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517 - 528 of 953 for "首开股份2026年3月25日盯盘标准"

517 - 528 of 953 for "首开股份2026年3月25日盯盘标准"

  • MICHAEL, JOHN HUGH (1878 - 1959), minister (Meth.), Professor in Methodist colleges in England and Canada, Biblical exegetist he went to Didsbury College, Manchester, where he successfully completed a B.D. course. Then, in 1903, he was appointed an assistant professor at Headingley College, Leeds, where he remained for four years. As a minister he travelled in the circuits of Wakefield (3 years) and Eccles (3 years) before going to Canada in 1913, having been appointed Professor of New Testament Studies at Emmanuel
  • MILES, JOHN (1621 - 1683), Particular Baptist leader and American settler Metacom's War ('King Philip's War') in 1675, with Swansey having become a flashpoint in the conflict between settlers and the Indigenous Wampanoag. Eventually he returned to Swansey, and died there on 3 February 1682/3. His son JOHN MILES was the first town-clerk of Swansey; his son SAMUEL MILES turned Anglican, graduated at Harvard in 1684, at Oxford (by diploma) in 1693, and was for nearly forty years
  • MILES, WILLIAM JAMES DILLWYN (1916 - 2007), local government officer and author Dillwyn Miles was born in Newport, Pembrokeshire on 25 May 1916, the eldest son of Joshua Miles, the proprietor of the Castle Hotel, and his wife Anne (Nancy, née Phillips). His brother Herbert was born in 1918. Following the death of his grandfather his grandmother asked that he stay with her on the outskirts of Newport, where he remained for twelve years. Welsh was his first language. Primary
  • MILLER, WILLIAM HALLOWES (1801 - 1880), crystallographer article on Miller, and The Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 1932-3, has an article with a long list of his papers. He died 20 May 1880.
  • teulu MORGAN Tredegar Park, further opposition and continued to represent the county till he died, 25 June 1792. On his death the male line became extinct and his elder sister, JANE, became the last heir of Tredegar. She was married to Sir CHARLES GOULD (1726 - 1806), the elder son of king Gould of Westminster, the deputy judge advocate, who died in 1756. Sir Charles Gould was appointed Judge-Advocate General in 1771, was made
  • MORGAN, JOHN (bu farw 1504), clerk of parliament, and bishop David Mathew the elder of Radyr, with some of the best-known families in South Wales : the Herbert s; the family of Dafydd Gam; the Wogans; and the Dwnns - hence perhaps Ieuan Deulwyn's reference (The Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 1941, 122-3). But it should be noted that he was not the brother of Richard III's attorney-general, Morgan Kidwelly, who is often confused with
  • MORGAN ELFAEL (fl. c. 1528-1541), poet at Presteigne, 25 August 1563. See F.G. Payne, Crwydro Sir Faesyfed, II, 17.
  • MORGAN, ABEL (1673 - 1722), Baptist minister of Abergavenny and his son. He held the pastorate of Pennepeck church until his death 16 December 1722, and was buried at Mount Moriah, Philadelphia. He married (2) Martha Burrows; and (3) Judith (or Martha) Joading, a widow, and daughter of Thomas Griffiths (1645 - 1725), first minister of the Welsh Tract. A son and daughter were born of the first marriage, and three sons and one daughter of the
  • MORGAN, Sir CHARLES (1575? - 1643?), soldier nobleman Philip de Marnix de Ste. Aldegonde (died 1598), William the Silent's coadjutor in the Netherlands Revolt. Their only child, ANN MORGAN (died 1687), came home and married (1) Sir Lewis Morgan of Rhiwpera, Monmouth (Member of Parliament for Cardiff, 1628, knighted 1629, died 1635), and (2) Walter Strickland, who became a Member of Cromwell's Council of State and ' Other House,' and (3) John
  • MORGAN, CLIFFORD (Cliff) ISAAC (1930 - 2013), rugby player, sports writer and broadcaster, media executive , replacing the dropped Glyn Davies. The Welsh team had been announced at 6.30pm on the previous Monday whilst Morgan was on the bus home from work as a management trainee at the Electricity Board in Cardiff. By the time he arrived back at Trebanog, a crowd of people with flags were waiting, cheering. Morgan always remembered that even the bus driver got off and shook his hand. The game ended in a 3-3 draw
  • MORGAN, DAVID EIRWYN (1918 - 1982), college principal and minister (B) David Eirwyn Morgan was born on 23 April 1918 in Bryn Meurig, Heol Waterloo, Pen-y-groes, Carmarthenshire, one of the four children - 3 sons and 1 daughter - of David and Rachel Morgan. His father worked in the local colliery, but the family worshipped in Saron, the Welsh Baptist church in Llandybïe, and it was there that Eirwyn was baptised by the Reverend Richard Lloyd, and there also that he
  • MORGAN, DAVID LLOYD (1823 - 1892), naval surgeon , and Inspector-general at Plymouth from 1878-80. In 1880-2 he was at Haslar, Hantshire. He was appointed physician to queen Victoria. He died 3 December 1892 at Rhos-maen, Llandeilo.