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Topic: Gervase Babington


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In the News (Fri 9 Jan 09)

  
  Gervase Fen (Edmund Crispin)
Gervase Fen, Professor of English Language and Literature at Oxford University, is in his early forties when we first meet him.
With the help of Gervase Fen (complete with Lily Christine III, "an extremely small, vociferous and battered sports car" that is driven by Fen in a wildly dangerous way) and numerous undergraduates, everything gets increasingly melodramatic, ending in a mad fight on a fairground roundabout that is hurtling around, completely out of control.
Gervase Fen thinks differently, but it's not until the end of the book that he realises just what really happened.
homepage.ntlworld.com /philipg/detectives/fen.html   (5215 words)

  
 Focus: The Hampton Court Conference I (the set-up) - The King James Bible - Icons of England   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
There had been a hint of gossip in 1603 that Babington had “turned Puritan” but although he was the most sympathetic to their cause, it is unlikely that this is true.
In his sermons Babington preached for moderation between the Established Church and the Puritans, regarding the pettiness and spite of the quarrels as the greatest sin.
Babington and Bancroft crossed swords frequently at the conference and for the rest of their careers.
www.icons.org.uk /theicons/collection/king-james-bible/features/hampton-court   (2096 words)

  
 Soli Deo Gloria Ministries   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
It was said of him that "he was a true pattern of piety to the people, of learning to the ministry, and of wisdom to all governors.
Gervase Babington died in 1610 of a fever and was buried in the cathedral in Worcester.
None of his works have gone into modern reprint, but they were highly prized in his own day.
www.sdgbooks.com /hall4_babington.html   (253 words)

  
 ORB: The Online Reference Book for Medieval Studies
Gervase of Canterbury, Historical works, the Chronicle of the Reigns of Stephen, Henry II, and Richard I, by Gervase, the Monk of Canterbury.
The part of 1135 is drawn mainly from Geoffrey of Monmouth and William of Malmesbury, and this is followed by an abstract of Gervase's Chronica, 1135-99.
He became a monk of Christ church, Canterbury, in 1163, and he was sacristan of the convent in 1193.
www.the-orb.net /rolls.html   (9365 words)

  
 David Babington — David Babiuk : ZoomInfo Business People Information
David Babington said: "Airports always carry a safety risk which is why they are generally situated away from cities.
Gervase Babington (1550-1610)- It is not known where Gervase Babbington was born.
The death of Tony Babington earlier in the year meant that CEPS lost its President.
www.zoominfo.com /people/level2page1655.aspx   (1598 words)

  
 Leaver Genealogy - Babington   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Babington, in the barony of Umfraville, where he resided in the reigns of
Abt 1460 another Babington was head of the Hospitallers of St. John of
of Derby and Notts in 1534, ancestor of the Babingtons of Dethick,of whom was
members.iinet.net.au /~billeah/babingdesc.html   (1018 words)

  
 babington1
Families covered: Babington of Babington, Babington of Burgley, Babington of Chilwell, Babington of Dethick, Babington of Kiddington, Babington of Kingston, Babington of Rampton
Gervase Babington, Bishop of Llandaff then Exeter then Worcester (d 17.05.1610)
Sir Hugh de Babington of Burgley and Rolleston, Governor of Cambridge, Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire (d 1296)
www.stirnet.com /html/genie/british/bb4ae/babington1.htm   (555 words)

  
 Gervase Babbington   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Queen Elizabeth had no sooner secured this property, than she granted it, on 15th May, 1595, to William Killigrew, Esq., one of the Grooms of her Chamber.
Heylin has very incorrectly charged this wrongful dismemberment to the memory of Dr. Cotton, the successor of Babington ('Hist.
Perhaps this act of obsequious subserviency to the royal wish induced her Majesty to translate our prelate to the wealthier see of Worcester, on 4th October, 1597.
www.exeter-cathedral.org.uk /Clergy/Oliver/36.html   (296 words)

  
 Dympna Callaghan: "(Un)natural Loving: Swine, Pets, and Flowers in Venus and Adonis"
The Swine was uncleane, because he parteth the hoofe, but cheweth not the cudde; and of their flesh they might not eate, nor touch their carkasse andcc.
Babington's desire for "Puddings" finds him in violation of the very injunction he is at pains to explicate and appears to run a very different course from that of Adonis's perilous pursuit of wild bacon.
In Gervase Babington's biblical commentary, bestiality and sodomy are near neighbors: "Thou shalt not lye with the male, as one lyeth with a woman: for it is abhomination.
eserver.org /emc/1-3/callaghan.html   (7200 words)

  
 thePeerage.com - Sir Thomas Newcomen and others
He married Mary Eyre, daughter of Sir Gervase Eyre and Elizabeth Babington, before 1645.
She was the daughter of Sir Gervase Eyre and Elizabeth Babington.
She was buried on 2 August 1671 in Haydor, Lincolnshire, England.
www.thepeerage.com /p19014.htm   (420 words)

  
 The Hampton Court Conference by Laurence M. Vance
1605), Gervase Babington (1550–1610), Henry Robinson (1553–1616), Anthony Rudd (1549–1615), and Tobie Matthew (1546–1628).
He had drawn up the Calvinistic Lambeth Articles in 1595, which articles were to be mentioned at the Hampton Court Conference.
Bilson was the bishop of Winchester, Dove of Peterborough, Watson of Chichester, Babington of Worcester, Robinson of Carlisle, Rudd of St. David’s, and Matthew of Durham.
www.lewrockwell.com /orig4/vance3.html   (3143 words)

  
 I15784: Gervase Clifton K.B. (Sir) ( - )
Sir Gervase Clifton K.B. Spouses of Gervase Clifton K.B. Unknown
Gervase Clifton K.B. and Unknown spouse had the following children
Descendants of Sir Gervase Clifton K.B. and ???
web.ukonline.co.uk /nigel.battysmith/Database/D0007/I15784.html   (28 words)

  
 The Westminster View of Creation Days: A Choice between Non-Ambiguity or Historical Revisionism
Gervase Babington (1550-1610), Bishop of Worchester, commented on Genesis 1:7 that God created “not in one moment, but in six dayes space” (Non uno momento, sed sex dierum spatio), thereby exhibiting an early use of “in the space of six days” to refer to actual days.
Within the generation before the Westminster Assembly: William Ames, Zacharius Ursinus, James Ussher, Andrew Willet, Gervase Babington.
Many other Westminster divines wrote catechisms, which also corroborate their uniform view on this subject.
mywebpages.comcast.net /webpages54/ap/hallcreation.html   (11195 words)

  
 Calvin in the Hands of the Philistines: or, Did Calvin Bowl on the Sabbath? by Chris Coldwell   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Anti-Sabbath and Sabbath writers seem to both agree that Gervase Babington (1551-1610) is the first clearly unambiguous writer to express what became the "Puritan" view.
However, remarking on this earlier ambiguity, Dennison, echoing Gilfillan, writes "Yet, I ask, how did it happen that in 1583, Gervase Babington penned a statement on the fourth commandment which could have passed for a summary of Nicolas Bownd.
One must not neglect to weigh the almost certain effect of the biblical discussions in these Puritan gatherings – gatherings which undoubtedly touched on the Sabbath discussion….
www.fpcr.org /blue_banner_articles/calvin_bowls.htm   (14569 words)

  
 notes
The present poem was written after his consecration as of Durham in 1595, and before his translation to the see of York in 1606.
III.10 Gervase Babington was consecrated Bishop of Llandaff in 1591, translated to the see of Exeter in 1594, and to the see of Worcester in 1597.
For thus writeth Gervase of Tilburie, who lived in the yeere 1160.
www.philological.bham.ac.uk /stradling/notes.html   (7563 words)

  
 Theologybooks.com
PENTATEUCH AND OTHER HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT 72 AINSWORTH (HENRY), Annotations on the Pentateuch (See also No. 66).
In Babington's Works, folio, 1622, there are "Certaine plain, brief, and comfortable notes" upon the five books of Moses.
Our copy is in the old Black Letter.
www.theologybooks.com /site/text.cfm?tkey=32   (1579 words)

  
 [No title]
Although he died before the end of Godwin’s Collection Godwin speaks so little of him that Smith wants to supply the defect.
The chief of his family, had been involved in the Babington plot.
Discussion of the scandal of his two marriages, one in Ireland and one in England, in which there was some question of bigamy.
shakespeare.folger.edu /other/html/dfosmith.html   (7950 words)

  
 MAPPAEMUNDI AND EARLY WORLD MAPS, 1200-1700
Babington, Churchill and Joseph Rawson Lumby (eds), Polychronikon Ranulphi Higden, together with the English translation of John Trevisa and of an unknown writer of the fifteenth century, 9 vols., London: Longman, 1865-86
Ketrzynski, S., "Ze studiów nad Gerwazym z Tilbury" [Studies on Gervase of Tilbury], Rozprawy Akademii Umiejetnosci, Wydz.
Liebrecht, Felix (ed.), Otia imperialia, Hannover: C. Rümpler, 1856 [Gervase of Tilbury]
myweb.dal.ca /jpekacz/Bibliography.htm   (16744 words)

  
 3eng
Teaching by word and example, you perform the two duties of a great doctor, not without the highest praise.
GERVASE BABINGTON, BISHOP OF You are a prelate for a clergy and a vice-president for the laity, and you mould them both with your precepts and govern them with your judgment.
The reward for you is double, and the praise owed to you is twofold.
www.philological.bham.ac.uk /stradling/3eng.html   (7684 words)

  
 Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music: Archive   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-30)
Watermark: hand and cuff with five-pointed star (not in Briquet).
Later used as binding material for printed book containing writings of Bishop Gervase Babington (London, 1615).
Fragments with music removed from binding in late 19th century; now preserved separately.
www.diamm.ac.uk /apps/Archive.jsp?navToggle=2&archiveKey=43   (12244 words)

  
 SELECTED PAPERS FROM THE
The scenes of attempted seduction and self-analysis, 2.2 and 2.4, display lust overwhelming the misguided Angelo while illustrating vividly the Renaissance psychology of temptation.
As Taylor’s Christs Combate and Conquest (57-58) and Gervase Babington’s Workes (17) both indicate, we must conquer temptation first by dismissing its suggestion, then by refusing to entertain the "rising" of sinful desires, and finally—having failed all else—by refusing to enact the sinful designs contemplated.
This view rested on two presuppositions: (1) that Protestantism won over the majority of Englishmen by the end of the reign of Edward VI, and (2) that these staunchly Protestant Englishmen supposedly linked Mary, her Catholicism, her Catholic, Spanish husband Philip, and his kingdom with their hatred of the Pope (Powell 93-5).
www.marshall.edu /engsr/SR1998.html   (16475 words)

  
 [No title]
014100522X : Head over Heels in the Dales : Phinn, Gervase
014102688X : A Wayne in a Manger : Phinn, Gervase
0141391006 : For the Sake of Example: Capital Courts-Martial 1914-1920 : Babington, Anthony
www.biggerbooks.com /isbnbrowser2/isbnstart/0141   (9978 words)

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