Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The citation stated: "Paul Stephenson has devoted his life to improving race relations and encouraging community involvement and is a founder member of the Bristol Black Archives Project which has contributed greatly to an understanding of the history of the City and has helped to build closer relations between all the communities of Bristol."
Owen Henry had met Paul Stephenson, whose father was from West Africa, and who had been to college. The group decided that the articulate Stephenson would be their spokesman. [6] Stephenson set up a test case to prove the colour bar existed by arranging an interview with the bus company for Guy Bailey, a young warehouseman and Boys' Brigade ...
Mr Stephenson helped to rally thousands of people for a boycott in 1963 against the Bristol Omnibus Company.
Paul Stephenson (civil rights campaigner) (1937-2024), British civil rights campaigner Paul Stephenson (police officer) (born 1953), Metropolitan Police Commissioner, 2009–2011 Paul Stephenson (rugby league) (born 1983), Australian rugby league footballer
Stephenson, Paul (July 2010). "Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, Chapters 30-35". Translated Excerpts from Byzantine Sources. Paul Stephenson. Fine, John V. A. Jr. (1991) [1983]. The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08149-7.
Historian Paul Stephenson wrote that Stephen's marriage alliance with the Normans of Southern Italy "must have been partly directed against the Venetians." [31] The Norman princes of Capua had been the pope's staunch supporters during the Investiture Controversy, suggesting that his marriage also continued his father's pro-Papal foreign policy ...
Both facts imply that Gyula's domains were located near the confluence of the Tisza and Maros, according to historian Paul Stephenson. [9] [10] In contrast, Hungarian historian Gábor Thoroczkay argued that Hierotheos' proselytizing mission took place in Transylvania, where Gyula had moved his seat by then. [5]
According to historian Paul Stephenson, it "suggests that he had been courted by the emperor, and awarded nominal rights neighbouring lands, including Duklja, which was at the time at war with the empire. [45] According to historical sources, the Serbian lands were under Byzantine control or vassalage until 1040s, but not under a direct control ...