「Clarendon」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Clarendon

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  • is in the possession of the current Earl of Clarendon, a direct descendant of Edward Hyde, the 1st
  • y, two interurban trolley lines converged in Clarendon a short distance west of today's Clarendon M
  • Lord Clarendon acquired the 8 acre (3.2 ha) site for his ho
  • The town, originally known as Clarendon, after the name of the county it was then in
  • ealth, but he attended the royal councils of Clarendon and Northampton in 1164, which dealt with th
  • andparents were Thomas Villiers, 1st Earl of Clarendon and Charlotte Cappell.
  • ce itself lies in a park-like median between Clarendon and Wilson Boulevards.
  • 1631, and Edward Hyde, who was made Earl of Clarendon, and was Lord High Chancellor of England dur
  • Three months ago I promised Lord Clarendon, and his government, in this country, that I
  • The population of Clarendon and the RAAF Base Richmond is 426 (Census 20
  • ucceeded his elder brother in the earldom of Clarendon and entered the House of Lords.
  • On Lord Clarendon and Rochester's death in December of the sam
  • de was a daughter of Henry Hyde, 4th Earl of Clarendon and his wife Jane Keveson-Gower.
  • By 1926, portions between Clarendon and Pampa, as well as north of Spearman, wer
  • aplain to Sir Edward Hyde, later the Earl of Clarendon and highly influential statesman.
  • was Edward Hyde, who became the 1st Earl of Clarendon, and Lord High Chancellor of England 1661 -
  • orbes who married John Villiers, 3rd Earl of Clarendon and Katherine Elizabeth Forbes who married W
  • led by noblemen such as the Earls of Essex, Clarendon and Brownlow, the railway line received Roya
  • ) was the father of Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon and great-grandfather of two British monarch
  • the Washington Metro subway system, between Clarendon and Ballston.
  • the import of Irish cattle, partly to oppose Clarendon and partly to thwart the Duke of Ormonde.
  • s day, and remained friends with the Earl of Clarendon and his second son Laurence Hyde, 1st Earl o
  • station and the opening of the Court House, Clarendon and Virginia Square stations.
  • 0), married the Thomas Villiers, 1st Earl of Clarendon and had issue.
  • In 1955, Burton was elected mayor of Clarendon and served until 1963.
  • ntly being voted in, with options being twin Clarendon and Chatham houses, pick two "lost" houses f
  • There is also ncn Clarendon and ncn Berridge, run by New College Notting
  • follows this east-southeasterly path through Clarendon and Childress, where it intersects US Highwa
  • edric Leonard Houston (born June 28, 1982 in Clarendon, Arkansas) is a former American football run
  • the government saw fit), opposed strongly by Clarendon as an encroachment on the prerogative, and i
  • School, Our Lady of Rosary, Stanwell Fields, Clarendon, Ashford Park, Echelford Primary School and
  • e vicarage of Suddington St. Peter's by Lord Clarendon, at the request of William Nicholson, bishop
  • Road, High Street, Bath Street, The Parade, Clarendon Avenue, Kenilworth Road, Leamington Road, Wa
  • Road, High Street, Bath Street, The Parade, Clarendon Avenue, Kenilworth Road, Leamington Road, Wa
  • Road, High Street, Bath Street, The Parade, Clarendon Avenue, Kenilworth Road, A46 Kenilworth Bypa
  • DeKalb School of the Arts is located at 1192 Clarendon Avenue, Avondale Estates, GA 30002, on the s
  • named in honor of U.S. Army general Charles Clarendon Ballou.
  • , located on the site where there used to be Clarendon Beach, a famous beach of the city.
  • t of Ireland (Lord Bessborough and then Lord Clarendon) between 1846 and 1852 and State Steward to
  • he platform to a location near the corner of Clarendon Boulevard and Barton Street.
  • Clarendon bridge around 1869
  • At the northern end to the west is the Clarendon Building on Broad Street, with the Sheldonia
  • The Clarendon Building
  • The Clarendon Building is a landmark Grade I listed buildi
  • Clarendon Building after cleaning and restoration, 200
  • Facing the Clarendon Building on Broad Street.
  • Before the construction of the Clarendon Building, the presses were in the basement o
  • Price and Baker work in The Item's Clarendon Bureau as staff writer and senior staff writ
  • "petty assizes" established by the Assize of Clarendon by Henry II in 1166.
  • "petty assizes" established by the Assize of Clarendon by Henry II in 1176 with the Azzize of North
  • However the colonists abandoned Clarendon by the autumn of 1667.
  • Clarendon came to be known as "Little Saigon" - restau
  • w became Prime Minister in 1922 he appointed Clarendon Captain of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen
  • Oxfordshire Hussars), at 34 Cornmarket, now Clarendon Centre (8 November 2003)
  • ly venturing out of his estates; the Earl of Clarendon claimed that he had lived ‘as near an innoce
  • ushland, Cactus, Canadian, Canyon, Channing, Clarendon, Claude, Cotton Center, Crosbyton, Dalhart,
  • After the Clarendon closed, attempts were made to relocate the c
  • le at the University of Oxford he joined the Clarendon Club, and met and married Peggy Moxon, a stu
  • The Clarendon Code was a series of laws used by the Parlia
  • The Clarendon Code was used against Charles II of England
  • However the Clarendon Code was not actually the work of Clarendon
  • Five Mile Act (1665) - This final act of the Clarendon Code was aimed at Nonconformist ministers, w
  • This law was part of the Clarendon Code, named after Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of C
  • f Dissenters suffering diabilities under the Clarendon Code.
  • He first attended Clarendon College in Clarendon.
  • e, Jamaica and attended Excelsior School and Clarendon College before moving to Canada in 1956.
  • Clarendon College (Jamaica), a religious school in Cla
  • Clarendon College (Texas), a two-year college in Clare
  • Walters attended Clarendon College in his native Jamaica, before moving
  • Stocking graduated from Clarendon College in Texas (BA 1918), the University o
  • Dixon attended Clarendon College where he played on the school's team
  • Ballarat and Clarendon College, a school in Australia
  • It includes all of Bamberg, Clarendon, Colleton, Marion and Williamsburg counties
  • estminster School for twenty years after the Clarendon Commission recommended that Westminster Abbe
  • hich was the foundation date accepted by the Clarendon Commission into public schools in 1861, maki
  • Clarendon Congregational Church (also known as Old Bri
  • Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon considered his influence on the parliamentar
  • Clarendon Consolidated ISD has three campuses - Claren
  • Clarendon Consolidated Independent School District is
  • The City of Howardwick is served by the Clarendon Consolidated Independent School District.
  • lasted from its creation from Claremont and Clarendon counties in 1791 until it was absorbed into
  • The paper currently covers Sumter, Lee and Clarendon counties, with a dedicated bureau located in
  • In 1886, Richardson was endorsed by Clarendon County Democrats for the candidacy of govern
  • Born in Clarendon County to Richard Richardson, a famed Revolu
  • ficially became Pinewood and in 1920 it left Clarendon County to become part of Sumter County.
  • Location of Clarendon County in South Carolina
  • Clarendon County School District is located in Clarend
  • The building now houses the Clarendon County Archives and History Center.
  • by Bamberg Memorial Hospital in Bamberg and Clarendon County Memorial Hospital in Manning.
  • It is part of the Clarendon County's Clarendon County School District 2
  • hodist minister and civil rights leader from Clarendon County, South Carolina.
  • onal Register of Historic Places listings in Clarendon County, South Carolina.
  • Clarendon County, South Carolina - southwest
  • Clarendon County, South Carolina, USA
  • Manchester State Forest, which extends into Clarendon County, is based in Wedgefield off SC 261 so
  • Clarendon County, New South Wales, Australia
  • arion, an impoundment of the Santee River of Clarendon County, South Carolina.
  • the National Register of Historic Places in Clarendon County, South Carolina, United States.
  • Clarendon County, South Carolina and Hyde County, Nort
  • at 9:00 am EDT on August 25, 1927 in Silver, Clarendon County, South Carolina to Daniel and Annie B
  • to John Peter Richardson III, a planter from Clarendon County.
  • 9, Richardson managed Elmswood Plantation in Clarendon County.
  • The region was named Clarendon county.
  • Avenue, Portobello Market, Westbourne Grove, Clarendon Cross and Ledbury Road.
  • Lord Clarendon describes him to the king as "a person of em
  • Clarendon died suddenly in December 1838, aged 81, at
  • Lord Clarendon died in March 1824, aged 70.
  • Lord Clarendon died in October 1914, aged 68, and was succe
  • 12 January - George Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon, diplomat and statesman (died 1870)
  • The neighborhood is bounded by Clarendon Drive on the north, Wright Street on the sou
  • Sonderburg Road in Harmsworth, North London, Clarendon Drive in Putney, South London, and Eccles Ne
  • d Electric Bell apparatus (also known as the Clarendon Dry Pile), constructed in 1840, is located i
  • wn-Falls Church Road (now Wilson Boulevard), Clarendon evolved into Arlington County's original "do
  • Egyptienne shows historical influence of the Clarendon faces.
  • There is evidence that the Romans used Clarendon Forest on a regular basis.
  • Texas, near Clarendon, from J.A. Reynolds.
  • He was secretary to Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon, from 1660 to 1667, M.P. for St. Michael (16
  • k, Snowtown, Blyth, Hoyleton, Hamley Bridge, Clarendon, Gawler, and Myponga; from the east side of
  • Sir Clarendon Golding Hyde (5 February 1858 - 24 June 1934
  • 31 March - Edward Hyde, 3rd Earl of Clarendon, Governor of New York and New Jersey (born 1
  • o years previously, Lord Hyde (later Earl of Clarendon) had been appointed Lord Chancellor, and in
  • all white students now attending the private Clarendon Hall, leaving the public schools almost enti
  • en (the 15th, 16th, and 17th Earls of Derby, Clarendon, Hartington and Oliver Stanley).
  • one, the house system will need to change as Clarendon has 4 houses for the entire school with Chat
  • ge in 1645; but from that time, according to Clarendon, he forsook his moderate attitude, and contr
  • is countess, an impertinence for which, says Clarendon, he was cudgelled by the earl.
  • When Besley created Clarendon he had it patented, as England just passed a
  • m (981 ft) three-pronged antenna tower near Clarendon Heights in San Francisco, California.
  • ketball, baseball and track & field while at Clarendon High School in Clarendon, Arkansas.
  • Betts attended Clarendon High School and has a younger brother, Darre
  • of the best running backs in Texas while at Clarendon High School.
  • career touchdowns with 97 from 1998-2000 at Clarendon High.
  • 89 Clarendon Hill or Davis Square - Sullivan Square Stati
  • a Medford Hillside), 87 (Arlington Center or Clarendon Hill via Somerville), 88 (Clarendon Hill via
  • Teele Square sits on Clarendon Hill, one of the seven hills of Somerville.
  • e world”, which made Roman cringe but slowly Clarendon Hills grew, it afforded more devices to make
  • sion could not be saved from demolition, the Clarendon Hills Historical Society and the Middaugh Ma
  • In Metra's zone-based fare system, Clarendon Hills is in zone D. There is a staffed stati
  • Clarendon Hills is a station on Metra's BNSF Railway L
  • Clarendon Hills has a station on Metra's BNSF Railway
  • The Clarendon Hills Historical Society was founded in 1974
  • During its initial years of operation the Clarendon Hills Historical Society had a small, but va
  • on panel 06E, row 103, and is buried at the Clarendon Hills Cemetery in Darien, Illinois.
  • Clarendon Hills is in Community Consolidated School Di
  • e Heritage Hall Committee, together with the Clarendon Hills Historical Society, leased an historic
  • loy his first employee and rebranded his $30 Clarendon Hills Shiraz as 1994 Clarendon Hills Astrali
  • Clarendon Hills was awarded New World Winery of the Ye
  • sion, a 19th century mansion built by one of Clarendon HIlls' founding members, and one of Clarendo
  • Edwards was born in Clarendon Hills, Illinois on June 2, 1945.
  • Currently, bus lines 663 and 664 serve Clarendon Hills.
  • rrie, Bedford, North Canonto, South Canonto, Clarendon, Hinchinbrooke, Kennebec, Loughborough, Mill
  • were his brothers, and Edward, first earl of Clarendon, his first cousin.
  • club known as "The Final Curtain" before The Clarendon Hotel Ballroom was demolished.
  • Occupying the former Clarendon Hotel on Station Road, the hotel's original
  • to his conduct on a certain occasion at the Clarendon Hotel: "The smallest voluntary aberration fr
  • rs who purchased a Piccadilly mansion called Clarendon House from Christopher Monck, 2nd Duke of Al
  • dicate purchased a Piccadilly mansion called Clarendon House from Christopher Monck, 2nd Duke of Al
  • Clarendon House Grammar School, or simply "Clarendon"
  • including the redeveloped Alexandra Hall and Clarendon House Postgraduate residence)
  • View of Clarendon House, now demolished.
  • The Saints' Roost Museum in Clarendon houses a restored Fort Worth and Denver Rail
  • pied the post until succeeded by the Earl of Clarendon in 1930.
  • d his elder brother, Henry Hyde, 2nd Earl of Clarendon, in defending him in Parliament, but the fal
  • rian, college president, and former mayor of Clarendon in Donley County, was born in Decatur.
  • ( Clarendon in his History of the Rebellion recorded tha
  • is a lighthouse built after the wreck of the Clarendon in 1837 to the west of Niton at the foot of
  • clude The Ship Inn, The Providence Inne, The Clarendon Inn and The Royal Norfolk Hotel.
  • Clarendon is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New S
  • The Clarendon is named after Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clar
  • Mardrea Hyman (born 22 December 1972 in Clarendon) is a Jamaican runner who specializes in the
  • Lake Clarendon is a reservoir located 10 km North East of G
  • The Market Common, Clarendon is an outdoor shopping mall and residential
  • Clarendon is a city in Monroe County, Arkansas, United
  • Clarendon is a side platformed Washington Metro statio
  • Clarendon is located in the Arlington district of the
  • The Clarendon itself was a very large 1930s public house w
  • Clinton McKenzie (born 15 September 1955 in Clarendon, Jamaica) is a former professional boxer.
  • acena Golding-Clarke (born March 20, 1975 in Clarendon, Jamaica) is a retired female hurdling athle
  • t" Ottey (born December 29, 1959 in May Pen, Clarendon, Jamaica) is a retired Canadian high jumper.
  • an St. Patrick Davey (born April 14, 1978 in Clarendon, Jamaica) is an American football quarterbac
  • Born in Pleasant Valley, Clarendon, Jamaica, Herb McKenley enrolled at the Univ
  • after refusing to sign the Constitutions of Clarendon, King Henry accepted a petition, in verse, f
  • r Oxford Physics groups are not based in the Clarendon Lab.
  • The current coordinates point at the Clarendon Lab/Physics department.
  • xford as a research fellow in physics at the Clarendon Laboratory in 1968, and was appointed to a u
  • The Clarendon Laboratory
  • th Simon and Kurti left Germany, joining the Clarendon Laboratory in the University of Oxford, Engl
  • at St John's College Oxford, working in the Clarendon Laboratory of the Oxford Physics Department
  • demann (Lord Cherwell) to lead a team at the Clarendon Laboratory at Oxford University, closely con
  • phy at Oxford University and director of the Clarendon Laboratory, largely on the recommendation of
  • The Clarendon Laboratory, located on Parks Road with the S
  • Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell to join the Clarendon Laboratory, University of Oxford in 1933.
  • n 1955, followed by his DPhil studies in the Clarendon Laboratory, Oxford.
  • uclear orientation for the first time at the Clarendon Laboratory, University of Oxford.
  • iversity during 1959 to 1992, working at the Clarendon Laboratory.
  • rying out research with Lord Cherwell at the Clarendon Laboratory.
  • don equations when working in Oxford, at the Clarendon Laboratory; these equations gave a first exp
  • uction to the Law of Contract (1995 5th Ed.) Clarendon Law Series, now updated by Stephen Smith.
  • The Item -- Covers Clarendon, Lee and Sumter counties and prints The Clar
  • idge, connects with Lough Key via a weir and Clarendon lock gates 300m upstream.
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