意味 | 共起表現 |
「Hungerford」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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dward Hasted was given the Mastership of The | Hungerford Almshouses by his friend William Bouverie, w |
The | Hungerford Almshouses in Corsham, Wiltshire, England we |
The site is also known as Lady Margaret | Hungerford Almshouses & Schoolroom and Corsham Almshous |
erkshire parishes of Fawley, Great Shefford, | Hungerford and Lambourn, and with the Oxfordshire paris |
uth of the River Kennet, between Newbury and | Hungerford and close to the Hampshire border. |
convention chair for the first year), David | Hungerford, and Jason Bustard. |
e in the order Hemiptera.It was described by | Hungerford and the type locality is in Canada. |
two daughters, Anne (who married Sir Walter | Hungerford), and Jane (a lady in waiting to Queen Mary |
er of settlements: Hermitage village, Little | Hungerford and Wellhouse, in 2003 these consisted of so |
ed, with far fewer towns (Newbury, Thatcham, | Hungerford and Lambourn). |
avel provide services to Wantage, Aldbourne, | Hungerford and Marlborough from the Bus Station. |
of Thargomindah, Birdsville, Eromanga, Eulo, | Hungerford and Windorah. |
onstituency consisting of Newbury, Thatcham, | Hungerford and a large part of the surrounding area of |
Chisbury is about 4 miles (6.4 km) west of | Hungerford and about 6 miles (9.7 km) south-east of Mar |
David | Hungerford Ashton OAM (6 July 1927 - 22 November 2005) |
Subsequently | Hungerford attacked Farleigh Castle, which was garrison |
Hungerford began writing as a teenager and had his firs | |
is a lock on the Kennet and Avon Canal, near | Hungerford, Berkshire, England. |
is a lock on the Kennet and Avon Canal, near | Hungerford, Berkshire, England. |
is a lock on the Kennet and Avon Canal, near | Hungerford, Berkshire, England. |
d Hants Railway, aka, Great Western Railway, | Hungerford Branch, opens |
d for making safe a mine which had fallen on | Hungerford Bridge on 17 April 1941. |
Hungerford Bridge Footbridges, London, UK | |
It is located in the | Hungerford Bridge arches. |
View of Jubilee Gardens with | Hungerford Bridge in background. |
nkment tube station is a short walk over the | Hungerford Bridge |
Charing Cross railway station (also over the | Hungerford Bridge) |
London, England, between Waterloo Bridge and | Hungerford Bridge, on the site of what is now the Queen |
Farleigh | Hungerford Castle, also called Farleigh Castle or Farle |
nia on December 21, 1833 and was interred in | Hungerford Cemetery in Leedstown, Virginia. |
He was buried in 1355 in | Hungerford Church, where an elaborate monument long exi |
kshire about 3.5 miles (5.6 km) southeast of | Hungerford, close to the county boundaries with Wiltshi |
Hungerford Common | |
ca and produced by the manufacturer Street & | Hungerford Company. |
racher; scenic and lighting design by Andrew | Hungerford, costume design by Susan Toy) |
, no observation has ever been recorded of a | Hungerford crawling water beetle flying. |
In 1883, it was maintained by | Hungerford Crewe, third Baron Crewe, the grandson of th |
in his estates and the baronies of Botreaux, | Hungerford, de Moleyns and Hastings by his surviving si |
A little later Hussey informed Cromwell that | Hungerford desired to be sheriff of Wiltshire, a desire |
zabeth Godfrey, married Edmund Dunch, son of | Hungerford Dunch. |
After much wavering in his belief Anthony | Hungerford embraced the reformed religion in 1588, at t |
John O'Gaunt Community Technology College in | Hungerford, England. |
While the Prince of Orange was in | Hungerford English supporters came into the town from a |
that was formerly the centre of the Farleigh | Hungerford estate, and much of the stone came from Farl |
John Gillam also bought much of the Farleigh | Hungerford estate. |
ieved to date to about 1450 and built by the | Hungerford family for use by themselves and their serva |
The | Hungerford family are commemorated in the name of the H |
s one of the principal seats of the powerful | Hungerford family (their principal seat was at Farleigh |
Bourton Place was the manor house of the | Hungerford family. |
eld from about 1680 in a London house of the | Hungerford family. |
the departure of Tranter at Christmas.Former | Hungerford goalkeeper Jimmy Greenwood briefly returned |
It was damaged when the adjoining | Hungerford Hall burned down in 1854, and was sold to th |
Hungerford has a special interest in promoting the use | |
ngs, 2nd Baron Hastings who married Margaret | Hungerford, heiress, and a daughter Anne, who married G |
His grandson, Sir John Leigh Austin | Hungerford Hoskyns was head of the Prime Minister's Pol |
Sir | Hungerford Hoskyns, 6th Baronet (c. |
He was born the second son of Sir | Hungerford Hoskyns, 7th Baronet of Harewood Park, Heref |
ying north of and including the townships of | Hungerford, Huntingdon and Rawdon and the Village of St |
l, Dungannon, Elzevir, Faraday, Grimsthorpe, | Hungerford, Huntingdon, Lake, Limerick, Madoc, Marmora, |
in the County of Hastings, the Townships of | Hungerford, Huntingdon, Thurlow and Tyendinaga, the Cit |
ngland today, the tradition survives only in | Hungerford in Berkshire, although the festival was some |
Afterwards, they took Daniel to a layby near | Hungerford in Berkshire, where he was again sexually ab |
o teach her mother's method from a studio at | Hungerford, in Berkshire. |
ught and restored Farleigh House at Farleigh | Hungerford in Somerset and lived there for most of the |
l Scientific Interest in the civil parish of | Hungerford in the English county of Berkshire. |
of the Townships of Thurlow, Tyendinaga, and | Hungerford In 1903, the county of Hastings was divided |
dgeway and Pewsey in the west to the edge of | Hungerford in the east. |
Weston-super-Mare in the west to Swindon and | Hungerford in the east. |
This was synonymised by | Hungerford in 1950. |
Born in | Hungerford in Berkshire, he was christened as James Bla |
Hungerford in 1625 lived at Corsham, Wiltshire, but aft | |
Currawinya is a national park near | Hungerford in south west Queensland, Australia, 828 km |
In 1958 the district combined with the | Hungerford Independent School District. |
iddings, Glen Flora, Guy, Hearne, Hempstead, | Hungerford, Industry, Kendleton, Kenney, Kurten, La Gra |
Hungerford is a civil parish, covering the town of Hung | |
Hungerford is a hamlet in the New Forest National Park | |
Hungerford Lock is a lock on the Kennet and Avon Canal, | |
Hungerford Lock was built between 1718 and 1723 under t | |
Nearby towns and cities: | Hungerford, Marlborough, Newbury, Swindon |
25th governor (1885-1887) and another, Henry | Hungerford Marmaduke, served as a gunner in the Confede |
During the reign of Henry VIII, Lord | Hungerford, married three times. |
Hungerford Marsh Lock is a lock on the Kennet and Avon | |
Hungerford Marsh Lock was built between 1718 and 1723 u | |
The | Hungerford massacre occurred in Hungerford, Berkshire, |
he used in 1987 to kill 8 people during the | Hungerford massacre. |
20s a portrait was in the possession of Mrs. | Hungerford Meyer Boddam, of Capel House, Guildford. |
Hungerford Newtown is a small village in Berkshire, Eng | |
to the east, between Shefford Woodlands and | Hungerford Newtown. |
Margaret Wolfe | Hungerford, novelist (d.1897). |
Hocktide in | Hungerford now combines the ceremonial collecting of th |
George William | Hungerford, OC (born January 2, 1944) is a Canadian law |
He seems to be the Anthony | Hungerford of Wiltshire, who matriculated from St. John |
e 1536 he was summoned to parliament as Lord | Hungerford of Heytesbury. |
Sir Anthony | Hungerford of Black Bourton (1567-1627), was a religiou |
In 1882 she married Thomas Henry | Hungerford, of Cahirmore, with whom she had two sons an |
George | Hungerford, Olympic rower |
ilbert Burnet, Bishop of Salisbury, being at | Hungerford on a visitation, sent for Robinson, who defe |
The resulting by-election was won by Thomas | Hungerford on 18 January 1882. |
it is situated half way between Newbury and | Hungerford on the A4 road. |
in centres in the district include Thatcham, | Hungerford, Pangbourne and Lambourn. |
and half in Berkshire, until transferred to | Hungerford parish in the 1890s. |
Hungerford Park is a country house and surrounding esta | |
Vane | Hungerford Pennell (August 16, 1876 - June 17, 1938) wa |
John | Hungerford Penruddocke (1770 - 1841) was a Tory politic |
xists due to the passion of Sir John Michael | Hungerford Pollen, 7th Baronet of Redenham. |
The United States Postal Service | Hungerford Post Office is located at 210 East Live Oak |
In September 1646 Anthony | Hungerford pressed for a commission as governor of the |
Hungerford proved useful to Cromwell in Wiltshire, and | |
Hungerford railway station is a railway station in the | |
Born in Leeds, Virginia, | Hungerford received an elementary education under priva |
11 Northumberland MLA Thomas | Hungerford resigned in April 1880 to attend to personal |
al Government Act 1894 from that part of the | Hungerford rural sanitary district that was in Wiltshir |
and cities: Devizes, Marlborough, Tidworth, | Hungerford, Salisbury, Swindon |
During that period, the | Hungerford School used money donated by the committee t |
llege organizations were contributing to the | Hungerford School in Eatonville, Florida, even before t |
ve adequate records to bear this out) to the | Hungerford School, it consistently contributed the larg |
Hungerford served in the War of 1812 as a brigadier gen | |
Hungerford served with the Australian Army in Darwin, N | |
Hungerford should not be confused with his namesake and | |
Trains at | Hungerford Station |
Hungerford station consists of two platforms either sid | |
st Great Western provide the rail service to | Hungerford station. |
ge on the north bank of the River Thames, by | Hungerford Steps. |
s products from its ten branches in Newbury, | Hungerford, Thatcham, Abingdon, Didcot, Wokingham, Ando |
ould give him, he travelled two miles out of | Hungerford to Littlecote Hall. |
f Coronation, Finchampstead North and Little | Hungerford to finish the election with 30 seats as comp |
ifax, Lord Nottingham, and Lord Godolphin to | Hungerford to confer with William. |
on on one occasion, including Abingdon Town, | Hungerford Town and Milton Keynes Dons. |
uthern league Division One South & west side | Hungerford Town alongside newly appointed manager Bobby |
st sixteen of the FA Vase, losing at home to | Hungerford Town in front of a crowd of 1,100. |
City, Barnet, Staines Town, Chesham United, | Hungerford Town and Aldershot Town. |
r their chairman Andrew Fitton, who had been | Hungerford Town's chairman while Austin was a player at |
anage clubs in the Berkshire area, including | Hungerford Town, Kintbury Rangers and Newbury. |
nds before eventually losing to local rivals | Hungerford Town. |
again in November 2008 rejoining former club | Hungerford Town. |
Rachel | Hungerford twice remarried, one of her husbands being S |
erkshire, where it joins the River Kennet at | Hungerford, ultimately draining to the North Sea via th |
The Houlton family remained at Farleigh | Hungerford until 1899, when Sir Edward Houlton died wit |
the Liberal Democrats in Emmbrook and Little | Hungerford wards, while also recovering Sonning which h |
Hungerford was appointed as an Assistant Whip in 1933, | |
The line from Reading to | Hungerford was planned by the Berks and Hants Railway, |
Hungerford was policed by two Sergeants and twelve Cons | |
Hungerford was himself High Sheriff of Wiltshire from 1 | |
While Wilson | Hungerford was serving as Secretary of the Ulster Union |
Walter | Hungerford, was the only child of Sir Edward Hungerford |
the Northern Ireland general election, 1929, | Hungerford was elected to represent Belfast Oldpark. |
Born in Belfast, | Hungerford was employed by the Irish Unionist Party fro |
Hungerford was the son of Walter de Hungerford of Heyte | |
Its nearest town is | Hungerford, which lies approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) w |
For this reason he could be the Anthony | Hungerford who on 9 November 1632 matriculated from Que |
His pupils include Malcolm Frager, Bruce | Hungerford, William Masselos, and Elly Ney. |
ry of his first wife, Joan, to the church of | Hungerford, Wiltshire, and to other religious foundatio |
formed and obtained the rectory of Farleigh, | Hungerford, Wiltshire. |
Lord Hussey of Sleaford, whose daughter was | Hungerford's third wife, wrote to Sir Thomas Cromwell s |
t Berkshire, including Newbury, Thatcham and | Hungerford, Wokingham, Bracknell, much of North Hampshi |
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