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565 - 576 of 890 for "华商润丰灵活配置混合C基金风险收益特征"

565 - 576 of 890 for "华商润丰灵活配置混合C基金风险收益特征"

  • MORUS BERWYN (fl. c. 1553-1615), poet
  • MORUS DWYFECH (fl. c. 1523-1590), a poet
  • MORUS GETHIN (fl. c. 1525), poet
  • MORUS MAWDDWY (fl. c. 1540-1570), poet
  • MORYS ap HYWEL (ap TUDUR) (fl. c. 1530), a poet
  • teulu MOSTYN Mostyn Hall, father-in-law and bishop William Morgan, the translator of the Bible into Welsh, over the Llanrwst leases. He appears also to have been the most prominent of the deputy-lieutenant s of Flintshire and served in that office at a time when frequent requests and orders came to that county from the Lord President of the Marches. He died 18 August 1642. His eldest son, Thomas Mostyn (c. 1598 - 1641), died in
  • teulu MYDDELTON Gwaenynog, The Denbighshire Myddeltons claimed descent from Rhirid Flaidd, lord of Penllyn (died 1207), but had adopted the English surname after the marriage of his descendant Rhirid ap David (c. 1393-4) to the daughter of Sir Alexander Myddelton of Myddelton, Salop. His great-grandson, DAVID MYDDELTON, was Receiver for North Wales under Edward IV and Richard III. David's eldest son settled at Gwaenynog
  • teulu NANNEY Nannau, Nannau'; he had a brother also, and executor of his will, who signs as 'Adam de Nannew.' Nor is there sufficient foundation for the story of Hywel Sele's treachery towards Owain Glyn Dŵr in 1402 - he was grandson to Meurig Fychan - so little indeed that Sir John E. Lloyd, the author of the standard work on the prince, never refers to Hywel at all. But certainly, the poet Llywelyn Goch ap Meurig Hen (c
  • NENNIUS (fl. c. A.D. 800), monk and antiquary sections or chapters, which can be grouped conveniently as follows (cf. the Mommsen-Lot text): (a) The Preface; (b) The Six Ages of the World, 1-6; (c) The History proper, § §7-56; (d) The Anglo-Saxon Genealogies, etc., § §57-65; (e) Computations and the twenty-eight Cities of Britain, § 66; (f) The Marvels of Britain, etc., § §67-76. With the exception of the preface all these sections are found
  • NEWELL, EBENEZER JOSIAH (1853 - 1916), cleric, schoolmaster, and historian Born in South-wark in 1853, second son of C. W. Newell, he went, in 1872, to Worcester College, Oxford, and graduated in 1876. After a period as assistant in a school at Cardiff, he was ordained in 1890 and took a curacy at Neath, where he also kept a school. In 1891 he opened a school at Porthcawl, acting also as curate of Newton Nottage, and further holding evening classes. Browsing in the
  • NICHOLAS, THOMAS (1816 - 1879), Congregational minister, theological college tutor, and historian , and other editions - for particulars of the lawsuit which followed on the publication of this work see Iwan Morgan, op. cit., and NLW MS 3097E; (c) Annals and Antiquities of the Counties and County Families of Wales, two vols. - the 1872 edition is still a useful source book; (d) History and Antiquities of the County of Glamorgan and its Families, 1874 - this is the Glamorgan portion of (c
  • NICOLAS, DAFYDD (1705? - 1774), poet T. C. Evans (Cadrawd) thought that he was the man of the same name who was born in Llangynwyd, Glamorganshire, in 1705. According to Cadrawd, the older people spoke of him as one who had kept school in the parish. Iolo Morganwg listed him with the literary men who were self-educated. He lived afterwards in Ystradyfodwg and perhaps in Glyncorrwg and Cwm-gwrach. It is quite possible that he was an