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         Digges Thomas:     more books (26)
  1. The Letters of Thomas Attwood Digges by Robert Henry Elias, Eugene D. Finch, 1982-05
  2. Adventures of Alonso by Thomas Attwood Digges, 1943
  3. Astronomical Thought in Renaissance England: A Study of the English Scientific Writings from 1500 to 1645 by Francis R. Johnson, 1937
  4. A bibliography of Indian geology .. by Thomas Henry Digges La Touche, 2010-08-05
  5. A geometrical practical treatize named Pantometria diuided into three bookes, longimetria, planimetria, and stereometria, containing rules manifolde for ... First published by Thomas Digges. (1591) by Thomas Digges, 2010-07-13
  6. The Theodelitus and Topographical Instrument of Leonard Digges of University College, Oxford. Described by His Son Thomas Digges in 1571. by Thomas (1546-1595). DIGGES, 1927-01-01
  7. LETTERS Of THOMAS ATTWOOD DIGGES (1742 - 1821). by Thomas Attwood].Elias, Robert H. & Finch, Eugene D. - Editors. [Digges, 1982
  8. An essay on ways and means to maintain the honour and safety of England, to encrease trade, merchandize, navigation, ... Written by Sir Walter Raleigh, ... on our harbours, ... by Sir Henry Sheers. by Thomas Digges, 2010-05-29
  9. Adventures of Alonso: Containing Some Striking Anecdotes of the Present Prime Minister of Portugal. by Thomas Atwood & Elias, Robert H. Digges, 1943-01-01
  10. The Portable Elizabethan Reader (Viking Portable Library) by John Donne, Michael Drayton, et all 1946-12
  11. A prognostication everlastinge: Corrected and augmented by Thomas Digges (The English experience, its record in early printed books published in facsimile) by Leonard Digges, 1975
  12. The theodelitus and topographical instrument of Leonard Digges of University College, Oxford: Described by his son Thomas Digges in 1571. Reprinted from ... of Pantometria (Old Ashmolean reprints) by Thomas Digges, 1927
  13. Thomas Digges, the Copernican system, and the idea of the infinity of the universe in 1576 by Francis R Johnson, 1934
  14. In defense of Thomas Digges by William Bell Clark, 1953

81. Footnotes Page 3
Holinshed or Camden or in digges book thomas digges, Alae seu scalae mathematicae Cecil consulted thomas digges about what the star might mean Olson,
http://www.sarahsmith.com/chasingshakespeares/book_and_background/chasing shakes
Footnotes page 3
The Blue Boar Society : The actual British Oxfordian society is the De Vere Society of Great Britain, a respectable group. This is a fictional society, so I could make them act silly. There has been at least one actual Blue Boar Society, in Boston in 1998-99; this one is not that one. According to her, he wrote Gascoigne's : Aunt Betty Lou bears on her rounded and no doubt osteoporotic shoulders the weight of many Oxfordian theories and is therefore, of course, entirely fictional. But see, for instance, Ogburn, pp. 514-519. Henry de Vere, Earl of Bulbeck : Fictional. Charles de Vere, Earl of Burford, is co-chair of the De Vere Society of Great Britain, but this is not the man. Mr. William Boyle is the well-known editor of the Shakespeare Oxford Newsletter : I thank him for allowing me to use him here. He is delivering a paper written by his brother, Charles Boyle, "Elizabeth's Glass," published in the

82. Books About Early America Bibliography
digges, thomas Attwood, 17421821. Title Letters of thomas Attwood digges (1742-1821) /edited by Robert H. Elias and Eugene D. Finch. Published
http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/risd/courses/hi441_baoa_bib.html

83. Adventurers
Dexter; Sir John Digby; Sir Dudley digges; John digges; thomas digges; John Dyke;John Dingley; Edward Ditchfeild; William Dobson; Sir John Doderidge;
http://www.jamestowne.org/adv.htm
ADVENTURERS The names of the persons appearing below are those listed on the Charters of 1606, 1609, 1612 and a list of stockholders in 1620. These names have been checked against names found in Alexander Brown's "Genesis of the United States". An attempt has been made to eliminate duplicates. Persons proving descent from any one of these individuals would be eligible to join the Jamestowne Society. Most of the following persons made contributions to the Virginia Company of London and held shares accordingly. Some shares were passed to heirs or sold after purchasing them. This list should be treated as a preliminary effort and not complete, although it is not likely to change significantly. A Thomas Abbay ; George Abbot ; Maurice Abbot ; Anthony Abdy ; Sir John Acland ; Thomas Adams ; Thomas Alcock ; Sir William Ayliffe ; Edmund Allen ; Edward Allen ; John Allen ; Thomas Allen ; Giles Allington ; Dr. John Andrewes ; John Andrewes ; Nicholas Andrewes ; Charles Anthony ; Capt. Gabriell Archer ; John Argall ; Capt. Samuel

84. The Demise Of The Firmament
of the Caelestiall Orbes.......In 1576 thomas digges (15461595) contributed a supplement containing sectionsof Book 1 thomas digges, A Perfit
http://www.sentex.net/~tcc/fdemise.html
Report on the Firmament
The Demise of the Firmament
Nicolaus Copernicus See biography ] studied at the University of Cracow in Poland, and at Bologna and Padua in Italy. He became a canon at Frauenberg Cathedral. During his time in Italy he was assistant to astronomer Domenico Novarra of Ferrara (1454-1504), and made astronomical observations. Copernicus was aware that measurements of the movements of the planets revealed discrepancies in the Ptolemic theory. These were usually explained away by postulating fixes called deferents and epicycles , but the accumulation of "fixes" tended to make the Ptolemaic scheme very complicated. Copernicus discovered, perhaps influenced by his reading of ancient Greek manuscripts that mentioned the heliocentric views of Aristarchius and others, that supposing the sun was the center of the planetary motions could make things much simpler. His ideas were summarized in a manuscript circulated in 1530 called the Commentariolus Over the next 13 years he developed his heliocentric theory, culminating in De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium , published in 1543. He produced clear arguments against the geocentric view of the universe. His system retained the rigid firmament of the stars, and circular movements for the planets.

85. Shakespeare's Unorthodox Biography - New Evidence Of An Authorship Problem By Di
Nelson and I disagree over whether digges’s allusion to Shakespeare is personal of the links between the digges family, thomas Russell, and Shakespeare,
http://www.shakespeare-authorship.com/responses/nelson.asp
Home Sales Contacts Search ... Appearances Addenda A seventh signature? The Stigma of Print Sir Thomas More Literacy ... Links and Search
Author's response socrates.berkeley.edu/~ahnelson/ Diana Price's Shakespeare's Unorthodox Biography Diana Price knows how to put a sentence together, but she does not know how to put an argument together without engaging in special pleading: that is, taking evidence that has an apparent signification, and arguing with all her might that it does not fit the special case of William Shakespeare for this or that special - and wholly arbitrary - reason. Take the fact that Ben Jonson writes a poem of dedication to the "memory of my beloved, the author, Mr. William Shakespeare"; or the fact that Jonson reported that he had offended "the Players" who thought he had insulted their "friend" Shakespeare. Jonson explains, "I loved the man, and do honor his memory (on this side Idolatry) as much as any." Master William Shakespeare, whom Jonson also calls "Sweet Swan of Avon," associating him with Stratford upon Avon for any but the wilfully deaf, is thus the recipient of a greater expression of friendship than any contemporary author.

86. American Memory From The Library Of Congress - Browse By
William (1) digges, Cole (1) digges, thomas A. (4) digges, thomas (4) Dillehay, thomas L. (1) Dillingham, James (1) Dillon, Robert J. (1)
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/madison_papers/nameD1.html
@import url(../../css/am15_global_ss.css); @import url(../ss/AMcoll_browse1a_ss.css);
  • Search all collections
The James Madison Papers
The Library of Congress American Memory Home Browse Collections ... Collection Home Search this collection
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87. Baconiana: The AA Head-pieces
These were augmented and republished by his son, thomas digges, According toAnthony Wood, thomas digges was highly skilled in the most difficult and
http://fly.hiwaay.net/~paul/ledsem/headpieces.html
BACONIANA.
V OL . VIII. Third Series . JULY, 1910. N O THE A A HEAD-PIECES. T he remarkable use which, in the latter part of the fifteenth and during the sixteenth centuries, was made by printers of emblematical head-pieces and tail-pieces has frequently been treated of in the pages of B ACONIANA *, but attention does not appear to have been drawn to a family of head-pieces in which a light A and a dark A
In drawing attention to this device I do not profess to have arrived at any definite conclusion as to its interpretation or its purpose, but the evidence which will be advanced appears to point to the blocks being the property of one person or Society, and my suggestion is that when an order was given to a printer to set up the type of a book forming one of a certain class it was stipulated that he would be supplied with a block which he was to reproduce on a given page or pages. That nine distinct designs, varying widely in other respects, were used, in all of which the light A and the dark A formed the outstanding feature, justifies the assumption that it had a special significance. Was this significance of general knowledge amongst printers and readers or was it an earmarking device used by one person or one Society? If the evidence to be put forward justifies, if not a definite answer to this question, at least the formation of a reasonable conclusion on the point, it may be hoped that students of the literature of the period may contribute to these columns any data that may fall in their way to assist in the elucidation of the subject.

88. Science Blog -- Astrophysicist Finds New Scientific Meaning In Shakespeare's Ham
models of thomas digges of England and Tycho Brahe of Denmark. In thetragic story of this play, Shakespeare, digges, and Bruno, speak to our day.
http://www.scienceblog.com/community/older/1997/B/199701048.html
From: Penn State
Astrophysicist Finds New Scientific Meaning in Shakespeare's Hamlet
A paper read today at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Toronto, Canada, offers a new interpretation of Shakespeare's play Hamlet. The paper, by Peter D. Usher, professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State, presents evidence that Hamlet is "an allegory for the competition between the cosmological models of Thomas Digges of England and Tycho Brahe of Denmark." Usher says the paper is significant because Shakespeare favors the Diggesian model, which is the forerunner of modern cosmology. "As early as 1601, Shakespeare anticipated the new universal order and humankind's position in it," Usher states. "The play therefore manifests an astronomical cosmology that is no less magnificent than its literary and philosophical counterparts." Claudius Ptolemy perfected a model of the universe in the second century A.D. that remained the standard model into the sixteenth century. In this model, the Earth was stationary at the center of the universe and everything else revolved around it. In 1543, Nicholas Copernicus of Poland published a revolutionary model (which is essentially the one in use today) in which the Earth rotates on its axis once a day and is merely one of several planets that revolve about the Sun. Though the Copernican model had been published before Shakespeare was born, it was not yet in vogue in his lifetime. However, both the Ptolemaic and the Copernican systems were contained in a crystalline sphere, beyond which lay Paradise and the realm of the Prime Mover. By contrast, in 1576 when Shakespeare was 12 years old, the English scientist and military scholar Thomas Digges extended the Copernican model by suggesting that the stars were like the Sun and were distributed through infinite space. He was therefore the first Renaissance scholar to publish the idea of an infinite universe. Eight years later similar ideas were published in a book by the Italian philosopher Giordano Bruno.

89. Fall 99 Electronic Proceedings
digges, thomas G., Jr., O5.7.1 Dmitriev, V., O8.6.1 Doan, TD, O3.3.1 Dommann,A., O7.9.1 Elenewski, JE, O6.4.1 Eom, CB, O8.3.1 Fan, ZY, O7.2.1
http://www.mrs.org/publications/epubs/proceedings/fall99/o/authors.html
November 29 -
December 3, 1999
Boston, Massachusetts
Hynes Convention Center and Boston Marriott Copley Place Meeting Website
1999 Fall Meeting
Symposium O
Substrate Engineering - Paving the Way to Epitaxy Authors Atwater, Harry A., O8.1.1
Barbe, C.J, O4.6.1
Bauer, Markus, O2.2.1
Berberich, Paul, O2.2.1
Blakely, Jack M., O5.8.1 Blank, Dave, O3.6.1 Budai, J. D., O3.7.1 Carpenter, R.W., O4.2.1 Cassidy, D.J., O4.6.1 Chabal, Y.J., O4.4.1 Chan, M., O8.2.1 Chan, W.Y., O8.2.1, O8.5.1 Chandrasekhar, D., O7.2.1 Chang, K., O6.1.1 Chen, Claudine M., O8.1.1 Chisholm, M. F., O3.7.1 Cox, M.J., O4.2.1 Davidsmeier, T.M., O6.4.1 Day, A., O4.6.1 Deitch, Richard H., O5.7.1 Digges, Thomas G., Jr., O5.7.1 Dmitriev, V., O8.6.1 Doan, T.D., O3.3.1 Dommann, A., O7.9.1 Elenewski, J. E., O6.4.1 Eom, C.B., O8.3.1 Fan, Z.Y., O7.2.1

90. Early American Literature, Volume 39, 2004 - Table Of Contents
Access article in PDF Subjects. Equiano, Olaudah, b. 1745 Correspondence.digges, thomas Attwood, 17421821 Correspondence.
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/early_american_literature/toc/eal39.2.html
Early American Literature
Volume 39, Number 2, 2004
C ONTENTS
    Baepler, Paul Michel.
  • The Barbary Captivity Narrative in American Culture
    [Access article in PDF]

    Subjects:
    • Captivity narratives History and criticism. Slavery Africa, North Public opinion. Pirates Africa, North Public opinion. Public opinion United States.
    • Hayes, Kevin J.
    • How Thomas Jefferson Read the Qur'an
      [Access article in PDF]

      Subjects:
      • Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826 Knowledge Islam. Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826 Books and reading. Sale, George, 1697?-1736, tr. Koran: commonly called the Alcoran of Mohammed.
      • Stievermann, Jan.
      • Writing "To Conquer All Things": Cotton Mather's Magnalia Christi Americana and the Quandary of Copia
        [Access article in PDF]

        Subjects:
        • Mather, Cotton, 1663-1728. Magnalia Christi Americana. Mather, Cotton, 1663-1728 Technique.
        • Gilmore, Paul, 1970-
        • Republican Machines and Brackenridge's Caves: Aesthetics and Models of Machinery In the Early Republic
          [Access article in PDF]

          Subjects:
          • Brackenridge, H. H. (Hugh Henry), 1748-1816. Modern chivalry.

91. Product Listing - Americana
digges, thomas Attwood. Elias, Robert H. Finch, Eugene D. Editors. LETTERS Ofthomas ATTWOOD digges (1742 - 1821). Columbia SC University of South
http://www.tavbooks.com/bookstore/index.cgi?product=Americana&keywords=&pid=&nam

92. The Nation, 06/25/1938 - Explaining Shakespeare By Doren, Mark Van
Why may we not take the afternoon of a poet with Sir Dudley digges as the part a portrait of thomas digges, the astronomer, whose widow Russell married.
http://www.nationarchive.com/Summaries/v146i0026_12.htm
Explaining Shakespeare From The Nation - America's Longest Running Weekly Magazine. Explaining Shakespeare by Doren, Mark Van Open the article in The Nation Digital Archive Abstract: This article discusses several books. "I, William Shakespeare, Do Appoint Thomas Russell Esquire," by Leslie Hotson. "Shakespeare Rediscovered," by Clara Longworth De Chambrun. "Shakespeare's Philosophical Patterns," by Walter Clyde Curry. "The Debt to Shakespeare in the Beaumont-And-Fletcher Plays," by Daniel Motley McKeithan. If the Thomas Russell, Esquire, whom Shakespeare appointed overseer or executor of his will was a certain gentleman of Worcestershire, and Mr. Hotson has decided he was, then "it seems natural to suspect" that many of the poet's connections with patrons and other well-placed strangers had been secured through him. Selections from Full Text: ...Oxford University Press... ...He does not finally explain them, nor does he pretend to... ...Why may we not take the afternoon of a poet with Sir Dudley Digges as the stimulus for some of "The Tempest's" mighty magic... ...Because the whole argument up to this point has been a castle of cobwebs builded in moonshine, with perhapses and probablys for mortar and far-fromimpossibilities for foundation stones...

93. ARCHIVES, MARYLAND PROVINCE, SOCIETY OF JESUS: FOLDER LISTING CONTINUED
Items include the following Indenture (1775) between William digges et al., Indenture (1744) between thomas digges and Nicholas St. Laurence.
http://www.library.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/fl/f119}9.htm
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS HOME PAGE
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ARCHIVES, MARYLAND PROVINCE, SOCIETY OF JESUS
FOLDER LISTING
Box: 30 Fold: 10 Church Account Record Book [103.5 R1]
DATE SPAN: [01/01/1840]? - [12/31/1843]?
DESCRIPTION: This item [103.5 R1] consists of the account record book (1841-43) for St. Elizabeth's in Denton and the Easton Church in Talbot County, Maryland. It may be found in OVERSIZE Box 4.
Box: 30 Fold: 11 Corresp. re:Mary E. Browne-Will/Estate [103.5 S1-S12]
DATE SPAN: [01/01/1843]? - [12/31/1872]?
Box: 31 Fold: 1 East Shore Delaware-Varia [103.5 T1-W6] DATE SPAN: [01/01/1765]? - [12/31/1880]? DESCRIPTION: This folder [103.5 T1-W6] consists of varia pertaining to East Shore Delaware. Items include the following: Extract from an Act of Assembly of Delaware for Conveyance (1810); Indenture (1800) between Francis Neale, S.J., and Patrick Kenny, S.J.; Letter (June 4, 1810) from John Rosseter, S.J., to Francis Neale, S.J.; Booklet-Dedication Souvenir of St. Peter's Cathedral [Wilmington, Del.]; Abstract of deeds (1765); Debts due at St. Joseph's at the time that Father Powers commenced in June, 1855; Two letters (1874) from C.C. Lancaster; Letter (Nov. 14, 1874) from Hoover Goldsborough; Map of St. Joseph Church Farm; Receipt (1880) from H. Goldsborough; Survey of lot attached to St. Joseph's Church; Number of acres at St. Joseph's. Box: 31 Fold: 2 St. Joseph's Church-Varia [103.5 W7-W16]

94. Ron Heisler - Shakespeare And The Ethos Of The Rosicrucians
thomas digges died and his widow, Anne, married thomas Russell, who acquired But we have digressed from the digges family. thomas digges s son, Leonard,
http://www.levity.com/alchemy/h_shake.html
Ron Heisler - Two Worlds that Converged: Shakespeare and the Ethos of the Rosicrucians
Article originally published in The Hermetic Journal
Two Worlds that Converged:
Shakespeare and the Ethos of the Rosicrucians
In a 1986 article on "Shakespeare and the Rosicrucians", I dissected a late play that Shakespeare wrote jointly with John Fletcher, The Two Noble Kinsmen . Relying mainly on internal evidence, I found some very strong Rosicrucian affinities, particularly the striking scene in which a quasi-religious ceremony takes place in the temple of Diana, at which a rose plays a crucial role. Emilia declares that "a rose is best" and then explains: "It is the very emblem of a maid:
For when the west wind courts her gently
How modestly she blows and paints the sun
With her chaste blushes! When the north comes near her,
Rude and impatient, then, like chastity,
She locks her beauties in her bud again
And leaves him to base briars." (II. ii.)
The play as we know it probably was premiered in early 1613 and I felt it somewhat of a coincidence that at Christmas 1611 the great Rosicrucian Michael Maier sent a "greetings card" to James I, which expressed the cryptic hope "May the Rose not be gnawed by the Canker of the North Wind…" Since 1986 I have had some leisure to explore Shakespeare's friends and acquaintances in depth, seeking for Rosicrucian clues - and hoping against hope that for once literature's greatest, most opaque and most secretive figure will have relaxed his guard. Readers must judge the results for themselves.

95. House Of Lords Journal Volume 63: 9 March 1831 | British History Online
wherein Patrick Pluck is Plaintiff, and Montgomery digges and thomas Whiteare Defendants, in order to reverse a Judgment given in the Court of
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=16983

96. The Political Graveyard: Index To Politicians: Dickman To Dikis
DiDomenico, G. thomas (19051978) — also known as Dapper Dan — of Bayonne, digges, Edward S. — of La Plata, Charles County, Md. Democrat.
http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/dickman-diket.html
Questions? Return to The Political Graveyard main page
Index to Politicians: Dickman to Dikis

97. Math And Culture Lesson 4-11
of The Celestiall Orbes thomas digges, though not particularly well known, is recognized as the first...... Darke Starre thomas digges s Perfit
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~matc/MathCulture/Digges.html
"Darke Starre": Thomas Digges's Perfit Description of The Celestiall Orbes
In The Copernican Revolution , Thomas S. Kuhn, noting that there had been no fundamentally new discoveries or observations in the field of astronomy that led to the development of a radically different theory by Copernicus, wrote that, "[a]ny possible understanding of the Revolution's timing" and, hence, of its degree of success prior to empirical evidence "must be sought ... within the larger intellectual milieu inhabited by astronomers" (132). As there was no available proof of Copernicus' heliocentric theory until the discovery of stellar parallax, "Copernicus' mathematical system was intrinsically no more accurate than Ptolemy's" ( CR 188), and what position one took on the debate necessarily involved more than purely logical evaluation of data. The battle then was partly rhetorical, drawing on other discourses for evaluation: what did heliocentrism mean? What pre-conditions must be in place and what consequences must necessarily follow? The best known debate is that between Galileo and the Church, where it can be said that theology was the nominal basis of rejection. An excellent example of the effects and interaction of extra-scientific discourse upon and with scientific thought in the period is the case of Elizabethan astronomer and mathematician Thomas Digges and his A Perfit Description of the Caelestiall Orbes . Thomas Digges, though not particularly well known, is recognized as the first person to claim at least in print that the universe was infinite. But

98. TRACTS (OSB MSS 28)
+ digges, thomas, d. 1595. Arguments proving the King Maties propriety in theSealands and Salt shoares thereof (Item No. 4) ca.
http://webtext.library.yale.edu/beinflat/osborn.TRACTS.htm
YALE UNIVERSITY
BEINECKE RARE BOOK AND MANUSCRIPT LIBRARY
THE JAMES MARSHALL AND MARIE-LOUISE OSBORN COLLECTION
PRELIMINARY FINDING AID

99. Verfassungsgeschichte - Third Charter Of Virginia (1612)
thomas Pelham, Esquiers; thomas digges, and; John digges, Esquiers, Sir John Sammes, Knight; Sir Samuell Sandys, Knight; Sir thomas Freke, Knight
http://www.oefre.unibe.ch/law/verfassungsgeschichte/1612_third_charter_of_virgin
Third Charter of Virginia (1612) Second Charter (1609) aktualisiert , der Rat verkleinert [1] James, by the grace of God [King of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith;] to all to whom [these presents shall come,] greeting. Whereas at the humble suite of divers and sundry our lovinge subjects, aswell adventurers as planters of the First Colonie in Virginia, and for the propagacion of Christian religion and reclayminge of people barbarous to civilitie and humanitie, we have by our lettres patent bearing date at Westminster the three and twentieth daie of May in the seaventh yeare of our raigne of England, Frannce and Ireland, and the twoe and fortieth of Scotland, given and grannted unto them, that they and all suche and soe manie of our loving subjects as shold from time to time for ever after be joyned with them as planters or adventurers in the said plantacion, and their successors for ever, shold be one body politique incorporated by the name of The Treasorer and Planters of the Cittie of London for the First Colonie in Virginia; ] And further our will and pleasure is, and we doe by theis presents grannt and confirme for the good and welfare of the said plantacion, and that posterity maie hereafter knowe whoe have adventured and not bin sparing of their purses in such a noble and generous accion for the generall good of theire cuntrie, and at the request and with the consent of the Companie afore said, that our trusty and welbeloved subjects.

100. PSIgate - Physical Sciences Information Gateway Search/Browse Results
thomas digges Born 1546 in Wotton (near Canterbury), Kent, England Died 24 Aug1595 in London, England Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically)
http://www.psigate.ac.uk/roads/cgi-bin/search_webcatalogue2.pl?limit=525&term1=b

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