Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Sir Thomas Lovell, KG (died 1524) was an English soldier and administrator, Speaker of the House of Commons, Secretary to the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer . Early life. He was fifth son of Sir Thomas Lovell of Barton Bendish in Norfolk, by Anne, daughter of Robert Toppe, alderman of Norwich; his family was Lancastrian in politics.

  2. (1803/07/20 - 1849/01/26) Thomas Lovell Beddoes. Poeta inglés. Nació el 20 de julio de 1803 en Clifton, cerca de Bristol. Cursó estudios en la Universidad de Oxford. En el año 1822 recibió críticas muy favorables por su drama La tragedia de la novia.

  3. 18 de dic. de 2016 · Sir Thomas Lovell – Tudor lawyer and henchman. Posted on December 18, 2016. I’ve arrived at today’s metaphorical advent in a rather circuitous way. My story starts with John Billesdon’s will. He wrote it on the 18th of December 1522 and left rather a lot of money to chantries being built for the repose of Sir Thomas Lovell’s soul.

  4. 26 de ene. de 1999 · Thomas Lovell Beddoes (born June 30, 1803, Clifton, Somerset, Eng.—died Jan. 26, 1849, Basel, Switz.) was a poet best known for his haunting dramatic poem Death’s Jest-Book; or, The Fool’s Tragedy. The son of a distinguished scientist, Beddoes seems early to have acquired, from his father’s dissections and speculations on anatomy and ...

  5. Hace 3 días · Sir Thomas Lovell. Politician, Philanthropist and Lawyer. A bronze relief medallion of Sir Thomas Lovell, Chancellor of the Exchequer, who died in 1524, is in the Westminster Abbey collection. The artist was Pietro Torrigiano and the relief probably dates from around 1518.

  6. Dr. Thomas Lovell Beddoes. 1803–1849. Poet and playwright Thomas Lovell Beddoes was born in Clifton, Bristol, England, to a literary and educated family. His father, a well-known physician, was a friend and confidant of Samuel Coleridge Taylor, and his aunt was the novelist Maria Edgework.

  7. 1 de mar. de 1998 · Share. Tools. Thomas Lovell Beddoes's almost unknown poem "Pygmalion" (1825) is one of the first nineteenth-century treatments of the Pygmalion myth. For his version Beddoes draws on Ovid's Metamorphoses, on Rousseau's Pygmalion, scène lyrique and Confessions, and on Beddoes's father's Hygëia (1802), a work on medicine and public health.