997 resultados para Dilke, Charles Wentworth, Sir, 1843-1911.
Discours sur la vie et les vertus de Charles François Melchior Bienvenu de Miollis, évêque de Digne,
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"This narrative ... appeared first ... in the pages of the 'Dublin university magazine'.".--Pref.
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Binder's title: Sidney's state letters.
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Report of the society for the year 1910 (3 p.) appended.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vol. 1 also issued under title: Sir Robert Peel. In early life, 1788-1812; as Irish Secretary, 1812-1818; and as Secretary of State, 1822-1827.
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Includes index.
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Imprint varies slightly.
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Vita.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Edited by J. A. Hammerton."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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The greater part of this Monograph is devoted to detailed descriptions of 1426 samples of deposits from the floor of the Atlantic Ocean stored in the Challenger Office, Edinburgh, which had been collected during thirty-five cruising expeditions between 1857 and 1911. The remaining part discusses the results of the work. The work of examining and describing in detail this abundant mass of material was in progress when the late Sir JOHN MURRAY met his death in March 1914. By that time about three-fourths of the descriptive work had been completed under his supervision. Sir John's trustees arranged for the completion of the descriptive work by Mr Chumley, and this was done in the Challenger Office during the two succeeding years. Later, after he had removed to Glasgow, Mr Chumley prepared the notes discussing the results. The trustees have pleasure in recording, on the suggestion of Mr Chumley, the courtesy of Dr G. W. Lee of the Geological Survey of Scotland, for help in determining many of the rarer mineral particles contained in the deposits.
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A seventeenth-century manuscript miscellany, which once belonged to Archbishop James Ussher of Armagh, contains a short treatise on the origins of government by Sir George Radcliffe. Radcliffe was legal assistant to Sir Thomas Wentworth, lord deputy of Ireland (from January 1640 earl of Strafford and lord lieutenant). The treatise insisted on the divine origin of all human political power and implied that the best form of government was absolute monarchy, in which the monarch was free of all human law and subject to divine restraint alone. It will be suggested below that the composition of this treatise can be dated to the summer of 1639. This introduction will offer an outline of Radcliffe’s education and political career, explain the genesis of his treatise on government, point out some pertinent aspects of its argument, and finally assess the document’s significance.