Canlyniadau chwilio

349 - 360 of 575 for "Now"

349 - 360 of 575 for "Now"

  • MORGAN, JOHN (1662 - 1701), cleric and author Diweddaf - published (posthumously) in 1704. A copy of this essay and a similar prose work called Ystyriaethau ar y Chwe peth diwethaf, together with a number of his poems - all in his own handwriting - are found in a kind of C.P.B. called ' Llyfr John Morgan ', now in the library, U.C.N.W. (Bangor MS. 421). His prose is of high quality, but his poetry lacks distinction. He died 14 September 1701.
  • MORGAN, JOHN (1743 - 1801), cleric Moravian missioner, came to Nantlle, a friendship sprang up between him and Morgan, who was greatly influenced by his teachings; correspondence between the two men continued after Mathias's departure, and Morgan welcomed Mathias's return to Caernarvon in 1788. It is clear that Morgan (though perhaps not in a strictly official sense) was now a Moravian, for the monthly Moravian society met at his house
  • MORGAN, PHILIP (bu farw 1435), bishop of Worcester (1419) and of Ely (1426) The first reference to him is to be found in the Episcopal Registers of St. David's, 28 May 1398, where he is styled ' doctor of laws and rector of Aberedowy.' The Papal Letters of 17 Kal. June 1401, give a dispensation to him, a sub-deacon, not to have himself ordained deacon and priest for ten years. On 6 Kal. June 1405 he, now styled doctor of the canon and civil law, was granted a renewal of
  • MORGAN, ROBERT (1608 - 1673), bishop of Bangor both Welsh and English. His sequestration of the rectory of Llandyrnog as an appurtenance of the see led to a bitter lawsuit with Thomas Jones (1622? - 1682), who had retired to the living on dismissal from his chaplaincy to the future James II, and was now left in poverty; otherwise Morgan eschewed controversy, ignoring the conventicles in his diocese, the appeals of Dr. Michael Roberts for help in
  • MORGAN, THOMAS (1720 - 1799), Independent minister Jenkins at Carmarthen, and in 1779 of his succeeding Jenkins there, but he wisely discouraged the suggestions. In 1795 he was paralysed, and resigned his charge; he died at Morley 2 July 1799. Together with the diaries of Edmund Jones, and indeed perhaps in an even greater measure than those, the papers and diaries of Thomas Morgan, now in N.L.W., are our most valuable materials for the history of Welsh
  • MORRIS, JAN (1926 - 2020), writer 2006, Ned Thomas wrote, 'Re-reading Pax Britannica now, I am struck by how just and balanced most of its judgements are, on both the colonizers and colonized.' Others are less enthusiastic. In a 2019 LRB essay, James Wood calls Pax Britannica 'glitteringly nostalgic', writing that 'Morris doesn't exactly hide the racism and genocidal violence of the imperial enterprise, but they're somehow swept up
  • teulu MORTIMER Wigmore, Radnor, and lands in Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire. With such territorial accretions the family was now assuming a dominant position as marcher lords. Roger's great adversary in Wales was his kinsman, the Welsh prince Llewelyn ap Gruffydd. There was intermittent fighting and truce-making until both met their deaths in 1282. The struggle between marcher lord and Welsh prince became at this juncture
  • MORTIMER, ROGER de (1256? - 1326), lord of Chirk victorious campaign in South Wales but, taking up arms against the king, were defeated at Shrewsbury, 22 January 1321/2. Roger of Chirk had been deprived of his office of justice of Wales 5 January 1321/2, and he was now confined to the Tower of London where he died August 1326.
  • MORTON, RICHARD ALAN (1899 - 1977), biochemist Industries (ICI). The Beckman Club evolved into a Photoelectric Spectrophotometry Group with its own bulletin. Morton and others formed the Photobiology Group (now known as the British Photobiological Society), and one of its earliest meetings was held within his department in Liverpool. In 1950 he was made a Fellow of the Royal Society for his work on Vitamin A. He was a member of the Society's Council
  • MORUS DWYFECH (fl. c. 1523-1590), a poet from either Eifionydd or Llŷn who apparently took his name from the river Dwyfech (now called Dwyfach). He received his poetic licence at the Caerwys eisteddfod, 1523, but the grade in which he graduated is unknown. Few details are known concerning his life, but it is suggested that he had a close connection with Talhenbont before becoming domestic bard at Cefnamwlch. Apparently restricting his
  • MORYS, HUW (Eos Ceiriog; 1622 - 1709), poet ganiadau Huw Morus.… This contains but two-thirds of his poems which have survived, and the text does not always compare favourably with the readings of the best manuscripts, of which Cwrtmawr MS 224B (now in the N.L.W.) may be principally in the poet's own hand. A selection of his work was published also by O. M. Edwards in the 'Cyfres y Fil' series.
  • NASH-WILLIAMS, VICTOR ERLE (1897 - 1955), archaeologist bronze at the Legionary Museum of Caerleon, now facing the great imperial inscription of AD 100 which he himself discovered, ends with these lines: He was gracious in life, exact in scholarship, fearless in advocating what he believed to be the truth, unfailing in friendship, and selflessly helpful to his colleagues, his staff, and his students.