Jesus CollegeF.E. Robinson and Company, 1899 - 252 pages |
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Page v
... death of Canon Llewelyn Thomas deprived the College of its most appro- priate historian . At the outset I was in almost entire ignorance of the past history of the College , and if Canon Thomas had got together any material , it has not ...
... death of Canon Llewelyn Thomas deprived the College of its most appro- priate historian . At the outset I was in almost entire ignorance of the past history of the College , and if Canon Thomas had got together any material , it has not ...
Page 15
... death in 1625 , Rector of Luffenham . It was during this last period of his life that he founded the two schools of Uppingham and Oakham . Thomas Huet , a native of Wales and a strong Protes- tant , had received from the Queen the ...
... death in 1625 , Rector of Luffenham . It was during this last period of his life that he founded the two schools of Uppingham and Oakham . Thomas Huet , a native of Wales and a strong Protes- tant , had received from the Queen the ...
Page 17
... death , and even when that took place in 1574 , it was only after legal proceedings that the College obtained any revenue from this source , and therefore at first both Fellowships and Scholarships were honorary only . If we look , on ...
... death , and even when that took place in 1574 , it was only after legal proceedings that the College obtained any revenue from this source , and therefore at first both Fellowships and Scholarships were honorary only . If we look , on ...
Page 18
... death in 1574 as much as £ 1500 . It is stated in Nicholas Fitzherbert's De- scriptio Oxoniensis Academia " † that he inserted a stone on the southern side of the gateway with this inscription : " Struxit Hugo Pricius tibi clara palatia ...
... death in 1574 as much as £ 1500 . It is stated in Nicholas Fitzherbert's De- scriptio Oxoniensis Academia " † that he inserted a stone on the southern side of the gateway with this inscription : " Struxit Hugo Pricius tibi clara palatia ...
Page 19
... death of his wife and daughter , and it was not till 1615 that the College actually came into possession of them . On the death of Dr. Price , however , in 1574 , in accordance with the understanding on which he had obtained the Charter ...
... death of his wife and daughter , and it was not till 1615 that the College actually came into possession of them . On the death of Dr. Price , however , in 1574 , in accordance with the understanding on which he had obtained the Charter ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abergavenny Account Book Anglesey appointed Asaph Bangor Beaumaris benefaction Benefactors bequeathed bequest Bevans Bishop of St Brecknockshire Brecon Buttery Cambridge Cardig Carm Carmarthen Carmarthenshire Carn century Chancellor Chapel Charles Charter Church Collegii Commissioners counties Cowbridge David death Denbigh Denbighshire died Edward elected a Fellow endowment entered the College Evans Exhibitioners Exhibitions Fellow of Jesus Fellows and Scholars Fellowships and Scholarships Francis Mansell Glamorg Glamorganshire Griffith Powell Henry Hereford Howell Hughes James Jesus College Jones Joseph Hoare lands Leoline's Letters Patent Library Llandaff Mansell's Merionethshire Meyricke Michael Roberts Monm Monmouthshire Morgan native nominated North Wales original Owen Oxford Oxon Parry portrait preference present Price Principal's Lodgings Principall Principalship Quadrangle Register rent-charge resident restored restrictions Richard School Sir Eubule Thelwall Sir John Sir Leoline Jenkins Souls South Wales statutes Stradling Thomas tion Tutor University Vaughan Vice-Principal Visitors Welsh language Welsh Scholarships Welsh students Welshmen White Hall Wynne
Popular passages
Page 159 - ... justify this preference. But cereals and other products are cultivated with profit, and may become in time an element of great value in the wealth of the country. Coffee. The production of coffee in Guatemala has been constantly increasing. The plantations improve and increase in number every year and will no doubt continue to do so as long as the quality of the coffee is acknowledged to be superior, and the great demand for it maintained. The following table shows the production of coffee in...
Page 148 - Library, has given him a very great character, to which you may be pleased to have recourse ; whilst in the mean time I tell you, that he is a person of singular modesty, good nature, and uncommon industry. He lives a retired life, generally three or four miles from Oxford, is not at all ambitious of preferment or honour, and what he does is purely out of love to the good of learning and his country.
Page 215 - Augustus at Rome was for building renowned And of marble he left what of brick he had found; But is not our Nash, too, a very great master, He finds us all brick and leaves us all plaster.
Page 6 - after consultation had with his friends concerning the matter petitioned Queen Elizabeth that she would be pleased to found a College in Oxford that he might bestow his estate for the maintenance of certain scholars of Wales to be trained up in good letters."t § 2.