「Merchant」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Merchant

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1語右で並び替え

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  • Randolph was a planter, a merchant, a public official, and a shipmaster.
  • Smith was a shopkeeper or merchant, a stonemason, and an assistant from Warwick
  • l 1818 - 25 December 1909) was an Irish bacon merchant, a self-described "pork philanthropist".
  • He was the grandson of Truman Merchant, a Revolutionary War soldier and cousin of Vi
  • Hankey (1805 - 13 January 1893) was a British merchant, a banker and a Liberal Party politician.
  • He was the father of Frank W. Merchant, a noted newspaperman in Pittsburgh between 1
  • They would be hired by a firm (a merchant, a shop, etc.) which operated out of one of t
  • Higher Grade School in Grimsby, and became a merchant, a ship-owner, and a partner in the Grimsby-b
  • (January 21, 1789 - November 28, 1865) was a merchant, a banker, and a statesman.
  • of the Greater Livadia Palace by the order of merchant A.I. Rofe, the owner of the guild "Rofe (Roff
  • stream media labelling Abdul Haq a successful merchant, Abdul Haq registered an oil company - Asia P
  • ford, Lancashire, the son of a wealthy cotton merchant, Absalom Watkin who was noted for his involve
  • , and Sir John Gresham, a rich City of London merchant, acquired Titsey from the heirs of John Bourc
  • is the United States' second-largest bankcard merchant acquirer, processing nearly $350 billion in a
  • As a Merchant Acquirer, it enjoys around 38% of the UK Acqu
  • erred to as TSYS) is the largest processor of merchant acquirers and bank credit card issuers.
  • Chase Bank, N.A., is a payment processing and merchant acquiring company headquartered in Dallas, Te
  • there is also Barclaycard Payment Acceptance ( Merchant Acquiring) and Barclaycard Commercial (Corpor
  • Pinter's first wife, actress Vivien Merchant acted at the Connaught during this period.
  • Russell Sturgis (1805-1887), a wealthy Boston merchant active in the China trade.
  • is a former country house built by a wealthy merchant, active in the triangle trade on the Danish W
  • n furnace, and took part in a wide variety of merchant activities including at least one slave voyag
  • As befits a church near the merchant activity on the river, there are several mari
  • submarines had by this time reduced Japanese merchant activity to a trickle.
  • and asphalt, was erected in 1876 by Sycamore merchant Adolphus W. Brower.
  • a brass of 1570 to John Carre, Ironmonger and Merchant Adventurer of London, with figures of himself
  • 625) was a prosperous London ship captain and merchant adventurer who travelled to the Mediterranean
  • mily in 1626 to Robert Berwicke (1573-1641) a Merchant Adventurer of Newcastle on Tyne, who was Sher
  • Nearby attractions also include the Merchant Adventurer's Hall (who were former owners of
  • te as to which Barne is credited as the first merchant adventurer, or investor, to Russia, Barbary,
  • nothing else, but continued his travels as a merchant adventurer, journeying to Virginia, where he
  • Marquis James, Merchant Adventurer: The Story of W. R. Grace, Wilming
  • The Merchant Adventurers then decided to use other ports.
  • otterdam he became preacher to the company of merchant adventurers in that city at the end of 1650.
  • In form it was similar to the Company of Merchant Adventurers of London.
  • Hopkins was recruited by the Merchant Adventurers to provide governance for the col
  • iesland and Hamburg competed to entertain the Merchant Adventurers of England, who chose Emden.
  • About the same time he became governor of the merchant adventurers of Bergen, and in 1541 he was sen
  • It was granted the status of the Company of Merchant Adventurers of York by Queen Elizabeth I in t
  • ociation of English merchants, the Company of Merchant Adventurers in 1552-1553, with the Duke of No
  • The medieval Merchant Adventurers' Hall seen from Piccadilly.
  • Entrance to the Merchant Adventurers' Hall from Fossgate
  • his northern voyages by him and others of the Merchant Adventurers' Company and, in his honour.
  • Other attractions include Merchant Adventurers' Hall, The Shambles, Clifford's T
  • entury as a port on the Danube by the Genoese merchant adventurers, who established a bank and trade
  • overnor of the Newcastle-upon-Tyne Company of Merchant Adventurers, four times Mayor of and five tim
  • to back Edward Misselden, influential in the Merchant Adventurers, against John Forbes.
  • e period 1579 to 1582, while Secretary of the Merchant Adventurers.
  • s, born at Calais, in 1797, a ship broker and merchant, agent in London for the General Steam Naviga
  • The second merchant agreed, and for the first three weeks (or mor
  • Dutch/Shell oil tankers converted to become a Merchant Aircraft Carrier (MAC ship).
  • erred to the United Kingdom, Ranee joined the merchant aircraft carriers guarding the Atlantic convo
  • pire MacColl was an oil tanker converted to a merchant aircraft carrier (MAC) ship.
  • pire MacCabe was an oil tanker converted to a merchant aircraft carrier or MAC ship.
  • Dutch/Shell oil tankers converted to become a Merchant Aircraft Carrier (MAC ship).
  • ndrick was a grain ship converted to become a Merchant Aircraft Carrier or MAC ship.
  • Dutch/Shell oil tankers converted to become a Merchant Aircraft Carrier (MAC ship).
  • Dutch/Shell oil tankers converted to become a Merchant Aircraft Carrier (MAC ship).
  • as a grain ship converted to become the first Merchant Aircraft Carrier or MAC ship.
  • Dutch/Shell oil tankers converted to become a Merchant Aircraft Carrier (MAC ship).
  • ire MacMahon was an oil tanker converted to a merchant aircraft carrier or MAC ship.
  • Callum was a grain ship converted to become a Merchant Aircraft Carrier or MAC ship.
  • Crawford and various guest spots with Natalie Merchant, Alan Simon's Excalibur project with Fairport
  • l in most of her attacks, sinking the Italian merchant Albachiara, but launching failed attacks agai
  • 5, Livingston Taylor, Jackson Browne, Natalie Merchant, Alejandro Escovedo, and Shania Twain, among
  • 18th-century structure originally operated by merchant Alexander Boyd, a Scottish immigrant, which i
  • he Arbuthnot and Ambrister incident, in which merchant Alexander George Arbuthnot was hanged
  • lleria is named after its original owner, the merchant Alexander Hay, who acquired the property - th
  • ves in the city to track down wealthy diamond merchant Alfred Mannheim and $50,000 worth of jewels h
  • Unbroken also attacked the Italian merchant Algerino, but missed her with her torpedoes.
  • Born in Boston to Scottish-born merchant Allan Melvill (d.1761) and Jean Cargill, Thom
  • in 1871, and became a mill owner and general merchant, also serving on the Protestant school board.
  • arting an office career with an international merchant, also Spanish and French.
  • Her son Anthony "Tony" Merchant also served in the Saskatchewan legislative a
  • Robinson was descended from a wealthy York merchant, also called William Robinson, who had been m
  • returned to in 1759 and operated as a London merchant, although with indifferent success.
  • a resides in Brooklyn with his wife Orelia E. Merchant, an assistant United States attorney and thei
  • Henry Jones (1790 - January 21, 1860) was a merchant and political figure in Upper Canada.
  • Hotchkiss (before 1814 - 1865 or later) was a merchant and political figure in Lower Canada.
  • William Douglas was a farmer, lumber merchant and political figure in New Brunswick, Canada
  • rdon (August 26, 1786 - April 10, 1865) was a merchant and political figure in Upper Canada and Cana
  • 3 November 1822 - 4 June 1902) was an English merchant and Conservative Party politician who sat in
  • John Julius Angerstein, West Indies merchant and art collector
  • or, philosopher, politician, lawyer, soldier, merchant and farmer.
  • merican version of The Office premiered, with Merchant and Gervais credited as executive producers.
  • t Albans, the son and heir of a former London merchant, and was educated at St Albans School and Emm
  • He went into business there as a merchant and shipper.
  • His father was a merchant and member of the Hudson's Bay Company's Boar
  • 28, 1865 - May 9, 1937) was an American-born merchant and political figure in Saskatchewan, Canada.
  • (August 1, 1834 - May 4, 1925) was a Canadian merchant and Liberal politician, who represented New W
  • ebruary 19, 1818-1862) was an American lumber merchant and politician who served in the New York Sta
  • William McGiverin was an Irish-born merchant and political figure in Canada West.
  • Gagnon (May 20, 1810 - August 28, 1885) was a merchant and political figure in Quebec.
  • st Baronet (1611 - April 1644) was an English merchant and landowner, responsible for the initial de
  • e 17, 1876 - February 7, 1957) was a Canadian merchant and parliamentarian.
  • Nicholson Richardson, a wealthy Quaker linen merchant, and Anna Grubb, from Clonmel, who lived at G
  • er 9, 1922 - August 14, 2010) was an American merchant and politician from Odessa, in New Castle Cou
  • Frederick Cawley, 1st Baron Cawley, cotton merchant and Liberal politician
  • ne 10, 1819 - February 21, 1894) was a lumber merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia.
  • As a merchant and planter, Bolling acquired a large estate.
  • irfield (1772 - May 9, 1842) was a shipowner, merchant and political figure in Upper Canada.
  • William Bayne, a commission merchant and grocer in Alexandria, purchased the lot a
  • style)- November 4, 1825) was a Massachusetts merchant and politician.
  • Thomas Liddell a wealthy Newcastle-upon-Tyne merchant and remained in the ownership of the Liddell
  • He was a successful merchant and a founder of the Mercantile Library Assoc
  • Kamatari Fujiwara as Tazaemon, Silk merchant and Mayor of town
  • on of Sarah and Richard Bright Sr., a wealthy merchant and banker.
  • ks (September 17, 1718 - July 10, 1796) was a merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia.
  • educated at Hutchins School before becoming a merchant and later a magistrate.
  • ton, the daughter of John Johnston, a wealthy merchant and a member of the Legislative Council.
  • e adventurers Francis Farewell, an East India merchant, and Francis Fynn, a physician, from whom not
  • Kennedy (May 14, 1869 - April 23, 1915) was a merchant and political figure in Prince Edward Island,
  • n moved to Palmerston, where he was a general merchant and served as town mayor, resigning in 1883 t
  • this party, James S. Buckmaster, a Frederica merchant, and narrowly won.
  • e were two brothers Rathbone, one the pioneer merchant and landlord, the other the mill-owner.
  • pman (August 2, 1803 - August 22, 1855) was a merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia.
  • ) was a 19th century mixed-race French-Ottawa merchant and fur trader.
  • g a prince, being offered marriage by a Dutch merchant, and is finally able to afford her own freedo
  • He was a merchant and importer of goods based in Quebec City.
  • e (February 6, 1770 - October 17, 1832) was a merchant and political figure in Quebec.
  • urke (1776 - February 2, 1854) was a soldier, merchant and political figure in Upper Canada.
  • Rouen, France in 1751, the son of a Huguenot merchant, and came to Quebec City around 1767.
  • ge Browne (before 1794 - June 10, 1822) was a merchant and political figure in Lower Canada.
  • operation was sold to Samuel Jackson, a salt merchant and owner of a nearby colliery in Bedford.
  • August 12 - William Donahue, merchant and politician (d.1892)
  • Robinson (1863 - 10 May 1927) was an English merchant and Liberal Party politician.
  • Esinhart (December 27, 1838 - ca 1915) was a merchant and political figure in Quebec.
  • an insurance agent, contractor, farmer, grain merchant and hotelier by career.
  • Clair (January 28, 1856 - July 3, 1917) was a merchant and political figure in New Brunswick.
  • Fish became a lumber merchant and building contractor, in 1885 purchasing t
  • Solomons (1730 - May 18, 1792) was a Canadian merchant and fur trader.
  • Robert Hamilton (1787-1856) was a merchant and political figure in Upper Canada.
  • r Everard Fawkener (1694-1758) was an English merchant and diplomat.
  • Ross was a lumber merchant and building contractor.
  • rt Chambers (ca 1813 - August 29, 1875) was a merchant and politician in Nova Scotia, Canada.
  • 30, 1910 - November 28, 2010) was a Canadian merchant and political figure in Prince Edward Island.
  • he son of Captain James Hooker (1742-1805), a merchant, and his third wife, Mary (Chaffee) Hooker.
  • The house was built in 1894 for the merchant and banker James Wilson Hunter, together with
  • nd Glen continued in business as a commission merchant and auctioneer.
  • y 1790 - 11 October 1865) was an English wine merchant and Mayor of Oxford.
  • 0, 1874 - March 1, 1948) was a farmer, lumber merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia, Canada.
  • as born in Sainte-Agathe, Quebec and became a merchant and trader.
  • ph Marshall (1807 - September 25, 1870) was a merchant and politician in Nova Scotia, Canada.
  • (November 17, 1864-April 1, 1932) was a grain merchant and Canadian politician.
  • tt Lowe (January 1, 1872-March 4, 1955) was a merchant and public official in the city of Minden, th
  • uel Clarke (July 29, 1853 - ) was an Canadian merchant and political figure.
  • November 1774 for John Duntze, an Exeter wool merchant and Member of Parliament for Tiverton.
  • Baronet (1679 - 18 March 1749) was an English merchant and writer on trade.
  • (1716 - December 28, 1781) was a German-born merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia.
  • 4 April 1862 - 19 January 1940) was a British merchant and politician, who sat as a Member of Parlia
  • 760 - September 9, 1851) was an American-born merchant and politician in Nova Scotia.
  • the Indian team in 1932 but, along with Vijay Merchant and Champak Mehta, refused on political groun
  • am Kendrick, grand-nephew of the famous cloth merchant and philanthropist, John Kendrick.
  • John Thornton (1720-1790) was a merchant and Christian philanthropist.
  • er (May 31, 1839 - May 29, 1916) was a Quebec merchant and political figure.
  • mer (September 3, 1781 - March 3, 1836) was a merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia.
  • 24, 1819 - April 4, 1893) was an English-born merchant and politician in Newfoundland.
  • Edward Eagar (1787-1866) was a lawyer, merchant and criminal.
  • He was a successful merchant and grocer, who served as his village's secre
  • ions, including Chase The Slut, Shakespeare's Merchant, and Joan of Arcadia.
  • n MC (1891-1964), another Scottish East India Merchant, and they had one son and three daughters.
  • ve a newly opened pizza takeaway, a builder's merchant, and hairdressing salon.
  • Bolton (1819 - 14 March 1901) was a Scottish merchant and a Liberal Party politician.
  • ald Morrison (November 27, 1852 - 1920) was a merchant and political figure in the Province of New B
  • ndergast (April 7, 1800 - May 13, 1895) was a merchant and political figure in Newfoundland.
  • 1532-1593) was a prominent merchant and public official from London during the re
  • Acorn (August 1868 - December 6, 1939) was a merchant and political figure on Prince Edward Island.
  • h greater national prominence alongside Larry Merchant and Sugar Ray Leonard as a member of the HBO
  • ter Richard Thornton (1776 to 1865) who was a Merchant and Trader.
  • He entered business on his own as a timber merchant and shipowner in 1871.
  • Murdock Kennedy (March 25, 1873 - 1950) was a merchant and political figure in Prince Edward Island,
  • Shaftesbury, England - 5 December 1883) was a merchant and politician who successfully fought attemp
  • David Layton and Alice Marion Gilbert, was a merchant and business executive in the family firm of
  • phens (October 6, 1846 - July 17, 1916) was a merchant and political figure in Ontario, Canada.
  • Rudolf (June 6, 1791 - January 1, 1859) was a merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia.
  • eve (April 19, 1850 - February 3, 1921) was a merchant and political figure in Newfoundland.
  • as L.F. Rothschild, Unterberg, Towbin) was a merchant and investment banking firm based in the Unit
  • gus John McDonald (January 17, 1848 - ) was a merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia, Canada.
  • rn in Norton, Derbyshire to James Addy a coal merchant and landowner and Sarah.
  • hn Rankin (1820 - after 1895) was a hotelier, merchant and political figure in Ontario, Canada.
  • rk (October 1, 1865 - January 18, 1948) was a merchant and political figure in New Brunswick, Canada
  • Gough (1760 - April, 1815) was an Irish-born merchant and political figure in Upper Canada.
  • architect Nicolas-Henri Jardin for the timber merchant and slave trader H. F. Bargum.
  • Stephen Mack, merchant and politician
  • He was a captain, merchant, and Indian trader.
  • ked with Academy Award winners such as Ismail Merchant and Meryl Streep.
  • 1819 - January 26, 1879) was an English-born merchant and political figure in Newfoundland.
  • He was a merchant and contractor, responsible for the Wellingto
  • He was a cloth merchant and manufacturer and chairman of Abingdon Rai
  • s Budd (April 1, 1795 - April 24, 1884) was a merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia.
  • ait McGauvran (ca 1827 - July 20, 1884) was a merchant and political figure in Quebec.
  • s directed by James Ivory, produced by Ismail Merchant, and with an adapted screenplay by Ruth Prawe
  • daughter of Obadiah Nussey of Leeds, a cloth merchant, and manufacturer.
  • ry 1860 - 27 December 1919) was an Australian merchant and businessman who lived mostly in Britain a
  • John Fell (1721-1798) was an American merchant and jurist.
  • Belcher (July 17, 1743 - May 14, 1802) was a merchant and political figure in Nova Scotia.
  • law, but his father determined to make him a merchant, and he was placed in the counting-house of C
  • ates is split equally, with half going to the merchant and half going to Half Off Depot and its affi
  • (4 May 1807-23 January 1888), a wealthy paper merchant and a well-known congregationalist, and Louis
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