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         Hakluyt Richard:     more books (28)
  1. Voyager's Tales - Hakluyt, Richard, 1552-1616 by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  2. Discovery of Muscovy - Hakluyt, Richard, 1552-1616 by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  3. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English NationVolume 02 - Hakluyt, Richard, 1552-1616 by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  4. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English NationVolume 01 - Hakluyt, Richard, 1552-1616 by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  5. Voyages in Search of the North-West Passage - Hakluyt, Richard, 1552-1616 by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, Henry, 1822-1894 Morley, 2009-07-02
  6. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English NationVolume 04 - Hakluyt, Richard, 1552-1616 by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  7. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English NationVolume 11 - Hakluyt, Richard, 1552-1616 by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  8. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation. Vol. XIII. America. Part II. - Hakluyt, Ri by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  9. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English NationVolume 08 Asia, Part I - Hakluyt, Richard by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  10. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques, and Discoveries of The English Nation, Vol. XII., America, Part I. - Hakluyt, Ri by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  11. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English NationVolume 09 Asia, Part II - Hakluyt, Richar by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  12. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English NationVolume 10 Asia, Part III - Hakluyt, Richa by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-07-02
  13. A Selection of Principal Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation By Richard Hakluyt 1552-1616 : Set Out with Many Embellishments and a Preface. by Laurence Irving, 1926-01-01
  14. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation ? Volume 06Madiera, the Canaries, Ancient Asia, Africa, etc. by Richard, 1552-1616 Hakluyt, 2009-10-04

81. John Foxe's Book Of Martyrs
of the Portuguese Royal Chapel in 1552 , Historical Research 69 (1996), pp.117. This was Richard Hakluyt the Elder, the cousin and guardian of the
http://www.hrionline.ac.uk/foxe/apparatus/freemanstpeterfootnote.html
John Foxe's Book of Martyrs home introduction transcriptions apparatus ... print this essay
"'St Peter did not do thus": Papal history in the Acts and Monuments ' - footnotes
by Tom Freeman
FOOTNOTE 1
New Light on Drake: A Collection of Documents Relating to his Voyage of Circumnavigation, 1577-80 , trans. and ed. Zelia Nuttall, Hakluyt Society, new series 34 (1914), p. 348.
FOOTNOTE 2
Ibid, pp. 354-7.
FOOTNOTE 3
As Zelia Nuttall points out, Drake is known to have taken an edition of Foxe's book with him on his 1577 voyage (ibid, p. 356 n. 3). There is one possible objection to the identification of Drake's book as the Acts and Monuments; the statements of Rengifo and Miranda that the book contained illustrations of 'Lutherans' who had been burned in Spain, a feature not usually associated with Foxe's martyrology. There are, however, illustrations in every edition available to Drake of two Englishmen executed for heresy in the Iberian peninsula: William Gardiner in Portugal (J. Foxe, Actes and Monuments [1563], p. 879;

82. ECS Publishing: Composer Pages: Thompson: Catalog
3053), for SATB and strings with text by Edmund Spencer (15521588), completes this Richard Hakluyt s Voyages had described the merits and methods of
http://www.ecspub.com/compThompsonCat.html
Annotated Choral Catalog
Randall Thompson Biography
ALLELUIA
Four-part Chorus, Unaccompanied
SATB (ECS No. 1786)
TTBB (ECS No. 2312)
SSAA (ECS No. 2593)
Duration: 5-6"
Level of Difficulty: Medium
Alleluia Alleluia suitable for almost any choir for almost any occasion. AMERICANA
SATB and Piano or Orchestra
ECS No. 1634 Duration: 17" Level of Difficulty: Medium-Difficult Instrumentation: 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 B-flat clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, timpani, harp, strings. May Every Tongue The Staff Neocromancer The Sublime Process of Law Enforcement , described by Joseph B. Wirger, deathhouse reporter of Little Rock Gazette, in Startling Detective Adventures. The last movement, Loveli-lines THE BEST OF ROOMS SATB, Unaccompanied ECS No. 2672 Duration: 3.5" Level of Difficulty: Medium A CONCORD CANTATA SATB and Piano or Orchestra ECS No. 3003 Duration: 22" Level of Difficulty: Medium Instrumentation: 2 flutes (piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 B-flat clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets in C, 3 trombones, tuba, percussion (one player: snare drum, bass drum, cymbals, suspended cymbals, triangle), timpani, strings.

83. File 4 - 1500-1550 - Merchants And Bankers Listings
Richard ZOUCHE Lord9 Zouche (b.1510;d.22 Jul 1552) sp Joan ROGERS wife1 Richard Hakluyt in his Voyages related Master John Haukins having made divers
http://www.danbyrnes.com.au/merchants/merchants4.htm
[Previous page File 3 - 1450-1500 ] [You are now on a page for 1500-1550 filed as (http://www.danbyrnes.com.au/merchants/merchants4.htm] [Next page File 5 - 1550-1575 This webpage updated 29 April 2004 Contact via the convenient (and virus-free): e-mail form For convenience, bookmark this page and return soon.
Merchants and Bankers
From 1500-1550
Trade - an international perspective
This website, produced by Australian historian Dan Byrnes , is a no-frills, text-based website designed simply to list historical and genealogical information on many notable merchants and traders of what is termed, the Western World.
Advertisement It is hoped that this web page will be of assistance to family historians in the UK, the US and Australasia, by way of providing contexts for further research. New Genealogy Finder Interested in genealogy? Want to sharpen your approaches? Upgrade your skills and info? Like a free download?
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84. Spinel: History & Mystery Of A Magnificent Gem
R. Hakluyt, The principall navigations, voiages and discoueries of the English 1997–2004 Richard W. Hughes/RWH Publishing Books; all rights reserved.
http://www.ruby-sapphire.com/spinel.htm
RUBY-SAPPHIRE.COM Home The Book Articles
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By Kurt E. Sickafus
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Div. of Materials Science and Technology
Los Alamos, NM 87545 Richard Hughes
Pala International
912 So. Live Oak Park Road Fallbrook, CA 92028 Submitted to the Journal of the American Ceramic Society November, 1999 e are delighted to present this topical issue of the Journal of the American Ceramic Society, devoted to the structure and properties of spinel compounds. Though spinels have commanded the attention of both scientists and engineers in recent years (as illustrated by the papers herein), they did not always enjoy this favored status. For roughly nine-tenths of this past millennium, spinel slumbered in obscurity, eclipsed by seemingly more glamorous materials like corundum. In fact, a topical issue of the Journal of the American Ceramic Society focusing on corundum (alumina), predates this publication by several years (

85. English Literature. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
Accounts by men such as Richard Hakluyt, Samuel Purchas, and Sir Walter Raleigh were Gurton’s Needle (c.1552) are considered the first English comedies,
http://www.bartleby.com/65/en/Englsh-lit.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. English literature literature written in English since c.1450 by the inhabitants of the British Isles; it was during the 15th cent. that the English language acquired much of its modern form. For the literature of previous linguistic periods, see the articles on

86. TROISIEME CHAPITRE
Translate this page Ainsi, la collection de Richard Hakluyt vit le jour parce que ce dernier Ainsi Richard Hakluyt fit des leçons de géographie à l’Université d’Oxford.
http://pot-pourri.fltr.ucl.ac.be/itinera/enseignement/FLTR2150/chap03.htm
FLTR 2150 Années académiques 2003-2004 / 2005-2006 Diaporama
TROISIEME CHAPITRE
Les humanistes et les « nouveaux mondes » : dire et engranger la découverte
(3)1. Introduction Que faut-il entendre par « Grandes Découvertes » ? Certainement pas un élargissement inédit de la connaissance de la terre habitée, dû à des pratiques nouvelles de voyages. Car on voyageait beaucoup au Moyen Âge et ce dernier avait connu, en outre, une formidable ère d'exploration au XIIIe siècle. Une forme de voyage fort répandue au cours des siècles précédents était, en effet, le pèlerinage , épreuve, mortification et sacrifice. Une des pérégrinations régénératrices par excellence était le voyage dans les Lieux Saints: « Mourir près du Tombeau du Christ, après avoir mis ses pas dans ceux du Christ, est une chance spirituelle, même pour ceux qui, en toute sincérité, préfèrent quand même revenir vivants, avec ces singuliers profits que sont l'invasion de la grâce pour l'Autre Monde et l'auréole du héros pour celui-ci » Favier (1991), p.125

87. Ricci Roundtable On The History Of Christianity In China
Timothy Richard of China seer, statesman, missionary the most disinterested Imprint, Cambridge Eng. published for the Hakluyt Society at the
http://ricci.rt.usfca.edu/bibliography/listAlpha.aspx?alpha=T&page=2

88. Gulliver's Travels - Sources: Japan
Diary of Richard Cocks, capemerchant in the English factory in Japan 1615-1622,with correspondence London printed for the Hakluyt Society, 1883.
http://www.jaffebros.com/lee/gulliver/sources/japan.html
Gulliver's Travels
by Jonathan Swift
Sources : Japan
Japan is the only real place among the "remote nations of the world" Gulliver visits and describes in the course of his Travels . Swift uses references to Japan to good advantage, adding touches of truthfulness to his story. Japan was a flourishing island nation, remote and mysterious. If Japan really existed, why not other "remote nations"? Outside knowledge of Japan was sparse in 1726, with foreign contact limited to the Portuguese and then the Dutch, and even that was closely regulated. The English had a trade mission briefly around 1600, from which a few sketchy accounts were included in Pvrchas - his Pilgrimes (see Adams and Cocks Engelbert Kaempfer , a Dutch physician, published a long treatise on Japan based on his visit there, not published in English until 1727, the year after Swift published the Travels . Researchers (see Gulliver's Travels and Japan ) can show parallels between Kaempfer's book and Gulliver's account, and subsequently speculate whether Swift had advance access to the translation. Japan also may have supplied Swift with material for other segments of the Travels , through Kaempfer or other sources. One I find particularly compelling is the "

89. Fiske, Dutch And Quaker Colonies In America. Ch. III
1 Gomara, Historia general de las Indias, Saragossa, 1552, cap. xii. Richard Hakluyt, and the great Arctic navigator, John Davis.
http://www.dinsdoc.com/fiske-2-3.htm
Dinsmore Documentation presents Classics of American Colonial History Author: Fiske, John. Title: The Dutch and Quaker Colonies in America. Citation: Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1902. Subdivision: Chapter III HTML by Dinsmore Documentation * Added September 23, 2004 Table of Contents III
VERRAZANO AND HUDSON
I t seems to be not uncommonly believed, even to-day, that Henry Hudson was the discoverer of the river that bears his name. But the student of history gets accustomed to finding that the beginnings of things were earlier than had been supposed. So many famous discoveries have turned out to be rediscoveries that we become cautious about asserting that any event or achievement was the first of its kind. With regard to the Hudson River, there can be no sort of doubt that it was visited by many Europeans before Hudson, and in the story of these earlier voyages there is much that is of interest. The expeditions of John and Sebastian Cabot, in 1497 and 1498, found no traces of civilization, or of spices, or gold, or precious stones, on the coasts which they visited, and hence their efforts were not followed up as otherwise they might have been. But one source of wealth attracted their attention, the fisheries on the banks of Newfoundland. Englishmen were rather slow in availing themselves of this information, inasmuch as they had long been accustomed to find codfish and haddock in plenty in the waters about Iceland. But sailors from Portugal and the Basque provinces of Spain, and in still greater numbers from Normandy and Brittany, soon flocked to the Newfoundland fishing grounds. From 1504 to the present moment there has probably never been a year when the French flag has not been seen and the French language heard upon those waters. The name of Cape Breton, which is perhaps the earliest European name north of the West Indies, tells its own story. It is only natural to suppose that now and then some hardy skipper, impelled by curiosity or in quest of further gains, would cruise along the mainland and enter the mouths of the broad rivers; and so in fact it seems to have happened.

90. The Sidneys Of Penshurst Place
In 1552 one year before his death, aged just 26 - Edward VI granted Hakluyt s first book, Divers voyages, touching the discoverie of America was
http://home.freeuk.net/sidsoft/thesidneys.html
T H E S I D N E Y F A M I L Y
Sir William Sidney (1482 - 1554)
William was a courtier to King Henry VIII and tutor (and later steward) to his son Edward. In 1552 - one year before his death, aged just 26 - Edward VI granted Penshurst to Sir William Sidney. William, now aged 70, had little time to enjoy Penshurst though and his son, Henry , inherited the property on his death just two years later.
Sir Henry Sidney (1529 - 1586)
Henry had spent his early life at court as the companion of the the young prince Edward. Within two years of Penshurst being given to the Sidney family both his father and childhood friend - now King Edward VI - were dead. Edward contracted tuberculosis (although it is also rumoured that he was poisoned) and is said to have died in Henry's arms. In 1553 Henry married Lady Mary Dudley, sister to Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, Ambrose Dudley, Earl of Warwick and Lord Guildford Dudley. Guildford was married to the ill-fated Lady Jane Grey, grand-daughter to Henry VII who had been named by Edward VI (under pressure from John Dudley, the Duke of Northumberland - Henry Sidney's father-in law) as his successor. Lady Jane reluctantly became queen but after only nine days the Lord Mayor of London announced that Henry VIII's eldest daughter, Mary, was rightfully Queen. Lady Jane Grey and many of her supporters - including her husband and father-in-law - were executed. Her brothers-in-law Ambrose and Robert were confined to the Tower of London but Henry Sidney and his wife escaped any implications.

91. The Sidneys Of Penshurst
In 1552 one year before his death aged just 26 - Edward VI granted Hakluyt s first book, Divers voyages, touching the discoverie of America was
http://www.i-way.co.uk/~sid/thesidneys.html
Penshurst Place - home of the Sidney family for 450 years. Please note that this site has no official connection with Penshurst Place. The official Penshurst Place visitors guide Contents and Links Sir William Sidney (1482 - 1554) Sir Henry Sidney (1529 - 1586) Sir Philip Sidney (1554 - 1586) Knights of the Garter ... The Gardens of Penshurst Sir William Sidney (1482 - 1554)
W illiam was a courtier to King Henry VIII and tutor (and later steward) to his son Edward. In 1552 - one year before his death aged just 26 - Edward VI granted Penshurst to Sir William Sidney. William, now aged 70, had little time to enjoy Penshurst though and his son, Henry, inherited the property on his death just two years later. Sir Henry Sidney (1529 - 1586)
H enry had spent his early life at court as the companion of the the young prince Edward. Within two years of Penshurst being given to the Sidney family both his father and childhood friend - now King Edward VI - were dead. Edward contracted tuberculosis (although it is also rumoured that he was poisoned) and is said to have died in Henry's arms. I n 1553 Henry married Lady Mary Dudley, sister to Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, Ambrose Dudley, Earl of Warwick and Lord Guildford Dudley who was married to the ill-fated Lady Jane Grey. She was grand-daughter to Henry VIII and had been named by Edward VI (under pressure from John Dudley, the Duke of Northumberland - Henry Sidney's father-in law) as his successor.

92. Ye Olde Booke O' Seadogs: Sir Walter Raleigh
15521618). Sir Walter Raleigh and son. English adventurer and explorer, His place was taken by his cousin, Sir Richard Grenville, who perished
http://www.vamos-wentworth.org/seadog/seadog.php?subject=raleigh

93. Dictionary Of Canadian Biography Online
of unknown provenance, are the Spanish chronicler López de Gómara (1552), Hakluyt’s statement that Cabot was appointed “Grand Pilot of England” by
http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=34224

94. EARLY CROATIAN CONTACTS WITH AMERICA AND THE MYSTERY OF THE CROATANS*
Even the Turkish government in Constantinople was asked in 1552 to intervene Amadas and Barlow reported in Hakluyt s Voyages We saw children that had
http://www.studiacroatica.com/jcs/01/prpic.htm
EARLY CROATIAN CONTACTS WITH AMERICA AND THE MYSTERY OF THE CROATANS* Were Some Croats Present at Discovery of America? George J. Prpic Journal of Croatian Studies , I, 1960 – Annual Review of the Croatian Academy of America, Inc. New York, N.Y., Electronic edition by Studia Croatica , by permission. All reserved by the Croatian Academy of America. By permission of Georgetown University, from doctoral dissertation The Croats in America, Department of History, Georgetown University, Washington D. C., 1959. After 1420, the whole eastern Adriatic coast with few exceptions was firmly in the possession of Venice, whose perennial policy was to rule these Croatian shores. Although the population of the entire eastern Adriatic region remained predominantly Croatian, a new political, religious and cultural center began to form in and around present day Zagreb - formerly Pannonian Croatia. However, one section of the southern Adriatic coast escaped Venetian hegemony. This was the Republic of Ragusa; an independent merchant state for over one thousand years. While all other Croats were for centuries to live either under Venetian or Turkish rule or under Austrian and Hungarian domination, the Croats in Dubrovnik (Latin "Ragusa") enjoyed complete political freedom and realized achievements which bordered on the miraculous. Dubrovnik was founded in the seventh century in the vicinity of Epidaurus, which had been previously destroyed by the Slavs. The population which was originally Roman became slowly Croaticized, so that the end of the fourteenth century saw it as almost completely Croatian. From the beginning, the city developed a seafaring tradition, which manifested itself in early trade throughout the Balkans. Her commercial routes were eventually extended to all the Mediterranean countries and the Near East, and her trading ships sailed as far as Spain, Portugal and England.

95. Blackwell Synergy - Cookie Absent
See, for example, Ascham in 1544 and 1552 (Spurgeon I, 85, 91), Richard Helgersonis often the wellspring of such work, having laid out the basic
http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1475-6757.2005.00051.x
 Home An Error Occurred Setting Your User Cookie A cookie is a small amount of information that a web site copies onto your hard drive. Synergy uses cookies to improve performance by remembering that you are logged in when you go from page to page. If the cookie cannot be set correctly, then Synergy cannot determine whether you are logged in and a new session will be created for each page you visit. This slows the system down. Therefore, you must accept the Synergy cookie to use the system. What Gets Stored in a Cookie? Synergy only stores a session ID in the cookie, no other information is captured. In general, only the information that you provide, or the choices you make while visiting a web site, can be stored in a cookie. For example, the site cannot determine your email name unless you choose to type it. Allowing a web site to create a cookie does not give that or any other site access to the rest of your computer, and only the site that created the cookie can read it. Please read our for more information about data collected on this site.

96. The Cobbs Of Kent
Esquire Ralph BROOKE was born in 1552. He died on October 15, The ReverendRichard Hakluyt, prebendary of Westminster, was selected by the Virginia
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~cobb/kent.htm
OAS_AD('Top');
John Cobb of Kent (c1324)
Email File Manager (Mike Cobb)
Your Attention Please
Anyone who has been researching this particular Cobb lineage for very long at all is aware of the value of a work published in 1968 by Cully Alton Cobb (Ruralist Press, Atlanta), "The Cobbs of Tennessee" . Now long out of print, interest is being shown in doing an updated revised edition. Your participation in this SURVEY is requested. Who was the first COBB? Researchers have been trying for many years to establish the identity of the progenitor of this COBB lineage. Click here to see Myths, Errors, and Fairy Tales . You must use the 'Back' feature of your browser to return here.
John Cobbs of Kent
Much of the information found on this page was taken from "The Cobbs of Tennessee", Ruralist Press, Atlanta, 1968. Mr. Cully Alton Cobb retained the services of professional genealogists on both sides of the Atlantic to do the research. Where is Kent? Click Here to find out. Once in the new window, scroll down to the bottom right corner of England to find County Kent. You must use the 'Back' feature of your browser to return here. John COBBS Esquire (of Kent).

97. Records Of The Exchequer, And Its Related Bodies, With Those Of The Office Of Fi
E 40/1777 Release by Richard de HAKEBURNE, goldsmith, of London, and Margarethis wife ca 1552 E 150/946/14 COMBE, Bartholomew Dorset 1 Eliz I 1558
http://www.combs-families.org/combs/records/england/pro/e.htm
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Assoc. Bibles DNA ... Searches Records of the Exchequer, and its related bodies, with those
of the Office of First Fruits and Tenths, and
the Court of Augmentations (excluding E 115
See English Regnal Years for the years Kings and Queens reigned.
Source: Extractions from Public Records Office (PRO) Catalogue , Records of the Exchequer, and its related bodies, with those of the Office of First Fruits and Tenths, and the Court of Augmentations (E) excluding E 115, Certificates of Residence (which see). E 40 = Exchequer: Treasury of Receipt: Ancient Deeds, Series A E 40/234 Grant by Joan, relict of Gilbert de BRUNARDESTON, to the abbey of St. Mary of Buckestre (Buckfastleigh) of a meadow belonging to her tenement in Brunardeston, situate as described. Witnesses:- Ralph de CUMBE , Thomas de MUTHECUMBE, and others (named) Devon
E 40/1774(i) "Certificate of proof of the will of William de CUMBE at the Husting held in London , Monday after the Purification, 26 Edward I. [ca 1298], by John de STORTEFORD and

98. Patrimoine Militaire Canadien

http://www.cmhg.gc.ca/cmh/fr/page_216.asp?flash=1

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