Adeney (surname)
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Adeney (surname)
Adeney is an English locative name from Adeney. Notable people with this surname include: * Bernard Adeney (1878–1966), English painter * Chris Adeney, Canadian singer-songwriter better known by his stage name Wax Mannequin * David Howard Adeney (1911–1994), British missionary to China * Richard Adeney (1920–2010), English flautist * Walter Frederic Adeney (1849–1920), English biblical scholar See also * Adney Adney is an English locative name from Adeney. Notable people with this surname include: * Syed Adney (born 1986), Malaysian footballer * Tappan Adney (1868–1950), American-Canadian artist, a writer and a photographer See also * Adeney (surna ..., variant spelling * Swaine Adeney Brigg References {{surname English toponymic surnames ...
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English Language
English is a West Germanic language of the Indo-European language family, with its earliest forms spoken by the inhabitants of early medieval England. It is named after the Angles, one of the ancient Germanic peoples that migrated to the island of Great Britain. Existing on a dialect continuum with Scots, and then closest related to the Low Saxon and Frisian languages, English is genealogically West Germanic. However, its vocabulary is also distinctively influenced by dialects of France (about 29% of Modern English words) and Latin (also about 29%), plus some grammar and a small amount of core vocabulary influenced by Old Norse (a North Germanic language). Speakers of English are called Anglophones. The earliest forms of English, collectively known as Old English, evolved from a group of West Germanic (Ingvaeonic) dialects brought to Great Britain by Anglo-Saxon settlers in the 5th century and further mutated by Norse-speaking Viking settlers starting in the 8th and 9th ...
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Adeney
Adeney is a hamlet in the English county of Shropshire, in the civil parish of Edgmond. Its name was formerly also spelt Adney, and derives from an Old English name meaning "Eadwynne's island".Raven, M. ''A Guide to Shropshire'', 2005, p.10 It lies in an area of the Weald Moors The Weald Moors are located in the ceremonial county of Shropshire north of Telford, stretching from north and west of the town of Newport towards Wellington, with the village of Kynnersley lying roughly at their centre. Etymology Although the W ... known as the "Birch Moors"; the closest villages are Edgmond, to the east, and Tibberton, to the north-west. References * External links Villages in Shropshire Newport, Shropshire {{Shropshire-geo-stub ...
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Bernard Adeney
Bernard Adeney (2 August 1878 – 4 April 1966) was an English painter and textile designer. He was a founding member of the London Group, an artists' exhibiting society, and was its president from 1921 to 1923. Between 1930 and 1947, he was head of the textile school at the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, where he had taught since 1903. One of his most notable works is the painting ''Toy Sailing Boats'' (1911), which formed part of a seven-piece collection of panels painted for Borough Polytechnic under the direction of Roger Fry. Other works include ''Edge of a Wood'', ''Barley Fields'', ''West Wittering'', ''Pond and Trees'', ''Farm Buildings'' and ''The Parade, Cowes''. Adeney was born on 2 August 1878 in London, the son of Canon W. F. Adeney. He started his art training in St.John's Wood Art School when only nine years old, He then studied at the Royal Academy, the Académie Julian in Paris and later the Slade School of Fine Art The UCL Slade Schoo ...
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Wax Mannequin
Wax Mannequin is the stage name of Chris Adeney,"The Joy of Being Wax Mannequin"
'''', August 2009.
a Canadian singer-songwriter. His style has been described as "a hybrid of Bruce Cockburn and ", "



David Howard Adeney
David Howard Adeney (3 November 1911 – 11 May 1994) was a British Protestant Christian missionary and university evangelist in Hunan, China and East Asia. He served with the China Inland Mission (CIM), InterVarsity Fellowship, and International Fellowship of Evangelical Students (IFES). In 1968 he founded the Discipleship Training Centre (DTC) in Singapore. Life and Ministry Born into a missionary family in Bedford, England on 3 November 1911, Adeney decided to become a missionary to China, following the path of his parents who had worked in Romania with the London Jews' Society. He was educated at Monkton Combe School, Somerset, UK, and completed an MA in theology and history at Queens' College, Cambridge, UK in 1933. Before moving to China in 1934, he spent a year at the CIM training school in London. Between 1934 and 1914, he involved in church planting in rural villages in central China. and left for the United States due to the attack on Pearl Harbor. During his stay in ...
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Richard Adeney
Richard Gilford Adeney (25 January 1920 – 16 December 2010) was a British flautist who played principal flute with the London Philharmonic Orchestra and the English Chamber Orchestra, was a soloist and a founding member of the Melos Ensemble. Career Richard Adeney was born the son of the painter Bernard Adeney (1878–1966).Biography
Brimstone Press
He was determined early in life, to "become the best flute player in the world", as he stated in his autobiography.Autobiography
/ref> He was educated at and subsequently studied at the ...
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Walter Frederic Adeney
Walter Frederic Adeney (14 March 1849 – 1 September 1920) was an English Congregational churches, Congregationalist minister, Christian theology, theologian, and biblical studies, biblical scholar. Born in Ealing in 1849, he was educated at New College London, New College and University College London. He served as a minister in Acton, London, Acton from 1872 to 1889 and became a lecturer in biblical theology, biblical and systematic theology at New College, London, in 1887. He was promoted to a professorship in New Testament exegesis and church history at New College in 1889, before moving to become Principal of Lancashire Independent College in Manchester in 1903. In addition to the numerous works he wrote on the Bible, for both academic and popular audiences, Adeney was general editor of the ''Century Bible Commentary'', and in 1908 he published an extensive history of Eastern Christianity, ''The Greek and Eastern Churches''. He retired in 1913, and died in Lewes on 1 September ...
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Adney
Adney is an English locative name from Adeney. Notable people with this surname include: * Syed Adney (born 1986), Malaysian footballer * Tappan Adney (1868–1950), American-Canadian artist, a writer and a photographer See also * Adeney (surname) Adeney is an English locative name from Adeney. Notable people with this surname include: * Bernard Adeney (1878–1966), English painter * Chris Adeney, Canadian singer-songwriter better known by his stage name Wax Mannequin * David Howard Adeney ... References {{Surname English toponymic surnames ...
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Swaine Adeney Brigg
Swaine London, known previously as Swaine Adeney Brigg is one of the oldest names in luxury goods and has traded in London's St James's for over 270 years. The House remains one of the most celebrated and decorated makers and it is the ultimate destination for traditional luxury leather goods, elegant Brigg umbrellas and all sorts of hats from Herbert Johnson. History John Ross The firm of Swaine & Adeney was said to have been founded in London in 1750, but the earliest documentary evidence goes back to around 1760 when a saddler named John Ross set up a whip manufactory in London. His first-known factory was in Marylebone Street (now incorporated in Glasshouse Street), just to the north of Piccadilly. Among his customers were Prince Henry, Duke of Cumberland and George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont. Ross's Marylebone Street premises were lost in a fire in July 1769, but by the following year he was trading at 238 Piccadilly on the south side of the street just a few doors aw ...
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