a British author and historian, best known for his two series of historical novels the Warrior of Rome, and Throne of the Caesars. He is Quondam Fellow and Tutor in Ancient History at St. Benet's Hall, Oxford, and lecturer at Lincoln College.
She took up a chair in English and Creative Writing at Birkbeck College, University of London, in September 2014. She is a quondam fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, and was chair of the judges of the Man Booker International Prize 2015."Recent news", marinawarner.com; retrieved 11 November 2014.
Christopher Donald Frith, (born 16 March 1942) is a psychologist and professor emeritus at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at University College London. Visiting Professor at the Interacting Minds Centre at Aarhus University, Research Fellow at the Institute of Philosophy and Quondam Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford.
He first appears in a document of 1059, when he is placed in power over the city of Savona, probably as per a request of the citizenry for a ruler of their own. He was present when the Emperor Henry IV donated the monastery of Breme to the church of Pavia. This section needs translation into English. In an act dated 15 September 1096, Uvilielmus marchio filius quondam Uvilielmi et Ota iugalis eius filia quondam Tebaldi et Uvilielmus filius presicti Uvilielmi et Ote, et Oto filius item Otonis, seu Petrus filius Roberti, atque coniunx eius Ermengarda filia predicti Tebaldi et Tezo filius iamdicti Petri et Ermengarde conceded their rights over the church of Santo Stefano di Allein.
Pliny the Younger, his neighbor and ward, has recorded the lines which Verginius had ordered to be engraved upon his tomb: Hic situs est Rufus, pulso qui Vindice quondam Imperium asseruit non sibi sed patriae ("Here lies Rufus, who after defeating Vindex, did not take power, but gave it to the fatherland").
Lord Quondam had several brothers: Thomas, William, Arthur, Geoffery and George. Lord Dudley decided upon a city residence at Tothill Street in Westminster. He died in Middlesex and was buried on 18 September 1553 in St Margaret's, Westminster, London; his wife was buried there on 28 April 1554.J. G. Nichols, ed.
"Hieronymus patre Eusebio natus, oppido Stridonis, quod a Gothis eversum, Dalmatiae quondam Pannoniaeque confinium fuit...". The exact location of Stridon is unknown. It is possible Stridon was located either in modern Croatia or Slovenia. Possible locations are the vicinity of Ljubljana, Starod (Slovenia), Sdrin, Štrigova, Zrenj, Zrin (Croatia) and many others in both countries.
Stapper, p. 34 On the contrary, he explicitly calls Hadrian V his direct predecessor. Medieval necrology of the Cathedral of Piacenza recorded only: obiit Vicedominus quondam ep. Paenestrinus anno 1276 .., without any allusion to his election to the papacy.Stapper, p. 33 note 5. False or at least dubious are also other details of the story.
Sir Francis Beaufort, the discoverer of this ancient site, gave the contemporary name of Vathy to the bay at the head of which Antiphellus stands.Beaufort, Karamania 1818:13. Pliny says that its ancient (i.e. pre-Hellenic) name was Habessus;Pliny's Natural History 5.100: Antiphellos quae quondam Habessus; atque in recessu Phellus; deinde Pyrrha itemque Xanthus….
The saloon was reconstructed in 2007. The reconstructed Kursalón is situated 15 metres from its original place, due to balance and erosion problems at the original site. The windows and outside pillars from the original building were preserved. Pillars with statues that represent the four seasons make the quondam foundation of the saloon now.
Queen Sophia referred to herself as regina quondam (former queen) and senior regina (senior queen).Sophia, urn:sbl:6154, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (art av Dick Harrison), hämtad 2016-09-06. She is mentioned in several business documents, such as when she donated the income from the salmon fishing in Norrköping to Skänninge Abbey in 1283.
Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive, p. 38. As a young man, he was active with the Socialist Party of America (his "quondam idol" was the black Socialist Hubert Harrison).Introduction from A Hubert Harrison Reader, University Press of New England He attended the City College of New York for one semester.Dearborn, The Happiest Man Alive, p. 42.
He married Myfanwy only daughter of Sir Francis Edwards, 1st Baronet, quondam Liberal MP for Radnorshire. Thus Francis Oliver Green- Wilkinson MC (7 May 1913 – 26 August 1970) was a grandson, and Constance Hilaré Myfanwy (died 1982), aka Hilaré, who married Captain Robert Edward Dudley Ryder, VC (1908 – 1986) on 26 April 1941, was a granddaughter. (Burke's Peerage).
The new tower had wooden board cladding at the belfry stage, and a timbered spire. The chancel was also enlarged at this time to its present length. On the inner sill of the north-west window in the chancel there is an inscription c.1400. It reads: ‘Hic jacet d°. Willms Savage quondam rector istius ecciesie’ – i.e.
The Quondam Club was formed in 1907 by Jeppe Old Girls as a means to stay in contact. It was these Old Girls who made the first Scholarship or Bursary Fund for Jeppe High School. Jeppe Girls is one of the schools partnered with SSP (Student Sponsorship Programme). The school is also partnered with the Old Mutual programme.
This includes a Latin inscription and whilst it is faded now, Dodsworth writing in 1622 recorded it as Hic jacet Thomas Jackson quondam mercator de Bedall qui obiit primo die mensis julii anno dñi mccccc xxix. Cujus anime propitietur deus, amen. The 18th century conjurer, quack and scientific lecturer Gustavus Katterfelto is buried near the altar in the church.
Costambeys, 157. Two charters from 802 and 804 show that Benedict and his predecessor Mauroald financed the military service of two brothers from the Sabina, Probatus and Picco, sons of Ursus of the Pandoni family, who were serving the army of Charlemagne then targeting the Principality of Benevento.They described themselves as filii quondam Ursi, cf. Costambeys, 229–30.
He was also Warden of Hiatt Baker Hall, one of the university's halls of residence. In 1965, Salway joined All Souls College, Oxford as domestic bursar. He served in that role until 1969 when he was elected a Quondam Fellow of the College. In 1970, he joined the Open University as Regional Director for the West Midlands.
From 1983 to 1989, he was also Professor of the History and Archaeology of Roman Britain. Salway retired in 1991 and was appointed an Emeritus Fellow of the Open University. He remains a Quondam Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. Salway is the author of Roman Britain (1981), a volume in the Oxford History of England series.
Nicholas Jackson O'Shaughnessy is professor of communications and of post-Cold War German history at Queen Mary, University of London. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, a Quondam Fellow of Hughes Hall, University of Cambridge and has previously been a professor at Keele University and Brunel University.
The discovery of the burial is described by chroniclers, notably Gerald, as being just after King Henry II's reign when the new abbot of Glastonbury, Henry de Sully, commissioned a search of the abbey grounds. At a depth of 5 m (16 feet), the monks were said to have discovered an unmarked tomb with a massive treetrunk coffin and an also buried lead cross bearing the inscription: Lead cross inscribed with Arthur's epitaph, published in William Camden's Britannia (1607) Accounts of the exact inscription vary, with five different versions existing. One popular today, made famous by Malory, claims "Here lies Arthur, the king that was and the king that shall be" (Hic iacet Arthurus, Rex quondam, Rexque futurus), also known in the variant "the once and future king" (rex quondam et futurus).
Abbot Jean de Beaulieu was later Abbot of Ste. Colombe, diocese of Sens, from 1295 to 1317. A. Molinier & A. Lognon, Obituaires de la province de Sens Tome I (Diocese de Sens) (Paris 1902), p. 18 (16 August): hic debet fieri sollempne anniversarium bone memorie Symonis, cardinalis, quondam fratris venerabilis in Christo patris Johannis de Bello-loco, abbatis ecclesie nostre.
On the other hand, on the great estates in Assyria and its subject provinces there were many serfs, mostly of subject race, settled captives, or quondam slaves; tied to the soil they cultivated and sold with the estate, yet capable of possessing land and property of their own. There is little trace of serfs in Babylonia, unless the mushkenu is really a serf.
Part of the church, notably the door and porch, is dated to 1310. A sundial on the turret to the left of the porch says "1688 Gifte of Edmond Hutchinson, Gentleman". The church contains three 14th-century tombs, one of which is inscribed "Hic intumulatur Johannes quondam dominus de Trikingham" ('Here is buried John, former lord of Threekingham'). The spire was restored in 1872.
No wife or offspring are mentioned in the will. Caxaro had willed that he be buried in the Dominican newly built church at Rabat, as eventually happened.Explicit reference is made regarding the execution of Caxaro’s desire in the archives of the Dominicans at Rabat, Ms. 321, Giuliana Antica, I, f. 83v (January 28, 1497): “… in dicta Ecclesia et Cappella, in qua est defunctus dictus quondam Notarius Petrus …”.
Only regiments for which inscription evidence exists are entered. Regiments whose existence can be inferred from sequence gaps, but are not attested in the epigraphic record, are not included. Cohorts whose name was changed are entered under their latest name (their old name is entered as a quondam). Most regiments carried a number and a name (normally a peregrini tribal name in the genitive plural case) e.g.
The Ottoman enterprise was not a full-fledged war effort, but rather a very substantial raiding one - the largest expedition Transylvania encountered during a century's worth of Hungarian-Turkish conflicts. Kinizsi's army consisted of Hungarian, Szekler, Serbian, Transylvanian Saxon forces, and some Vlach volunteers. The latter were commanded by Basarab Laiotă "cel Bătrân", lit. "the Elder", quondam ruler of Wallachia and archrival to Basarab "cel Tânăr", lit.
There is also a cover for the chalice. These two items date from the Archbishopric of John Vesey (c. 1678 – 1716), There are also two flagons with a similar inscription, Ex dono Viri Venerabilis Honorabilis Thoma Vesey, Episcopi Laonensis Equitis Aurati quondam Archdiaconi Tuamensis in Usum Ecclesiac Cathedralis do Tuam & Gloriam SS & Individuae Trinitatis. These hallmarked flagons are 10 inches high and 7 inches in diameter.
In autumn 2010, Quondam toured an Arts Council England-supported "new play with songs" called The Wife of Usher's Well to 27 venues. Inspired by the border ballad, this reprised the historic text in a new setting of a mother's losing her son in the war in Afghanistan. The writer was Jules Horne and the cast was Helen Longworth, Danny Kennedy, Ruth Tapp and Andrew Whitehead.
Smith left Oxford in 1998 to pursue a career in management consultancy, becoming a partner in a London- based firm in 2004. In 2009, Smith set up a company of his own in order to operate independently. He continues to be a Quondam Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. Smith sits on the board of the Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology and of the Institute of Art and Ideas.
To here, to these hills, : Sybaris, and Rhodes, and Miletus – flowed here - : and Tarentum too crowned and with drunken impudence. : First tainted money carried in foreign : ways, and effeminate riches shattered the ages with : foul luxury. … : unde haec monstra tamen uel quo de fonte requiris? : praestabat castas humilis fortuna Latinas : quondam, nec uitiis contingi parua sinebant : tecta labor somnique breues et uellere Tusco : uexatae duraeque manus ac proximus urbi : Hannibal et stantes Collina turre mariti.
The Jeppe Old Girls' Association is known as the Quondam Club (Latin for 'formerly' or 'once upon a time') and was established in 1907.JHSG Magazine, June 1914, p.2 A large piece of land was bought in Bedfordview for the new clubhouse. The project to build the clubhouse, in 1945, costed 15 000 pounds to include a hall, dressing rooms, secretary's office and a verandah with a view of the cricket oval.
The Kaboga family first appears during the late 13th century. Džore Dišić, who died before 1282, appears to be the patriarch although he is not specifically mentioned in sources. Džore Dišić's wife Draga and their sons, Mihajlo (Miho), the cleric Dživo, Marin and Vlaho, are frequently mentioned in records of the Dubrovnik chancellery for 1281 and 1282; Draga is described as "Uxor quondam Georgii de Disica", and her sons primarily as "filii qu. Džore Dišić".
The saga first appeared as a published dissertation which stated in an introduction that it was edited from parchment fragments found by the dissertation's author, Lucas Halpap.Lucas Halpap, Fragmentum mscr. runici... (Uppsala, 1690), unnumbered page at start of dissertation: “Nam hoc ipsum ego M. ss. ante aliquot menses a Rustico quondam pretio vel contemnendo mini comparavi” (“For I bought this very manuscript a few months ago at a shockingly cheap price from a farmer”).
" What Pont apparently did not know was that a David de Lyne lived in Peeble-shire in 1270 and was described in a volume of "The Scots Peerage" (Vol. IX, p. 199) as being the "quondam Domini [late Lord] of Locherworth." Nearly a century earlier, David de Lyne, son of Robert de Lyne, and David's uncle Walter de Lyne held rights to the Chapel of Lyne in Peebles-shire, as reported in "The Book of Stobo Church.
In 1278, Valdemar finally accepted to abdicate permanently in favor of his brother Magnus and took the title quondam rex (former king), and was given some lands in Västergötland and Östergötland. Valdemar settled in Denmark in 1280, while Sophia remained in Sweden.Sophia, urn:sbl:6154, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (art av Dick Harrison), hämtad 2016-09-06. From this point on, they lived separate lives.Sophia, urn:sbl:6154, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (art av Dick Harrison), hämtad 2016-09-06.
And on the 25 day of May, > being the Friday in Whitsun week, Sir John Bulmer, Sir Stephen Hamerton, > knights, were hanged and headed; Nicholas Tempest, esquire; Doctor > Cockerell, priest;James Cockerell, Prior of Guisborough. Abbot quondam of > Fountains;William Thirsk. and Doctor Pickering, friar,John Pickering of > Bridlington. were drawn from the Tower of London to Tyburn, and there > hanged, bowelled and quartered, and their heads set on London Bridge and > divers gates in London.
Born in Buenos Aires, she was the daughter of Raimundo Octavio Bunge, quondam justice of the Supreme Court of Argentina, and María Luisa Justa Rufina de Arteaga. She had at least three brothers: Carlos Octavio Bunge, publicist, sociologist and historian, as well as Augusto Bunge and Alejandro Bunge, who were involved in the country's affairs; she also had a sister, Julia Bunge de Uranga. She was educated in the Colegio del Sagrado Corazón. Bunge married Manuel Gálvez.
Lord Dudley's great grandson, the third Baron, managed to get himself severely into debt and lost the family seat of Dudley Castle to his cousin John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland. He became known as "Lord Quondam" ("Lord Has-been" or "Lord Formerly"). However, Dudley Castle and the other family estates were restored to his son, the fourth Baron. He was succeeded by his son, the fifth Baron, who like his grandfather came heavily into debt.
The castles were probably built to control the road and river crossing. The first historical records of the castles date to the 13th century, when a Friderici quondam de Thvchervelt was mentioned on 26 November 1243, they were probably built just before this. The Bishop of Bamberg, Berthold of Leiningen, acquired one of the castles on 27 May 1262; from whom he bought it, is not known. It is likely that this was the castle of Frederick of Tüchersfeld.
It was built by Xu's family in the Zhengtong era (1436–1449) of the Ming Dynasty and bought by Zhang's family in the early Qing Dynasty. Located to the south of the Double Bridges, Zhangting House has more than 70 rooms and takes up about 1,800 square meters (less than half an acre). With Ruojing River flowing through, Zhangting House is a dapper and graceful residential house; has a tranquil courtyard and pond. Deep halls all represent the life of the quondam owner.
The first left behind Domina Guida vidua f. et uxor quondam Clari Davanzati pp. Sancte Marie supra Arnum (Lady Guida, widow and former wife of Chiaro Davanzati of the popolo of Santa Maria sopr' Arno), two sons (Martinuccio and Bartolo), and two daughters (Lucia and Lori). A later reference to two sons, Bartolo and Lapo (not mentioned in the earlier document), who were citizens and merchants of Florence, suggests that Lapo had already attained his majority at his father's death.
Turin continues to direct the Digital Himalaya Project, which he co- established in December 2000, based jointly the University of Cambridge and the University of British Columbia. In 2009, he established up the World Oral Literature Project supporting the documentation and preservation of oral literatures and endangered cultural traditions, affiliated to the University of Cambridge Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Turin was elected to a Fellowship at Hughes Hall, Cambridge in March 2011 and made a Quondam Fellow in March 2014.
John Dudley was one of those who had profited from the improvidence of his second cousin, John Sutton, 3rd Baron Dudley. In 1537 he had acquired from him a package of estates and lordships around Dudley, including Dudley Castle itself. Although Dudley had paid £4000, there was some sympathy for his relative, who became known as "Lord Quondam." The unfortunate baron died in September 1553, shortly after the Duke of Northumberland's execution, and was succeeded by his son, Edward Sutton, 4th Baron Dudley.
The slab has a border inscription > Hic jacet Dominus Johannes de Heton quondam rector ecclesie de benyfelde et > nuper de Lufwyck cujus anime propicietur Deus Amen. Credo quod Redemptor > meus vivit et in novissimo die de terra surrectus sum et in carne mea videbo > deum salvatorem. Sir Ralfe Greene who died in 1417. He was Knight of the Shire for Northamptonshire, High Sheriff of Northamptonshire and Sheriff of Wiltshire. The memorial is by Thomas Prentys and Robert Sutton at a cost of £40.
Having left Oxford in 2013, she was appointed a Quondam Fellow of All Souls: this is a type of fellowship that allows former fellows to maintain an official link with the college. In September 2013, Lacey returned to the London School of Economics where she had been appointed Professor of Law, Gender and Social Policy. She was a Distinguished Global Fellow with the Hauser Global Law School Program of New York University School of Law for the 2014 Spring Semester.
Tel Rumeida is the oldest site in the city of Hebron.Kenneth Anderson Kitchen, On the Reliability of the Old Testament, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2003 p.184 Pringle suggests that the site excavated 200–300 metres east of the hilltop mosque represents the old Kiryat Arba described by the Dominican pilgrim Burchard of Mount Sion in 1293 as "vetus civitas quondam Cariatharbe dicta".Denys Pringle,The Churches of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem: A Corpus: Volume 2, L-Z, Cambridge University Press, 1998 pp.203-204.
"Reminiscences of Regency Life" by Captain Gronow Lumley was a private in the City Imperial Volunteers in the Boer War.See nine photograph albums belonging to his sister Prudence, sold at SAS auctions, Greenham, Berkshire, UK, 30 April 2019, lot 130. The albums contained many pictures of Oliver as a child and teenager. His mother Myfanwy was the only daughter of Sir Francis Edwards, 1st Baronet, quondam Liberal MP for Radnorshire; she was a niece of Alfred Edwards, first Archbishop of Wales and Bishop of St Asaph.
After recognizing the case, Pope Clemens IV in the bull of May 22, 1267 annulled all previous candidacies and appointed one of his chaplains, Mikołaj, to whom he also gave the episcopal consecration to the post of the Poznań bishop. However, in the bullet against Falenty, the Pope used the wording venerabil fratrem nostrum V. episcopum quondam Poznaniensem, which suggests that he acknowledged the validity of his consecration. The fate of Falenty is unknown. He seems to have returned to the post of dean of Gniezno.
This text, furnished with a Latin translation, appeared under the title D. Seven, Alexandrini, quondam patriarche, de Ritibus baptismi et sacre synaxis apud Syros Christianos receptis liber. Lefevre tells us (Epistola dedicatoria, p. 4 f.) that he published this text to illustrate the agreement of the ancient Eastern Church with the Western in the important matter of sacramental ritual. To make the little text useful for beginners in Syriac Lefevre vocalized the text and added at the foot of the page a vocalized transliteration in Hebrew characters.
In 2008, Sabrina Matthews created a piece for England's Royal Academy of Dance's 2008 Genee International Ballet Competition. She also created a new piece, quondam in 2008 for the Royal Swedish Ballet, which has since been reprised in 2009 and 2010. Sabrina Matthews made her U.S. debut in March 2008 with ein von viel at Boston Ballet to high critical praise. To date, ein von viel has been performed by three different companies for a total of eight reprisals in four different countries and eleven different cities.
The work is divided into 434 sections. The title of the work in Migne's edition is Libellus DE ECCLESIASTICIS DISCIPLINIS ET RELIGIONE CHRISTIANA, COLLECTUS Ex jussu domini metropolitani Rathbodi Trevericae urbis episcopi, a Reginone quondam abbate Prumiensis monasterii, ex diversis sanctorum Patrum conciliis et decretis Romanorum pontificum. Substantial portions of this work were included in the Decretum Burchardi of 1012. Section 364 (corresponding to Burchard 10.1) is the so-called Canon Episcopi (after its incipit Ut episcopi episcoporumque ministri omnibus viribus elaborare studeant) dealing with popular superstition.
According to McDaniel, Maria and her sister Helen were descended, trough their father John, from a side branch of the Byzantine emperor's family, and the Hungarian royal house. Parents of Maria Angelina are known from her marriage licenses, issued in 1253 and 1254 by the papal chancellery. The first mentions the marriage "inter Anselmum de Keu ac Mariam, natam Matildis dominae de Posaga, natae comitissae Viennensis", while the second mentions "Maria, nate quondam Calojohanni" and also mentions Maria′s maternal uncle as "imperatore Constantinopolitano, eiusdem Matildis avunculo".
Evans had a bad character with the authorities, who called him "the merchant parson" and believed that he associated with "interlopers". The company in a letter to Madras (18 February 1690–1) call him "the quondam minister, but late great merchant", and a year later (22 January 1691–2) speak of discontinuing his salary. A letter of his own, dated London, 18 April 1698, seems to show that he had only recently left India. He then became rector of Llanaelhaiarn in his native county.
Nonetheless it was delayed, probably until the king of Castile felt the need of having a more secure state of affairs among the orders guarding his southern frontier.Forey, 263. At Segovia, on 23 May 1221, Ferdinand III granted all the rights and castles, including Monfragüe, to the Order of Calatrava, effectively merging the smaller order into the larger.The wording of the charter states that Ferdinand considerans penuriam et annullationem ordinis de Montfrac, qui licet quondam magnus fuerit a miniculo indiget iam extremo (Forey, 263).
Roberto employs his brother, but Lucanio leaves and spends the remainder of his life as a pimp. Roberto's success does not stop him from squandering all of his money until he is left dying, once again finding himself with just one groat left. The narrator then states that the life of Roberto is similar to his own, and exhorts his readers to follow a more honourable path, summed up in ten precepts. He then addresses three unnamed "Gentlemen his Quondam acquaintance, that spend their wits in making Plaies", telling them to reform their ways.
Eugene Galanter was one of the modern founders of cognitive psychology. He was an academic in the field of experimental psychology and an author. Dr. Galanter was Professor Emeritus of Psychology end Quondam Director of the Psychophysics Laboratory at Columbia University.Professor Eugene Galanter Columbia University Department of Psychology: Professor Eugene Galanter He was also the co-founder, Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Scientific Officer of Children’s Progress,Children's Progress an award-winning New York City-based company that specializes in the use of computer technology in early education.
Bishop Joannes Scanzo (1295–1309) died on 2 November 1309.Ronchetti, V, p. 6: per obitum bone memorie Domini Johannis quondam Episcopi Bergamensis qui die dominico secondo presentis mensis Novembris rebus cessit humanis. The Chapter met and appointed two Vicars Capitular instead of the customary one: Alessandro de' Clementi and Cipriano degli Alessandri. The meeting to elect a new bishop was held on 21 November, and four scrutators were appointed: the Provost Alessandro de' Clementi, the Archpriest Lanfranco de' Colleoni, Canon Cipriano degli Alessandri, and Canon Manfredo de' Longhi.
OBIIT FLORENTIE A NnO DomiNI MCCCCXVIIII XI KALENDAS IANVARII Which translates to: John the former pope XXIII. Died in Florence A.D. 1419, on 11th day before the Calends of January The Marzocco was a symbol of Florentine rule. Pope Martin V objected to a portion of the inscription—"IOANnES QVOnDAM PAPA"—because he thought it implied Cossa had died as pope (the Latin "" could mean either "the former" or "the late"). The use of "olim Papa", as was common in many contemporary documents, instead of "quondam Papa" would probably have removed Martin V's objections.
The manor of Kingston in Dorset was held by John Russell in-chief from the king by grand serjeanty, the particular service due to the king was originally to be Marshal of the Buttery (i.e.store of wine barrels), as the entry in the Book of Fees dated 1211 records for the Hundred of "Alvredesberge" (since dissolved), Dorset:Book of Fees, vol.1, 1920, p.92 :Johannes Russel tenet Kingeston pro dimidia hyda terre de domino rege ex tempore Willelmi Bastard quondam Rege Anglie per serjanciam essendi marescallus buteilerie domini regis ad Natale Domini et ad Pentecosten.
William II (died probably around 961) was the co-Marquis of Montferrat with his father Aleram. He was the eldest son of Aleram by his first wife, name unknown. He was named after his grandfather, the head of the family, William I. William probably co-reigned with his father, but appears to have been dead at around the same time. The only mention of him is in a document for the foundation of an abbey pro anime nostre et quondam Gulielmi qui fuit filius et filiaster atque germanus noster seu parentum nostrum mercede.
Sarti, G (2000.) Early and Mannerist Paintings in Italy (1370-1570). Paris, France: G Sarti Antiques Ltd. His opinion was highly valued in the art community, as he was frequently called upon to estimate the value of other artists’ works. He was known to have an extremely even emotional temperament, and in one instance is described as being “phlegmatic”. His death occurred between 1503 and October 8, 1505, since a document of that date describes his son, a canon of San Lorenzo, as Ser Camillus quondam Bartholomei Caporalis, or “of the late Bartolomeo Caporali”.
On a later occasion, probably in 28, he would have accompanied his friend who had been sent on a mission to the East, but he fell sick and had to stay behind in Corcyra. Tibullus had no liking for war, and though his life seems to have been divided between Rome and his country estate, his own preferences were wholly for the country life. The loss of Tibullus's landed property is attested by himself (i.1, 19), as a farmer "felicis quondam, nunc pauperis agri" ("of a once fruitful, now impoverished field"; cf.
420 and p. 494 (Internet Archive). In 1315 he founded a chantry at the conventual church of Tynemouth, under the aegis and seal of St Albans Abbey, for the soul of John de Greystok "quondam baronis de Graistok cognati sui" (i.e., "sometime baron of Graystok, his kinsman"), and for his own soul, the abbey's award to him describing Ralph Fitzwilliam as Baro de Graystok and bearing his seal.W. S. Gibson, The History of the Monastery Founded at Tynemouth, in the Diocese of Durham (London: William Pickering, 1846), I, p. 134 and II, p.
The plain octagonal font probably dates from about 1700. On the chancel floor there is a half-length brass of a priest in mass vestments, with the inscription, 'Hic jacet Hugo Parke quondam istius ecclie Rector in artibus magister sacreque theologie bacularius.' Hugh Park died in 1514. On the north wall of the chancel are monuments with arms to Mary (Tresham) wife of John Crane of Loughton (d. 1624), and to Felice [(Phyllis) Moorton], wife first of William Mortoft of Itteringham, and secondly of John Crane of London (d. 1622).
Qui secularis > et non plene scientie conscius, maiores ab honoribus deiciens, iuvenes et > pastores honoribus cepit sublimare; spreta senum sapientium societate, et > honores et dignitates Ecclesie cepit destruere et a nichilum deducere. Sed > cum comites et potestates Galletie patrem non bene rectum nec filium, flores > iuventutis adultum, ergo se amicos non senserunt, tunc accepto consilio, > Ueremudum iuvenem Ordonii regis filium quondam, apud inclitam beati Iacobi > urbem educatum, in regiminis excellentis sublimare conantur, in era Ma XXa. > . . Qui Ueremudus rex, accepto maiorum consilio, predictum Pelagium, > Ruderici comitis filium, a sede prolecti.
The play was one of several adaptations of Shakespeare centring on the character of Falstaff, but is "the most remarkable" of them according to critic Adam Hansen.Hanson, Adam, "introduction", Shakespeare, William, The Second Part of King Henry IV, Cambridge University Press, 2007, pp.39-40. Hansen describes the first version of the play as "an ingenious exploitation of some hints and inconsistencies in the Shakespearean original". In particular Kenrick picks up on the hint that Hal has a relationship with Poins' sister, who is portrayed in Falstaff's Wedding as the king's "quondam mistress".
Cu îndrumările și anexele necesare pentru determinarea genurilor și familiilor naturale care provin din Europa medie, played a crucial role in this process. His most important publication, from 1868, is Enumeratio plantarum phanerogamicarum districtus quondam Naszondensis; as was customary at the time, it is written in Latin. A Romanian variant appeared in 1881 as Diagnozele plantelor fanerogame și cryptogame vasculare, care provin spontaneu din Transilvania. This was followed in 1893 by Diagnoza plantelor fanerogame și cryptogame vasculare care cresc spontaneu în Transilvania și nu sunt descrise în opul lui Koch: Synopsis Florae Germanicae et Helveticae.
123 Cardinal Angelo Mai, however, for historical reasons, justly assigns a later date, namely 634, under Pope Honorius I and the Emperor Heraclius (Spicilegium Rom., III, V). The relics were placed in the suburban church of Santa Passera (a linguistic corruption of "Abbas Cyrus") on the Via Portuense. In the time of Bosio the pictures of the two saints were still visible in this church. Upon the door of the hypogeum, which still remains, is the following inscription in marble: :Corpora sancta Cyri renitent hic atque Joannis :Quæ quondam Romæ dedit Alexandria magna Their tomb became a shrine and place of pilgrimage.
His two immediate predecessors, Ragambald and Altpert, were also from Francia, although they were probably not Frankish. The period of their abbacies (781–802) has been described as one of "ethnic tension" and the domination of "Frankish ideas", but there is little evidence to support this. Two charters from 802 and 804 show that Mauroald and his successor Benedict financed the military service of two brothers from the Sabina, Probatus and Picco, sons of Ursus of the Pandoni family, who were serving the army of Charlemagne then targeting the Principality of Benevento.They described themselves as filii quondam Ursi, cf.
1, p. 47. In that same year Spain appointed José de Iturriaga as its First Commissioner making specific mention of the rivers of Javari, Japurá, Negro and Madeira for his attention, while at the same time he was also appointed as commander (Spanish: comandante general) of new settlers on the Orinoco River and given other tasks including leading a major scientific research program on that river. The great river Marañon, or Amazon, with the mission of the Company of Jesus geographically delineated by Father Samuel Fritz, a continuous missionary in this river. P.J. de N. Societatis Jesu, quondam in hoc Maranone missionarius, sculpebat.
These were soon dispersed and he again fled to France. After this last effort he did not take a very active part in the propaganda and subsequent risings of the Carlists, who, however, continued to consult him. He took offence when new men, not a few of them quondam regular officers, became the advisers and lieutenants of Don Carlos in the Third Carlist War which lasted more or less from 1870–1876. Indeed, his long residence in England, his marriage with Miss Richards, and his prolonged absence from Spain had much shaken his devotion to his old cause and belief in its success.
He reappeared for a few months after General Pavias coup d'état in January 1874, to join a coalition cabinet formed by Marshal Serrano, with Sagasta and Ulloa. Martos returned to the Bar in May 1874, and quietly looked on when the restoration took place at the end of that year. He stuck to his democratic ideals for some years, even going to Biarritz in 1881 to be present at a republican congress presided over by Ruiz Zorilla. Shortly afterwards Martos joined the dynastic Left organized by Marshal Serrano, General Lopez Dominguez, and Moret, Becerra, Balaguer, and other quondam, revolutionaries.
The identity of the author of the Gesta has always been subject to scholarly debate. Although the first words of the opening sentencean initial "P" followed with the words "dictus magister ac quondam bone memorie gloriosissimi Bele regis Hungarie notarius"describe him, they cannot be interpreted unambiguously. First of all, the interpretation of the "P dictus magister" text is unclear. The text may refer to a man whose monogram was P or it may be an abbreviation of the Latin word for "aforementioned" (praedictus) in reference to a name on the title page which is now missing.
Between 1211 and 1225, he received fifteen Papal commissions, which required him to regularly leave his monastery and involve himself again in contemporary politics. Having resigned his diocese, Conrad remained a bishop in rank and prerogative even while also a monk. Contemporary documents often refer to him as the "[lord] [brother] bishop [and monk] of Sichem", or "in Sichem". In Papal documents he is referred to as the "former bishop of Halberstadt" (episcopus quondam Halberstadensis), although he was always addressed by the pope as "brother" (as protocol demanded for a bishop) and not as "son" (as it would for a monk).
He came to Helsingfors, Helsinki in 1831 and became a member of the circle of young nationalist men surrounding Johan Ludvig Runeberg, in whose home he stayed for some time. Topelius became a student at the Imperial Alexander University of Finland in 1833, received his master's degree (cand. philol.) in 1840, the Licentiate degree in history in 1844 and his PhD in 1847, having defended a dissertation titled De modo matrimonia jungendi apud fennos quondam vigente ("About the custom of marriage among the ancient Finns"). Besides history, his academic studies had for periods been devoted both to Theology and Medicine.
The word pēdīcātor ("buggerer") is used in a poem by Catullus's friend the orator Licinius Calvus quoted by Suetonius (Caesar 49), in which the King of Bithynia is referred to as pēdīcātor Caesaris ("the buggerer of Caesar"), referring to a rumour that in his youth Julius Caesar had had an affair with king Nicomedes. Martial on the other hand preferred to use the shorter form pēdīcō or pēdīco, of the same meaning,Adams (1982), p. 123. for example at 11.87: :dīves erās quondam: sed tunc pēdīco fuistī et tibi nūlla diū fēmina nōta fuit. nunc sectāris anūs.
John was married to Matilda of Vianden (ca. 1216–), daughter of Henry I, Count of Vianden and Margaret Courtenay, Matilda′s mother Margaret was daughter of Peter Courtenay, Latin emperor of Constantinople, and thus sister of Latin emperors Robert and Baldwin II. Their daughter Maria was married to "Anselm of Keu". Their marriage licenses were issued in 1253 and 1254, by the papal chancellery. The first document mentions the marriage "inter Anselmum de Keu ac Mariam, natam Matildis dominae de Posaga, natae comitissae Viennensis", while the second document mentions "Maria, nate quondam Calojohanni" and also mentions Maria′s maternal uncle as "imperatore Constantinopolitano, eiusdem Matildis avunculo".
The first indication that these devices were used for birth control, rather than disease prevention, is the 1605 theological publication De iustitia et iure (On justice and law) by Catholic theologian Leonardus Lessius, who condemned them as immoral. In 1666, the English Birth Rate Commission attributed a recent downward fertility rate to use of "condons", the first documented use of that word (or any similar spelling). (Other early spellings include "condam" and "quondam", from which the Italian derivation "guantone" has been suggested, from "guanto", "a glove.") A condom made from animal intestine circa 1900 In addition to linen, condoms during the Renaissance were made out of intestines and bladder.
Although there is no further mention of Pedro's second wife, Margaret, after their joint donation to Calatrava on 17 November 1189, his third and final wife (and widow), Mafalda, is not mentioned until after his death, on 3 February 1202, when she and her eldest son by Pedro, Gonzalo, sold their estate at Tragacete to the city council of Cuenca for 4,000 maravedíes.Barton, 282 and 283 n5. She refers to herself as quondam uxore comitis Petri, "formerly count Pedro's wife". She also had by Pedro a son named Rodrigo or Ruy, who in the 1190s joined his father at the royal court and became merino mayor.
He was promoted major in September 1901 and retired from the Yeomanry in 1911. On 30 July 1892, Cavendish married Lady Evelyn FitzMaurice, the elder daughter of the Marquess of Lansdowne, Viceroy of India and quondam Governor General of Canada. The couple thereafter had seven children: Edward, Marquess of Hartington (born 1895), Lady Maud Louisa Emma (born 1896), Lady Blanche Katharine (born 1898), Lady Dorothy (born 1900), Lady Rachel (born 1902), Lord Charles Arthur Francis (born 1905), and Lady Anne (born 1909). Through his children's eventual marriages, Cavendish became the father-in-law of Henry Philip Hunloke, James Stuart, Harold Macmillan, and Adele Astaire.
The king later confirmed this sale on 14 November at Acre.LaMonte, "Lords of Caesarea", 151 n. 41, quotes the charter: Galterius Caesaree Palaestine dominus, Hugonis domini bone memorie euisdem Cesaree quondam domini filius, "Lord Walter of Caesarea of Palestine, son of Lord Hugh of good memory, once also lord of Caesarea". Walter aligned with his step-father and the baronial party during the conflicts of the reign of Baldwin IV. When Guy, count of Jaffa and newly appointed bailiff of the kingdom, led an army out to the Pools of Goliath near Bethsan to face an invading army under Saladin, the baronial party, including Walter, refused to fight under him.
He ceased the professorship in 1988 to become a Senior Research Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford and returned to Cambridge as Professor of Economic History for the period 1994-1997. As of 2019, he was an Honorary Fellow at Peterhouse. He was Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge from 1994 until 2000, and was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1980, serving as president from 1997 to 2001.British Academy fellowship entry He was the recipient of the 2005 Leverhulme Medal and Prize awarded by the British Academy and in the same year became a Quondam Fellow of All Souls College.
Franjo Rački considered that Porga could have been a foreign transcription of the Slavic name Borko.Franjo Rački, Documenta historiae Croaticae periodum antiaquam illustrantia, p. 291 Vladimir Mažuranić noted that it was a genuine personal name which was attested in medieval Kingdom of Croatia at least since 12th as well Banate and Kingdom of Bosnia since 13th century in the form of Porug (Porugh de genere Boić, nobilis de Tetachich near terrae Mogorovich), Poruga, Porča, Purća / Purča, and Purđa (vir nobilis nomine Purthio quondam Streimiri). Recently, Serbian historian Tibor Živković argued that the name comes from the Iranian phrase pouru-gâo, translated as "rich in cattle".
John Pruste the former abbot of Hartland, pleaded Cromwell "as a good master", but that had not prevented Sir Thomas Arundell's ad quondam servants taking off the livestock. The last abbot, Sir Thomas Pope was accused of looting the silver plate that belonged to the Bishop of Exeter.Letter from Sir William Courtenay, knt to Thomas Cromwell, 20 April 1535 (publ 1882, Camden Society) Nevertheless, Courtenay was accused of taking the abbey's account and record books.on 6 October 1534 He was an instrument of the dissolution of the monasteries used by Thomas Cromwell to carry through the transfer of assets and wealth to the Treasury in the westcountry.
Robert Aske, gentleman, that was captain in the > insurrection of the Northern men; and one Hamerton, esquire, all which > persons were indicted of high treason against the King, and that day > condemned by a jury of knights and esquires for the same, whereupon they had > sentence to be drawn, hanged and quartered, but Ralph Bulmer, the son of > John Bulmer, was reprieved and had no sentence. > And on the 25 day of May, being the Friday in Whitsun week, Sir John Bulmer, > Sir Stephen Hamerton, knights, were hanged and headed; Nicholas Tempest, > esquire; Doctor Cockerell, priest;James Cockerell, Prior of Guisborough. > Abbot quondam of Fountains;William Thirsk. and Doctor Pickering, friar,John > Pickering of Bridlington.
Steiner's fictional author, credited as "quondam curator of the Museum of the Darwin Institute of Hy-yi- yi, Mairuwili," provides a very detailed account of the order and individual species, written in a dry, scholarly tone. Michael Ohl wrote that the book is written "in truly amusing attention to detail and using what is immediately recognizable as a practiced scientific patois". The evidently expert voice of the author, his competent writing, and apparent familiarity with conventions of academic literature set the work apart as a rare example at the intersection of fiction and scholarship. Steiner credits himself by name as illustrator of the book, and explains how that role led him to possess the only remaining record of Rhinogradentia.
Four such operations were established in Iowa, and developed to various degrees. The Associated Packing Company plant in Des Moines never progressed beyond the acquisition of a second-hand hog-scraping machine. The Farmers' Mutual Packing Company operation in Muscatine went so far as to acquire a used building and paint its name on the door. The Corn Belt Packing Company plant in Dubuque, in the quondam Dubuque Brewing and Malting Co. buildings, operated for three years before closing. The Midland Packing Company in Sioux City was incorporated in 1918. A building in the Sioux City stockyards, designed by Chicago architectural firm Gardner and Lindberg, was constructed in 1918–19, at an estimated cost of $3 million.
However, no surviving document explicitly attributes to Jordan command of the district around Nocera, nor, before becoming prince, did he employ a formal title. His charter always refer to him as "Jordan, son of the Jordan once prince" (Jordanus Jordani filius quondam principis). In a deed of gift of 1113, Jordan states that property he was dispensing was "in the territory of Nocera, which belongs to me" (in territorio Nucerie quod michi pertinet) and among the witnesses to the document are "the good men of the aforesaid castle of Nocera" (, probably his vassals. In every other charter he issued from this date on he explicitly recognises the authority of his brother, Prince Robert I of Capua.
The heavily weathered tomb is believed to date from the 14th or 15th centuries. A branch of the Cockburns were lairds of nearby Henderland in Selkirkshire starting in the mid-14th century. In perhaps the first recorded mention of a Cockburn, a Petro de Cokburne witnessed a charter in the "Register of the House of Soltre" that described a gift of arable land in Lempitlaw, just east of Kelso in Roxburghshire in about 1190–1220, during the reign of King William "the Lion" (1165–1214).Carta Florie relicte quondam Ade Quintini de donacione terrarum de Welflat in territorio de Lympetlaw, 9th charter in Registrum Domus de Soltre, published with notes in English by the Bannatyne Club, Edinburgh, 1861.
1: 591 Alan de Lauder was dead by 20 March 1407 when Robert is recorded as executor testamenti quondam Alani de Lawedre patris sui nuper defuncti.Reid, John J., Early Notices of the Bass Rock & its Owners, Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Edinburgh, 1885 As Alan de Lawedre's eldest son and, so, the eldest grandson of Sir Robert de Lawedre of The Bass he was placed in fee by his grandfather in the feudal barony of The Bass and its lands, as well as the castle of Edrington, Berwickshire, and that estate. Because of his father's longevity he continued to be often referred to as "of Edrington", even after he was placed in fee of The Bass.
Gabriel Gorodetsky (born 13 May 1945) is a Quondam Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, and emeritus professor of history at Tel Aviv University. Gorodetsky studied History and Russian Studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and went on to obtain his Ph.D degree under the supervision of British historian E. H. Carr in Oxford. He was the director of the Cummings Center for Russian Studies at Tel Aviv University from 1991–2007. He has been a visiting fellow of St. Antony's College in Oxford in 1979 and in 1993, of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington in 1986, of All Souls in Oxford in 2006, and a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.
137 A later confirmation charter granted in 1207 by King John (1199–1216) to Neath Abbey confirmed to the monks the former grants of Richard de Grenville:Clark, G.T. Cartae et Alia Munimenta Quae ad Dominium de Glamorgancia Pertinent, vol.2, p.309, Charter CCCVII > Johannes Deo Gratia etc. Sciatis nos dedisse et concessisse et presenti > carta nostra confirmasse Deo et ecclesie sancte Trinitatis de Neth et > monachis ibidem Deo servientibus locum ubi castellum Ricardi de Granavilla > quondam fuit cum omnibus pertinentiis suis et totam terram quam idem > Ricardus habuit inter Thawy et Neth, in bosco et plano cum omnibus > partinentiis suis; habenda et tenenda in liberam puram et perpetuara > elemosinam, quieta ab omni servicio sicut predictus Ricardus ea illis prius > dedit et carta sua confirmavit.
On that date Fernando referred to her as Stephania, comitissa, quondam uxore mea ("Estefanía, countess, formerly my wife") in a donation to the Diocese of Zamora, cf. Barton (1997), 242 n3. In 1183 Fernando made donations to the Order of Calatrava and to the regular clergy of the Sar. In 1188 he was appointed majordomo by Ferdinand II, and he continued in that post under Alfonso IX as late as September 1189. This period, the final years of the reign of Ferdinand II and the early years of that of his son, corresponds to Fernando Ponce's maximum power and influence, when he held the large and important tenencias of Extremadura (1188–92), Salamanca (1189–90), Tierra de Campos (1186–93), Valladolid (1190), and Zamora (1176, 1188–92).
Ammianus served as an officer in the army of the emperors Constantius II and Julian, he served in Gaul (Julian) and in the east (twice for Constantius, once under Julian). He professes to have been "a former soldier and a Greek" (miles quondam et graecus), and his enrollment among the elite protectores domestici (household guards) shows that he was of middle class or higher birth. Consensus is that Ammianus probably came from a curial family, but it is also possible that he was the son of a comes Orientis of the same family name. He entered the army at an early age, when Constantius II was emperor of the East, and was sent to serve under Ursicinus, governor of Nisibis in Mesopotamia, and magister militum.
26 In its review of the 1989 London revival, the reviewer for The Guardian wrote that the "production also strikes me as infinitely superior to Harold Prince's 1975 version at the Adelphi. Mr Judge's great innovation is to transform the Liebeslieder Singers from the evening- dressed, after-dinner line-up into 18th century ghosts weaving in and out of the action...But Mr Judge's other great realisation is that, in Sondheim, the lyrics are not an adornment to a song but their very essence: understand them and the show will flow. Thus Dorothy Tutin as Desiree, the touring thesp eventually reunited with her quondam lover, is not the melting romantic of previous productions but a working mother with the sharpness of a hat- pin."Billington, Michael.
Available on Google Books. He died on 16 April 1623, and was succeeded as abbot by Bernard Campmans. In 1627 his remains were transferred to Bruges, where the community had relocated.Nivardus Van Hove, Het leven, mirakelen ende wonderlycke vindinghe van het heyligh ende ongheschonden lichaem van den S. Idesbaldus derden abt van de vermaerde abdye van Duynen, nu binnen de stadt van Brugghe, met noch eenighe ghedenck-weerdighe historien (Bruges, Joos vander Meulen, 1687), pp. 239-240. Available on Google Books. His biography, by Charles de Visch, was published in Bruges in 1655 and reprinted in Brussels in 1660.Charles de Visch, Vita Reverendi in Christo Patris ac Domini, D. Adriani Cancellier, monasterii Dunensis, Ordinis Cisterciensis, quondam Abbatis (Brussels, Philip Vleugaert, 1655). Available on Google Books.
Rubbing from the tomb of Bishop Hallam, Constance Cathedral, at the foot of the steps to the high altar, to an English design. The text of hexameter verses, rhymed at end and middle, in the ledger lines is as follows: Subiacet hic stratus, Robert Hallum vocitatus; Quondam prelatus, Sarum sub honore creatus; Hic decretorum, doctor pacisque creator; Nobilis Anglorum, regis fuit ambasciator; Festum Cuthberti, Septembris mense vigebat; In quo Roberti, mortem Constantia flebat; Anno milleno, tricent octuageno; Sex cum ter deno, cum Christo vivat amoeno. Robert Hallam ( Alum or Halam; died 4 September 1417) was an English churchman, Bishop of Salisbury and English representative at the Council of Constance. He was Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 1403 to 1405.
Juraj Dalmatinac (George the Dalmatian) monument in Zadar Two Renaissance putti by Giorgio da Sebenico with the consecration inscription of the construction of the Cathedral of St. Jacob in Šibenik, Croatia At the feet of the two Renaissance putti by the north apse of Cathedral of St.James the artist signed in Latin: "hoc opus cuvarum fecit magister Georgius Mathaei Dalmaticus", and on a contract from 1441 he signed: "Georgius lapicida quondam Mathei de Jadra Civis Sibenicenis" (trans. "Georgius sculptor son of Matheus from Zadar citizen of Šibenik"). Those are only known signatures of the artist. References to the artist are most common under the name Giorgio da Sebenico, Architecture in Italy, 1400-1500 by Ludwig Heinrich Heydenreich, Yale University Press; Second Revised edition, 1996; , pp.
So intricate the drill of Trojan boys Who wove the patterns of their prancing horses, Figured, in sport, retreats and skirmishes …Translation by Robert Fitzgerald of Vergil, Aeneid 5.580–593: olli discurrere pares atque agmina terni / diductis soluere choris, rursusque uocati / conuertere uias infestaque tela tulere. / inde alios ineunt cursus aliosque recursus / aduersi spatiis, alternosque orbibus orbis / impediunt pugnaeque cient simulacra sub armis; / et nunc terga fuga nudant, nunc spicula uertunt / infensi, facta pariter nunc pace feruntur. / ut quondam Creta fertur Labyrinthus in alta / parietibus textum caecis iter ancipitemque / mille uiis habuisse dolum, qua signa sequendi / frangeret indeprensus et inremeabilis error; / haud alio Teucrum nati uestigia cursu / impediunt texuntque fugas et proelia ludo. Complex intertwining manoeuvres as a display of horsemanship were characteristic of Roman cavalry reviews on the parade ground.
However, it seems that the elected, but not yet consecrated, bishops who were appointed cardinals were generally obliged to resign their sees.For example, in September 1173 Alexander III named bishop-elect of Meaux, Pietro da Pavia, to the rank of cardinal-priest of S. Crisogono, and in 1175 forced him to resign his see (Ganzer, p. 123–125 no. 50). In 1182, Pedro de Cardona, archbishop-elect of Toledo, was named cardinal-priest of S. Lorenzo in Damaso by Lucius III and from the document dated 3 June 1182 appears that he resigned the see of Toledo: P(etro)…presbitero Cardinali, quondam electo vestro (Ramón Riu y Cabanas, Primeros cardenales de la sede primada, in: Boletín de la Real Academia de la Historia, XXVII, Madrid 1896, p. 144).
Clüver was an antiquary, who was given a special appointment at Leiden as geographer and put in charge of the university's library, but his life's project, it developed, was a general study of the geography of Antiquity, based not only on classical literary sources, but – and this was his contribution – supplemented by wide travels and local inspections. He became virtually the founder of historical geography. Clüver's first work, in 1611, concerning the lower reaches of the Rhine and its tribal inhabitants in Roman times (Commentarius de tribus Rheni alveis, et ostiis; item. De Quinque populis quondam accolis; scilicet de Toxandris, Batavis, Caninefatibus, Frisiis, ac Marsacis) touched a source of national pride among the Seventeen Provinces, for the Dutch were enjoying a twelve years' truce in their Eighty Years' War of liberation.
"Russell Chantry", ibid. footnote 51, mentioned in the 1305 return of the dean of the Isle of Wight Sir Theobald, as his father, was not based at Dyrham but in the Isle of Wight. He died in 1349 leading local forces against a French invasion of the Isle. He had sub-enfeoffed Dyrham to Roger de Cantock(d.1349), who is recorded as holding the manor in 1347 in the records of the feudal aid of 20 Edward III (1347): > "De Rogero Cantek pro uno foedo militis in Derham et Henton quod Willelmus > Russel quondam tenuit ibidem, XX s" (Received from Roger de Cantock for one > knight's fee in Dyrham and Hinton which William Russell once held the same, > 20 shillings) A certain Roger de Cantock, possibly his father, was prepositor to the Sheriff of Bristol in 1260 and 1271.
Nicetas promoted Latin sacred music for use during the Eucharistic worship and reputedly composed a number of liturgical hymns, among which some twentieth-century scholars number the major Latin Christian hymn of praise, Te Deum, traditionally attributed to Ambrose and Augustine. He is presumed to be the missionary to the barbarian Thracian tribe of the Bessi. Because of his missionary activity, his contemporary and friend, Paulinus of Nola, lauded him poetically for instructing in the Gospel barbarians changed by him from wolves to sheep and brought into the fold of peace, and for teaching to sing of Christ with Roman heart bandits, who previously had no such ability."quod barbaros oves factos Evangelium edocuisset atque in pacis aulam duxisset et quondam inperiti ac latrones Christum corde romano resonare didicisset" (Martyrologium Romanum Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2001. , p. 330).
Ednyfed was buried in his own chapel, now Llandrillo yn Rhos Church, Llandrillo-yn-Rhos (Rhos-on- Sea), North Wales, which was enlarged to become the parish church after the previous one (Dinerth Parish Church) had been inundated by the sea during Ednyfed's lifetime. A tombstone attributed to him once lay near the altar but is now in a vertical position in the entrance porch of the church, but the name inscribed is "Ednyfed quondam vicarius"(sometime vicar), and an "Ednyfed ap Bleddyn" was vicar in 1407. Two other sons were successively seneschals of Gwynedd under Llywelyn ap Gruffudd. After Llywelyn's death in 1282, the family made its peace with the English crown, though a descendant joined the revolt of Madog ap Llywelyn in 1294–5, acting as Madog's seneschal after his proclamation of himself as prince of Wales.
In 1927, Stern received her doctorate and married the director and founder of the academy, the historian Eugen Täubler.The Court Jew A Contribution To The History Of The Period Of Absolutism In Central Europe by Selma Stern In 1936 the Täublers moved to England in an attempt to move the academy, but returned to Germany a year later. The quondam building of the Hochschule für die Wissenschaft des Judentums at Tucholskystraße 9 in Berlin (since 1999 named Leo-Baeck-Haus and seat of the Central Council of Jews in Germany) In 1938 one of the volumes was ready to be published by the Schocken Verlag, but due to Nazi policy all the stock, including her manuscript and many documents were burned during Kristallnacht. Stern was not allowed to visit any public libraries or archives, but got help from several scholars to finish her work.
It has been speculated that Leonardo might have taken the Madonna Litta with him to Venice in March 1500, as the diarist Marcantonio Michiel apparently recorded its presence in the Ca' Contarini in that city in 1543: The earliest print of the composition is Venetian, by an artist in the circle of Zoan Andrea, and at least one painted copy by the Venetian school is known, in the Museo di Castelvecchio in Verona. In 1784, the earliest secure date in its provenance, the painting was bought by Prince Alberico XII di Belgioioso from one Giuseppe Ro. After Belgioioso's death in 1813 it passed into the collection of the Litta family, from whom it takes its current name. In 1865 the Russian Tsar Alexander II acquired the panel from Count Antonio Litta,, n. 5 quondam minister to Saint Petersburg, for the Hermitage Museum, where it has been exhibited to this day.
Late in his life, on May 15, 1278, John was appointed by Pope Nicholas III to the position of Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem,.Conradus Eubel, OFM Conv., Hierarchia Catholici Medii Aevi...ab anno 1198 usque ad annum 1431 perducta editio altera (Monasterii 1913), p. 275. It was a promotion to the prelacy which he did not welcome and which he wished to decline. After consideration and with considerable reluctance, the Pope wrote Master John a long letter (October 1, 1278) rehearsing the reasons why he should not ask to be released from the episcopal office, addressing him in the letter as Joannes electus Hierosolymitanus, quondam Ordinis Fratrum Praedicatorum Magister (John, Bishop-Elect of Jerusalem and former Master of the Order of Preachers).T. Ripoll, Bullarium ordinis FF. Praedicatorum I (Rome: Hieronymus Mainard, 1729), p. 572. August Potthast, Regesta pontificum Romanorum II, no. 21462. Augustinus Theiner (Editor), Caesaris S. R. E. Cardinalis Baronii, Od. Raynaldi et Jac.
Imperial coins recovered from the treasure hunters depicted both Alfred the Great and Ceolwulf II of Mercia, indicating "a previously-unknown alliance between the kingdoms of Wessex and Mercia" according to a news report. "These coins enable us to re-interpret our history at a key moment in the creation of England as a single kingdom," said Gareth Williams, curator of early medieval coins at the British Museum. A listing about the Archenfield area of Herefordshire appeared in the 1870-72 Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales with the following specifics about early incidents involving the Danes: > IRCHINGFIELD, or ARCHENFIELD, a quondam liberty and a rural deanery in the S > of Hereford. The liberty was known to the ancient Welsh as Urging, to the > Saxons as Ircingafeld, and at Domesday as Arcenfelde; was ravaged in 905 by > the Danes, and given afterwards, by the Crown, to the Earls of Shrewsbury; > and had the custom of gavelkind, and some other peculiar customs.
159 The Chronicle of Lanercost claims that the remorseful Henry III had given a gold crown to Eleanor to legitimize himself and his descendants shortly before her death, and only three days later the crown was donated to young Prince Edward (the future Edward I of England) as a gift. Another version says that she only wore the crown for one day before returning it. The Annales Londonienses recorded the event of her death, referring to her as "Alienora quondam comitis Britanniæ filia, in custodia diuturni carceris strictissime reservata" (in English: "Eleanor, the daughter of the late Count of Brittany, long established in the custody of the strictest prison reserved"), and noted that she was the rightful heir to England,Stubbs, W. (ed.) (1882) Annales Londonienses and Annales Paulini, London, p.38 although some years after her death Henry III was still unwilling to admit that he was initially not the hereditary king of England.
The image on the brass is believed to be a true representation of him and he most likely sat for it shortly before his death. It has been suggested that it is of Flemish origin but, because of the similarities it bears to the brass of Sir John Filmer in East Sutton, Kent, it is now believed to be by Edward Marshall. His epitaph on the brass reads: > Hic iacet Samuell Harsnett quondam vicarius huius ecclesiæ primo indignus > episcopus Cicestrensis deindignior Norwicencis demum indignissim' > archiepiscop' Eboraceñ qui obiit XXV die maii anno dñi: 1631 > Here lies Samuel Harsnett once vicar of this church, first unworthy bishop > of Chichester, then more unworthy bishop of Norwich, finally most unworthy > archbishop of York; he died on the 25th day in May in the year of our Lord > 1631. There are two changes from the inscription he requested in his will – his name is spelt as "Samuell", not "Samuel" and "deindignior" should have been "dein indignior".
Very little is known about the exact conditions of the Hospital. The earliest drawings are in accord with the 1531 Mortification. William Orem, the Old Aberdeen Town Clerk, writing in 1725 provides some details: Early drawing of Dunbar's Hospital - date unknown c 1700. The Lintel from Bishop Dunbar's Hospital (c1820) - "Per Executores" (See Orem, 1782) From a drawing by Mr J Logan, Aberdeen in a Collection held by the National Library of Scotland by George Henry Hutton, a professional soldier and amateur antiquary. (With permission) > “ …Above the gate is an inscription “PER EXECUTORES” and on the south side > of the ..oratory another inscription, viz. Duodecim pauperibus domum hanc > Reverendus Paper Gavinus Dunbar hujius alme sedis quondam pontifex > aedisicari jussit anno a Christo nato 1532”. [Trans. Gavin Dunbar, reverend > Father in God, who was sometime Bishop of this holy see, ordered this house > to be built for twelve poor men, anno 1532 – Glory To God] Within the > Oratory there is an further dedication (which includes) .. “Gloria episcopi > est pauperum opibis providere. Ignominia sacerdotis est proprijs studere > divitijs Patientia pauperum non perbit in sinem..” [ Trans.

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