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  2. Hermit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermit

    The Three Hermits is a famous short story by Russian author Leo Tolstoy written in 1885 and first published in 1886, with its shock ending, featured the 3 hermits as the titular characters. The main character of Tolstoy 's short story " Father Sergius " is a Russian nobleman who turns to a solitary religious life and becomes a hermit after he ...

  3. Peter Noone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Noone

    Early in his career, he used the stage name Peter Novac. At 15, he became the lead singer, spokesman and frontman of Herman's Hermits, who were discovered by Harvey Lisberg. [4] As "Herman", the photogenic Noone appeared on the cover of many international publications, including Time Magazine's 1965 collage showing new faces in popular music. [5]

  4. Herman's Hermits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herman's_Hermits

    Herman's Hermits are an English rock and pop group formed in 1963 in Manchester and formerly fronted by singer Peter Noone.Known for their jaunty beat sound and Noone's often tongue-in-cheek vocal style, the Hermits charted with numerous transatlantic hits in the UK and in America, where they ranked as one of the most successful acts in the Beatles-led British Invasion.

  5. Rule of Saint Albert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rule_of_Saint_Albert

    Saint Albert Avogadro (1149–1214), a priest of the Canons Regular and a canon lawyer, wrote the Rule between 1206 and 1214 as the Catholic Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem.The Rule is directed to "Brother B.", held by tradition to be either Saint Bertold or Saint Brocard (but historical evidence of his identity is lacking), and the hermits living in the spirit of Elias near the prophet's spring ...

  6. Grazers (Christianity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grazers_(Christianity)

    Saint Paul, "The First Hermit", Jusepe de Ribera, Museo del Prado (1640) The grazers or boskoi (in Ancient Greek: βοσκοί, romanized: boskoí) are a category of hermits and anchorites, men and women, in Christianity, that developed in the first millennium of the Christian era, mainly in the Christian East, in Syria, Palestine, Pontus, Mesopotamia, and Egypt.

  7. List of people known as the Hermit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_known_as...

    The epithet "the Hermit" may be applied to: . Anthony the Hermit (c. 468–c. 520), Christian saint; Bluebeard the Hermit (died 1450), a leader of the English uprising generally known as Jack Cade's Rebellion

  8. List of recluses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_recluses

    Name Year of birth Year of death Description Devorah Baron [1]: 1887 1956 Hebrew author, Reclusion 1922-1956 Syd Barrett [2] [3]: 1946 2006 English singer-songwriter, former leader of the band Pink Floyd

  9. Hermits of Saint William - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermits_of_Saint_William

    Houses were established throughout central and northern Italy, and in Belgium, Germany, Bohemia and Hungary. In 1243, Pope Innocent IV issued a papal bull addressed to all Tuscan hermits, with the exception of the "Brothers of Saint William in Tuscany", calling them to unite in a single religious order according to the Rule of Saint Augustine ...