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Topic: William <b>of<



  
 <b>Williamb> Mahone - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<b>Williamb> Mahone was active in the economic and political life of Virginia after the Civil War for almost 30 years.
Beginning with the Mahone immigration from Ireland, he was the fourth individual to be called simply "<b>Williamb> Mahone." Even his adversaries seemed to respect this preference, and it is extremely rare to find written accounts using his middle name or initial.
Although Mahone was not to live to see the outcome, for several decades, Virginia and West Virginia disputed the new state's share of the Virginian government's debt.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Mahone   (2206 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> Quantrill - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Inquiries after this recluse made in Victoria by unidentified Americans led to their killing of the recluse, who they claimed was no less than <b>Williamb> Quantrill and whom they sought out to avenge the deaths of fellow Union soldiers.
Many historians, however, believe that Quantrill had planned the raid in advance of the building collapse.
On May 10, Quantrill was shot in a Union ambush and died from the wound on June 6 at the age of 27.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Quantrill   (920 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> Tell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Max Frisch in his "<b>Williamb> Tell for Schools" deconstructed the legend, portraying the bailiff as a well-meaning administrator suffering from being placed in a barbaric back-corner of the empire, while Tell is a simpleton who stumbles into his adventure by a series of misunderstandings.
The Legend of <b>Williamb> Tell by Markus Jud.
Characters from the <b>Williamb> Tell legend are featured in decks of playing cards popular in central Europe.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Tell   (1798 words)

  
 Probert Encyclopaedia: People and Peoples (<b>Williamb> N-<b>Williamb> S)
<b>Williamb> Smellie then became one of the trio to produce the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and although he acknowledged copying and inserting existing articles by some 150 authors, <b>Williamb> Smellie also wrote his own articles including a controversial criticism on Doctor Johnson and his dictionary.
<b>Williamb> Penn was an English quaker and the founder of Pennsylvania.
<b>Williamb> Parsons, the third earl of Rosse, was an English astronomer.
http://www.probertencyclopaedia.com/CW3.HTM   (1896 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> Safire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<b>Williamb> L. Safire (born December 17, 1929) is an author, semi-retired columnist, and former journalist and presidential speechwriter.
<b>Williamb> L. Safire on NBC's Meet The Press with Tim Russert.
Safire is a graduate of the Bronx High School of Science, an elite public school in New York City.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Safire   (819 words)

  
 Salem Witch Trials Governor Sir <b>Williamb> Phips
<b>Williamb> Phips was born on February 2, 1651 in the then remote trading village of Woolwich, Maine.
Phips placed prominent and experienced men of Boston and Salem on the new court, under the new lieutenant-governor, <b>Williamb> Stoughton whom he placed in charge.
With his crew and ship, Phips sailed to the Caribbean, finding substantial treasure in the sea in 1687 when he and his ship, the James and Mary, came across the wreck of the Spanish ship, Concepcion.
http://www.iath.virginia.edu/salem/people/phips.html   (819 words)

  
 Strauss and Howe - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Strauss and Howe (<b>Williamb> Strauss and Neil Howe) are a duo of authors who are known for their books on generations and history.
Strauss and Howe have been criticized for the use of archetypes, which are more critically seen as stereotypes.
The authors are also criticized for linking their theory in The Fourth Turning to mythology and referencing the writings of Joseph Campbell, which is seen by critics as bordering on mysticism or the supernatural and thus detracting from the theory's credibility.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Strauss   (1403 words)

  
 The Seattle Times: Arts & Entertainment: 'The Outlaw Sea': <b>Williamb> Langewiesche on the growing anarchy at sea
After bringing back eye-opening reports from the Mexican-American border ("Cutting for Sign"), the interior of the Sahara Desert ("Sahara Unveiled") and the ruins of the World Trade Center ("American Ground"), <b>Williamb> Langewiesche has turned his investigative eye to what's happening — piracy, pollution, possible terrorism-in-the-making — on our oceans.
Langewiesche cites rumors that Osama bin Laden "is said to own or control up to twenty aging freighters," and he mentions the arrest of suspected terrorists, including a stowaway known as "Container Bob," arrested in October 2001 in a southern Italian port when he was discovered drilling ventilation holes from inside his container.
<b>Williamb> Langewiesche will read from "The Outlaw Sea" at 5 p.m.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/artsentertainment/2001934248_langewiesche23.html   (1403 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> III of England - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<b>Williamb> attempted to conciliate James, who he hoped would join the League of Augsburg, whilst at the same time trying not to offend the Protestant party in England.
In about 1667, as <b>Williamb> III approached the age of eighteen, the pro-Orange party attempted to restore the Prince to power by securing for him the offices of Stadtholder and Captain-General.
<b>Williamb>, the son of <b>Williamb> II, Prince of Orange and Mary, Princess Royal and Princess of Orange, was born in The Hague.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_III_of_England   (3761 words)

  
 Oscar Wilde - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thus during his time in prison, Wilde wrote a 50,000 word letter to Douglas, which he was not allowed to send while still a prisoner, but which he was allowed to take with him at the end of his sentence.
Although Wilde later claimed to have told the customs officer "I have nothing to declare except my genius", historians and biographers have concluded that this is an embellishment of Wilde's as there is no contemporary evidence that this occurred.
Wilde: "The love that dares not speak its name" in this century is such a great affection of an elder for a younger man as there was between David and Jonathan, such as Plato made the very basis of his philosophy, and such as you find in the sonnets of Michelangelo and Shakespeare.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Wilde   (3880 words)

  
 Shakespeare's Unorthodox Biography - New Evidence of an Authorship Problem by Diana Price
This has a signature on the title-page which many, many very knowledgeable people believe to be that of <b>Williamb> Shakespeare.
On his website in his section on Hand D, Kathman directs readers to Giles Dawson's 1992 article, "A Seventh Signature for Shakespeare." In a message to the "Shaksper" discussion group on 19 June 1995, Kathman cited some authorities concerning "the Folger Shakespeare Library's copy of <b>Williamb> Lambarde's Archaionomia, a treatise on Anglo-Saxon law.
I will not attempt to summarize the evidence here, but it is summarized by Samuel Schoenbaum's <b>Williamb> Shakespeare: Records and Images (1981), and by Giles Dawson in an article he wrote for Shakespeare Quarterly a few years ago (1992?), a couple of years before his death.
http://www.shakespeare-authorship.com/resources/Archaionomia.asp   (3880 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> Clarke Quantrill
On October 30, 1992, the skull of <b>Williamb> Quantrill was buried in an infants coffin in the Dover 4
<b>Williamb> Clarke Quantrill has been described as being the "Bloodiest man in the annals of America." He was the leader of the Missouri Partisan Rangers and guerilla gang during the Civil War.
<b>Williamb>’s father was a tin smith and was involved in several scandals that included theft and fraud.
http://www.millersparanormalresearch.com/Pages/Quantrill.htm   (2351 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited Special reports Obituary:<b>Williamb> Manchester
Even Jacqueline Kennedy, who hated the book and offered a magazine $1m to kill its serialisation, said publicly that Manchester had made "inaccurate and unfair references" to Johnson and others, though she did not name them.
Lyndon Johnson saw The Death Of A President as simply part of a conspiracy to discredit him, masterminded by Robert Kennedy, whom he disliked even more than he feared.
The historian of the feud, Jeff Shesol, however, recorded that Johnson's relatively reticent public response to the book worked; as a result of the row, 20% of Americans thought less of Robert Kennedy as a result.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1229480,00.html   (2351 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> I of England - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<b>Williamb>'s defeat of these led to what became known as the harrowing of the North in which Northumbria was laid waste to deny his enemies its resources.
<b>Williamb> is said to have deported large numbers of the old landed classes into slavery through Bristol.
<b>Williamb> succeeded to his father's Duchy of Normandy at the young age of 7 in 1035 and was known as Duke <b>Williamb> II of Normandy.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_I_of_England   (2351 words)

  
 Board of Contract Appeals Decision - HUD
<b>Williamb> D. Muir (Muir) was the president and chief executive officer of Metro when it was founded in 1991; he became Metro's executive director in 1993.
Nor do I find Muir's explanation for answering the subject question in the negative, i.e., that he was in a hurry or that he misunderstood the question, to be the least bit exculpatory notwithstanding Muir's long record of service on behalf of the nation's homeless.
One cannot realistically suggest that the IRS, which is part of the U.S. Department of the Treasury and whose employees are Federal employees, is not a branch of the United States Government.
http://www.hud.gov/offices/bca/decisions/das/muir.cfm   (2478 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> Desmond Taylor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<b>Williamb> Desmond Taylor (born <b>Williamb> Cunningham Deane-Tanner April 26, 1872 in Carlow, Ireland – February 1, 1922 in Los Angeles) was a successful US film director and a popular figure in the growing Hollywood film colony of the 1910s and early 20s.
After Taylor’s death several people said he had organised a party of employees to enter Taylor’s home and remove incriminating items before police were notified of the death.
The Taylor murder, along with the Fatty Arbuckle scandal and the drug related deaths of such stars as Olive Thomas, Wallace Reid, Barbara La Marr and Alma Rubens were catalysts in the effort of Hollywood to purge itself of undesirable influences.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Desmond_Taylor   (1387 words)

  
 Telegraph News Sir <b>Williamb> Deakin
Deakin - who was neither aware that Tito was the secretary-general of the Communist Party, nor of high-level contacts between the Partisans and the Germans - was favourably impressed by the Yugoslav's "pragmatism".
Anglo-Yugoslav colloquia, chaired by Deakin, met privately and by invitation only, with the Yugoslav view represented by official historians.
Deakin - who by then had become head of SOE Cairo - received the DSO, and upon the transfer of GHQ to Italy was attached to the staff of Harold Macmillan (Minister Resident in the Mediterranean) as adviser to the Balkan Air Force.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/01/25/db2501.xml&sSheet=/portal/2005/01/25/ixportal.html   (1778 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> H. Seward - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Seward survived an assassination attempt on April 14, 1865 (the same night Abraham Lincoln was shot) from Lewis Powell (alias: Lewis Payne), an associate of John Wilkes Booth, who broke into Seward's bedroom and stabbed him repeatedly.
(1839-1920), Frederick <b>Williamb> Seward (1835-1915) and Augustus Henry Seward (1826-1876).
Arrested citizens were not told the reason for their arrest, no investigation of their alleged wrongdoing was carried out, and no trials were held.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_H._Seward   (842 words)

  
 <b>WILLIAMb> TELL - LoveToKnow Article on <b>WILLIAMb> TELL
The alleged proofs of the existence of a real <b>Williamb> Tell in Uri in the 14th century break down hopelessly, (1) The entries in the parish registers are forged.
His book is a striking proof that the popular Tell legend cannot claim the support of authentic history, while his attempt to find room for the atrocities of the wicked bailiffs elsewhere than at Altdorf consists only in suggesting an intricate series of possibilities, none of which are supported by any positive evidence.
The levying of these tolls gave rise to various disputes between the men of Uri and the bailiffs of the dukes of Austria, and by 1319 (if not already in 1309) the claim to levy them was silently given up.
http://52.1911encyclopedia.org/T/TE/TELL_WILLIAM.htm   (1682 words)

  
 Dictionary of Australian Biography D
Deakin was a great Australian and a great man. He began as a dreamer, he was always an idealist, yet he realized that he was in a world of men who had to be lived with.
<b>Williamb> Deakin was born in Northamptonshire in 1819, and came to Australia immediately after his marriage in 1849.
By many people Deakin's action is considered to be the one blot on his career, but the statement of one of his biographers that "dislike of Reid and anxiety lest a truce should prove harmful to protection induced him to break his compact" scarcely covers the whole ground.
http://gutenberg.net.au/dictbiog/0-dict-biogD.html   (21566 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> Dalrymple - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<b>Williamb> Dalrymple is a writer of popular travel works which are based on historical fact.
Dalrymple is an active opponent of what he sees as the rise of Islamophobia in the west.
Dalrymple is also a critic of the state of Israel in its dealings with the Palestinians.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Dalrymple   (733 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> Carstairs
CARSTAIRS, <b>WILLIAMb>, an eminent political and ecclesiastical character, was born at the village of Cathcart in the neighbourhood of Glasgow, on the 11
Having completed his course at the school, Mr Carstairs entered the college of Edinburgh in his nineteenth year, where he studied for four years under Mr, afterwards Sir <b>Williamb> Paterson, who in later life became clerk to the privy council of Scotland.
Sydney now dropped all his objections, and letters were immediately forwarded to Carstairs, requesting him to come over, and an express was sent down to Scotland, for his friends to come up, in order to a speedy adjustment of every particular relative to the insurrection and consentaneous invasion.
http://www.electricscotland.com/history/other/carstairs_william.htm   (733 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> II, king of England
<b>Williamb> ruled England with a strong hand and aroused the hatred particularly of the church, for which he had utter contempt.
From 1097 to 1099 <b>Williamb> was engaged primarily in campaigns in France, securing and holding northern Maine but failing in his attempt to seize the French Vexin.
<b>Williamb> was killed by an arrow while on a hunting party, and there is some evidence to suggest that his death was not an accident.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0852296.html   (514 words)

  
 <b>Williamb> III of England
<b>Williamb> was at first opposed to the project of invasion.
<b>Williamb> attempted to conciliate James, whom he hoped would join the League of Augsburg, whilst at the same time trying not to offend the Protestant party in England.
<b>Williamb>, Duke of Gloucester in 1700 left the Princess Anne as the only individual left in the line of succession established by the Bill of Rights.
http://omniknow.com/essays/William_III_of_England.html   (514 words)

  
 <b>WILLIAMb> HENRY SEWARD - LoveToKnow Article on <b>WILLIAMb> HENRY SEWARD
His son, FREDERICK <b>WILLIAMb> SEWARD, was born in Auburn, New York, on the 8th of July 1830, graduated at Union College in 1849 and was admitted to the bar at Rochester, N.Y., in 1851.
Although this idea had often been expressed by others, and by Seward himself in his speech of 1848, yet he was severely criticized, and four days later he sought to render this statement innocuous also.
Nine days later, while lying ill at his home at Washington, he was attacked by one Lewis Powell, alias Payne, a fellow-conspirator of John Wilkes Booth, at the same time that Lincoln was assassinated.
http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/S/SE/SEWARD_WILLIAM_HENRY.htm   (2752 words)

  
 4hoej11.txt
<b>Williamb>, who had retired for a few days to Loo, learned, with surprise and extreme vexation, that cavalry, infantry, artillery, bridges of boats, were fast approaching the fated city by many converging routes.
<b>Williamb>'s headquarters were enlivened by a crowd of splendid equipages and by a rapid succession of sumptuous banquets.
But his temper was very different when he woke the next morning, when the courage which he had drawn from wine and company had evaporated, when he was alone with the iron grates and stone walls, and when the thought of the block, the axe and the sawdust rose in his mind.
http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext01/4hoej11.txt   (19831 words)

  
 Religious Controversy: POPISH PLOT
According to one (admittedly partisan) account, "Hundreds of innocent people died through the Oates Plot; one Jesuit, <b>Williamb> Culcheth, reckoned that four hundred perished in prison, some of them victims of the plague" (Bernard Basset, SJ, The English Jesuits, 1967).
<b>Williamb> Bedloe (1650-1680) and Stephen Dugdale (1640?-1683), equally unsavoury characters who had also wormed their way into Catholic confidence, chipped in with further accusations and, swept up in a national panic, the courts were hasty to condemn and gainful employment for the executioners ensued.
Sixteen innocent men were executed (barring one, who apparently escaped) for their part in an alleged plot to kill the king (Charles II), together with eight Catholic priests executed in the ensuing purge against Catholics, but the real death toll was much higher.
http://www.rarebooksinjapan.com/religious/popishplot.html   (19831 words)

  
 Historical Biographies, Nova Scotia: Sir <b>Williamb> Phips (1651-95).
"Massachusetts had made an easy conquest of all Acadia; a conquest, however, which she had neither the men nor the money to secure by sufficient garrisons." Leaving the community under a provisional government consisting of a council of local French leaders, Phips returned to Boston to bask in his glory.
Phips was fitted out and returned to the Caribbean in two ships, James of London (22 guns) and Henry of London (10 guns).
Phips -- by then an accomplished Caribbean navigator -- calculated the location of about where the fleet likely got itself into trouble: north of Puerto Plata on a reef off the Turks, the reefs of Ambrogian Shoals.
http://www.blupete.com/Hist/BiosNS/1600-00/Phips.htm   (19831 words)

  
 yass courier
<b>Williamb> George Acocks, married Miss Lella Marine Broughton, daughter of Mr H B Broughton and granddaughter to the late Mr Rees Jones and Mr JA Broughton of Tumut, niece to Messrs HR and JT Jones of Taemas, Yass at Hay on Tuesday.
<b>Williamb> Garner of Toomooroma married Mary Jones, fourth daughter of the late Mr G Jones of Toomooroma on 5.4.1893 in Tumut.
<b>Williamb> the eldest son of JJ Bradford, St Kilda Melbourne married Elizabeth Margaret Downey the youngest daughter of the late WH Downey late of Yass NSW at All Saints, Wickham Terrace on 18.4.1874.
http://members.iinet.net.au/~sgrieves/yass_courier.htm   (19831 words)

  
 Richard Stubbs Family Site - Research
<b>Williamb> Gilbert against whom Richard and John Stubbs brought their suits, was godson of Christopher Webster, a Gloucester County resident.
June 16, 1714, the date of the third Stubbs land patent, was the land transaction that led W. Stubbs to speculate that John Stubbs had been in Gloucester County by 1652.
Neither W. Stubbs nor we can account for the accumulation of land the Stubbs family had.
http://www.stubbsofva-nc.net/research/janeresearch_082002.htm   (3201 words)

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