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133 - 144 of 890 for "华商润丰灵活配置混合C基金风险收益特征"

133 - 144 of 890 for "华商润丰灵活配置混合C基金风险收益特征"

  • EDERN DAFOD AUR, made a small dosbarth (arrangement or grammar) of the orthography of the Welsh language and of the form of words Many copies of this are extant. The copyists claimed, sometimes, that he was Edern, son of Padarn Beisrudd, that is, that he was the father of Cunedda Wledig. On the other hand, John Davies of Mallwyd said that he flourished c. 1280. EDWARD WILLIAMS (Iolo Morganwg) was the first to state categorically that Edern's work was the grammar which is associated with the names of Einion Offeiriad and
  • EDGEWORTH, ROGER (bu farw 1560), Roman Catholic divine showed himself a zealous defender of the Roman Catholic faith. He was the author of (a) Resolutions concerning the Sacraments, which may be seen in Burnet's History of the Reformation; (b) Resolutions of some questions relating to Bishops and Priests and of other matters to the reformation of the Church made by Henry VIII; (c) Sermons. He died early in 1560 and was buried before the choir door in Wells
  • teulu EDISBURY Bedwal, Marchwiel, Pentre-clawdd, Erddig, This Cheshire family, descended from Wilkin de Edisbury, first appears in Denbighshire c. 1544, when RICHARD WILKINSON, alias EDISBURY, held lands in Bedwal. His younger son, ROBERT WILKINSON EDISBURY (died 1610), extended the estate by marriage with Jane, daughter of Kenrick ap Howel of Stryt yr Hwch, Marchwiel. Their son, KENRICK EDISBURY (died 1638), entered the service of the Navy Board
  • EDNYFED FYCHAN, noble family of Gwynedd Ednyfed ap Cynwrig (died 1246), claiming descent from Marchudd, was a member of one of a group of kindreds long settled in Rhos and Rhufoniog. As seneschal (in Welsh, distain) of Gwynedd c. 1215-1246 (A History of Wales, ii, 684-5), his political and military services to Llywelyn the Great were rewarded, not only by the grant to Ednyfed himself of bond vills in Anglesey, Nantconwy, Arllechwedd
  • EDWARD MAELOR (fl. c. 1580-1620), poet
  • EDWARDES, DAVID (c. 1630 - 1690), landowner and deputy-herald Of Rhyd-y-gors, Carmarthenshire, only son of David Edwardes, c. 1630. He married Elizabeth, daughter of David Morgan of Coed-llwyd, Pembrokeshire. An able genealogist and armorist, he was on 1 August 1684 appointed by Clarenceux king-of-arms to be deputy-herald for Cardiganshire, Brecknock, Pembrokeshire, Carmarthenshire, and Glamorganshire. He travelled widely in Wales and England, consulted
  • teulu EDWARDS Cilhendre, Plas Yolyn, doom, and his son John in later years frequently visited his widowed cousin there, taking a lease of the house in 1688 and dying in it c. 1717. Thomas Edwards's daughter and heiress, Judith, married JOHN MORRALL, and they and their descendants lived at Plas Yolyn, whence the family papers of the regicide found their way to the National Library of Wales in 1937, Cilhendre having been demolished in
  • EDWARDS, ARTHUR TRYSTAN (1884 - 1973), architect and pioneer town planner Margaret Meredyth, daughter of Canon F. C. Smith. She died in 1967 and he led a lonely life until his death at Saint Tydfil's hospital, Merthyr Tydfil 29 January 1973 aged 88.
  • EDWARDS, CHARLES (1628 - after 1691), Puritan man of letters lost that living in 1659 and it is difficult to trace his steps during the years that followed the Restoration in 1660. [N.L.W. Jnl., 1961, 82 indicates that he was again at Llanrhaeadr in 1660.] He went to Oxford c. 1666 or 1667 in order to see his first book, Y Ffydd Ddi-ffuant, 1667, through the press. It is likely that he spent the next few years at his old home in Llansilin, but he was back at
  • EDWARDS, DAVID (1660 - 1716), Independent minister He lived at Abermeurig, in the vale of Ayron, and was a landed proprietor in the parishes of Nantcwnlle and Llanddewi-brefi. He was a friend and neighbour of John Jones, farmer, of Llwyn-rhys, the leading Independent in central Cardiganshire. Edwards was a competent scholar and was ordained assistant minister to David Jones (c. 1630 - 1704?), at Caeronnen, Cellan, and other churches in the
  • EDWARDS, EDWARD (1726? - 1783?), cleric and scholar knowledge of things Welsh, but was primarily a Grecian. He projected an edition of Xenophon's Memorabilia, published, 1773, an essay on Socratic ethics as mirrored in that book, and by the time of his death had printed the Greek text with a Latin version; his work was seen through the press in 1785 by his friend and fellow-Cymmrodor Henry Owen (1716 - 1795). Enw. C. says he died 2 September 1783, 'in
  • EDWARDS, JOHN (Siôn Treredyn; 1606? - c. 1660?), cleric and translator