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William Patten (c. 1510 – after 1598) was an author, ... In Michaelmas term 1567/8, however, his fortunes received a devastating setback. The Auditor of the Receipt ...
William Patten may refer to: William Waynflete (William Patten, c. 1398–1486), bishop of Winchester, 1447–1486, and Lord Chancellor of England, 1456–1460 William Patten (historian) (c. 1510 – after 1598), English historian and teller of the English exchequer
Battle of Pinkie, woodcut illustration from William Patten (1548) The Imperial ambassador François van der Delft went to the court of King Edward VI at Oatlands Palace to hear the news of the battle from William Paget. Van der Delft wrote to the Queen Dowager, Mary of Hungary, with his version of the news on 19 September. He described the ...
At the beginning of the reign of William III and Mary II a proposed Royal Academies Company was a lottery scheme. [55] Lewis Maidwell (1650–1716) had some initial success in promoting his school in King Street, London as chartered by William III, with a modernised curriculum. He proposed a tax on publications to support it, but was opposed in ...
Arms of William Waynflete: Lozengy ermine and sable, on a chief of the second three lilies argent William Waynflete (c. 1398 [a] – 11 August 1486), born William Patten, was Headmaster of Winchester College (1429–1441), Provost of Eton College (1442–1447), Bishop of Winchester (1447–1486) and Lord Chancellor of England (1456–1460).
William Patten (1861-1932) was an American biologist and zoologist at University of North Dakota and Dartmouth College noted for work on fossil ostracoderms, ideas on the origin of vertebrates from arachnids and his 1919 address to the American Association for the Advancement of Science and follow-up book about The Grand Strategy of Evolution: the Social Philosophy of a Biologist.
Bill Van Patten, academic; ... William Patten (disambiguation) This page was last edited on 6 February 2016, at 23:44 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
On the morning of 21 April 1861, William Brahe and his party of three others including the seriously-injured Patten, left for Menindee. Burke's party reached Camp LXV that same evening with his two surviving though exhausted camels and with perilously low stores. Brahe had left messages carved into the Dig Tree pointing to the cache of supplies.