Emilius Parisianus
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Emilius Parisianus
Emilius may refer to: People * Saint Emilius (died 250), Christian martyr * Emilius Ditlev Bærentzen (1799–1868), Danish painter * Emilius Bangert (1883–1962), Danish composer, organist, and academic * Emilius Bayley (1823–1917), English clergyman and cricketer * Emilius R. Ciampa (1896–1996), American artist * Émilius Goulet (born 1933), Canadian Roman Catholic archbishop * Emilius Hopkinson (1869–1951), British aviculturist * Emilius Seghers (1855–1927), bishop of Ghent * Emilius Wagemans (1926–2011), Belgian singer Other uses * Emilius (horse), a racehorse * Monte Emilius, a mountain in the Graian Alps * Mr. Emilius, a character in the novels '' Phineas Redux'' and ''The Eustace Diamonds'' by Anthony Trollope * Emilius Jones, a character in the novel ''Bonfires and Broomsticks'' by Mary Norton. * Prof. Emilius Brown, a character in '' Bedknobs and Broomsticks'', based on the character directly above. See also * Emil (given name) The name Emil, Emi ...
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Saint Emilius
Saints Castus and Emilius (died 250 AD) are venerated as saints and martyrs by the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches. They are mentioned by St. Cyprian as having been martyred sometime during the Decian persecution, and were praised by Augustine of Hippo. When they were imprisoned, Castus and Emilius denied that they were Christians under torture and were released. When they were arrested a second time, they refused to abjure Christianity and were burned to death. Their feast day is May 22 Events Pre-1600 * 192 – Dong Zhuo is assassinated by his adopted son Lü Bu. * 760 – Fourteenth recorded perihelion passage of Halley's Comet. * 853 – A Byzantine fleet sacks and destroys undefended Damietta in Egypt. * 11 ....May 22.'' The Roman Martyrology. References External linksCastus and Emilius 250 deaths Saints duos 3rd-century Christian martyrs Groups of Christian martyrs of the Roman era Year of birth unknown {{saint-stub ...
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Emilius Ditlev Bærentzen
Emilius may refer to: People * Saint Emilius (died 250), Christian martyr * Emilius Ditlev Bærentzen (1799–1868), Danish painter * Emilius Bangert (1883–1962), Danish composer, organist, and academic * Emilius Bayley (1823–1917), English clergyman and cricketer * Emilius R. Ciampa (1896–1996), American artist * Émilius Goulet (born 1933), Canadian Roman Catholic archbishop * Emilius Hopkinson (1869–1951), British aviculturist * Emilius Seghers (1855–1927), bishop of Ghent * Emilius Wagemans (1926–2011), Belgian singer Other uses * Emilius (horse), a racehorse * Monte Emilius, a mountain in the Graian Alps * Mr. Emilius, a character in the novels ''Phineas Redux'' and ''The Eustace Diamonds'' by Anthony Trollope * Emilius Jones, a character in the novel ''Bonfires and Broomsticks'' by Mary Norton. * Prof. Emilius Brown, a character in ''Bedknobs and Broomsticks'', based on the character directly above. See also * Emil (given name) The name Emil, Emile, or É ...
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Emilius Bangert
Emilius Bangert (19 August 1883 – 19 August 1962) was a Danish composer, organist, and professor. He played the organ at Roskilde Cathedral and also composed orchestral and chamber music. Biography Emilius Ferdinand Caspar Bangert was born in Copenhagen, the son of Conrad Bangert and Ida Anderson. In 1902, he graduated from Borgerdydskolen (School of Civic Virtue), Copenhagen’s most prestigious private school. He acquired a cand. phil. degree in 1903. He was a private pupil in theory and composition with Carl Nielsen 1902–07. He contributed several times to compositions that Nielsen had received orders for either transcript, instrumentation, or directly as a composer. Emilius Bangert also had piano lessons with Henrik Knudsen and organ lessons with Edgar Henrichsen and Eugene Gigout in Paris. In 1913 he received the Ancker Award scholarship (''Det anckerske Legat'') and went on study tour to Germany and Italy. In 1908 he took the exam organist. From 1915, he was o ...
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Emilius Bayley
Sir John Robert Laurie Emilius Bayley, 3rd Baronet (16 May 1823 – 4 December 1917), later Sir Emilius Laurie, was an English clergyman, baronet and amateur cricketer. He was generally known by his middle-name Emilius and changed his surname to Laurie in 1887. Early life Bayley was born at Bloomsbury in London in May 1823, the son of lawyer Sir John Bayley, 2nd Baronet and his first wife Charlotte.Carlaw D (2020) ''Kent County Cricketers A to Z. Part One: 1806–1914'' (revised edition), pp. 49–50.Available onlineat the Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians. Retrieved 2020-12-21.)Rev. Sir John Robert Laurie Emilius Laurie of Maxwelton, 3rd Bt.
The Peerage. Retrieved 2017-03-26.
He is thought to have been given the name Emilius, by which he was generally known, after the nam ...
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Emilius R
Emilius may refer to: People * Saint Emilius (died 250), Christian martyr * Emilius Ditlev Bærentzen (1799–1868), Danish painter * Emilius Bangert (1883–1962), Danish composer, organist, and academic * Emilius Bayley (1823–1917), English clergyman and cricketer * Emilius R. Ciampa (1896–1996), American artist * Émilius Goulet (born 1933), Canadian Roman Catholic archbishop * Emilius Hopkinson (1869–1951), British aviculturist * Emilius Seghers (1855–1927), bishop of Ghent * Emilius Wagemans (1926–2011), Belgian singer Other uses * Emilius (horse), a racehorse * Monte Emilius, a mountain in the Graian Alps * Mr. Emilius, a character in the novels ''Phineas Redux'' and ''The Eustace Diamonds'' by Anthony Trollope * Emilius Jones, a character in the novel ''Bonfires and Broomsticks'' by Mary Norton. * Prof. Emilius Brown, a character in ''Bedknobs and Broomsticks'', based on the character directly above. See also * Emil (given name) The name Emil, Emile, or É ...
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Émilius Goulet
Emilius Goulet, PSS (May 15, 1933) was the Roman Catholic Archbishop of St. Boniface in the Province of Manitoba, Canada. He was appointed Archbishop by Pope John Paul II on June 23, 2001 and was consecrated in the Cathedral Basilica of St. Boniface (in the St. Boniface District of Winnipeg), Manitoba on September 13, 2001 by Jean-Claude Cardinal Turcotte, Archbishop of Montreal; Archbishop Maurice Couture, R.S.V.(Religieux de Saint Vincent de Paul), Archbishop of Quebec (City); and Archbishop James Vernon Weisgerber, Archbishop of Winnipeg. Biography Archbishop Goulet was the youngest of 13 children born in St-Isidore de Dorchester, Québec on May 15, 1933. He studied theology at the Grand Séminaire de Saint-Boniface in Manitoba and was ordained to the priesthood on June 24, 1958, for the Archdiocese of Saint Boniface. In 1960, he was incardinated into the Sulpician Fathers (The Society of Saint Sulpice) and continued his theological studies in Montreal, followed by studies at ...
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Emilius Hopkinson
Emilius Hopkinson CMG DSO (31 March 1869 – 11 Jun 1951) was the son of Jonathan Hopkinson (1811–1882) and Emily Elizabeth née Cutbill (1838–1926). Educated at Haileybury, he graduated from Trinity College, Oxford and completed his medical training at St Thomas' Hospital, London. He was a Medical Officer, a Surgeon-Captain, in the 15th Battalion, Imperial Yeomanry in South Africa from 1900–01 where he was mentioned in dispatches, awarded the Queen’s Medal with four clasps and the DSO. From 1901–29 he served in the Gambia Protectorate, as a Medical Officer from 1901–11 and then as Travelling Commissioner, and was awarded the CMG in 1922. He had a long interest in birds and aviculture and would bring live specimens back with him when on leave. After retirement, until the start of the Second World War, he would travel every winter to study bird migrations in West Africa and to visit warmer climes. His friend David Bannerman named a sub-species of Ahanta spurfowl fou ...
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Emilius Seghers
Emilius Seghers (1855–1927) was the 25th bishop of Ghent in Belgium. Life Seghers was born in Ghent on 3 September 1855, the son of a lawyer. He studied at the Jesuit secondary school in Ghent and the minor seminary. In 1874 he entered the Major Seminary of Ghent for three years of Theology, which he followed with another three years at the Catholic University of Leuven, graduating Licentiate of Sacred Theology in 1880.Jan Art, "Seghers, Emilius Joannes Gerardus Maria Josephus", ''Nouvelle Biographie Nationale''vol. 1(Brussels, 1988), pp. 305-306. After a few months as an assistant in a parish in Ghent he was appointed professor of Moral Theology at the Major Seminary and an honorary canon of Ghent Cathedral on 9 December 1880. In 1888 he resigned his teaching position and asked the bishop, Henri-Charles Lambrecht, to send him to a working-class parish. On 26 July 1888, he was appointed parish priest of St John the Baptist's church. In April 1898 it became the seat of a ne ...
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Emilius Wagemans
Bob Benny (18 May 1926 – 29 March 2011), born Emilius Wagemans, was a Belgian singer and musical theatre performer, who participated in the Eurovision Song Contests of 1959 and 1961. Early career Benny began his singing career at the end of World War II when he started performing regularly at a café in Sint-Niklaas. By the early 1950s, he had regular spots on radio and released his first album ''Mijn haart spreekt tot u'' (''My Heart Speaks to You''). In 1957, he had his first hit single with "Cindy, Oh Cindy", which reached No. 2 on the Belgian chart. Eurovision Song Contest In 1959, Benny was chosen, with the song "Hou toch van mij" ("Do Love Me"), as the Belgian representative in the fourth Eurovision Song Contest which took place on 11 March in Cannes, France. ''Hou toch van mij'' received votes from five of the other 10 participating countries and finished in sixth place. In 1961, Benny was again selected to represent Belgium, with the song "September, gouden roos" ("Se ...
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Emilius (horse)
Emilius (1820–1847) was a British Thoroughbred racehorse and sire. In a career that lasted from April 1823 to October 1824 he ran ten times and won seven races, including a walkover. As a three-year-old in 1823 he was undefeated in six starts, including the Derby. After a less impressive year in 1824 he was retired to stud and became a highly successful and important breeding stallion. Background Emilius was a "muscular, compact" bay horse with a white star bred by his owner, Colonel John Udney. The colt was sent into training with Robert Robson, known as the "Emperor of Trainers" who produced the winners of thirty-four Classic races from his base at Newmarket, Suffolk. Emilius was ridden in all his races by the veteran Frank Buckle, who was fifty-seven years old at the time of the colt's greatest successes. Emilius was sired by Orville, a successful staying racehorse who excelled over extreme distances. At stud he was Champion sire in 1817 and 1822 and sired the Cl ...
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Monte Emilius
Monte Emilius (french: Mont Émilius) (3,559 m) is a mountain of the Graian Alps in Aosta Valley, north-western Italy. Located just above the town of Aosta, from where it is visible looking southwards behind the lower Becca di Nona, it is usually climbed starting from the ski resort of Pila, at a height of 1,870 m. History This mountain was formerly known as ''Pic de dix heures'', meaning "10 a.m. peak" in French, as the sun stands right on top of it at 10am, or even as Pic Chamosser or Pic Chamoisier. In 1839 the canon Georges Carrel climbed the peak with a 14-year-old girl named Émilie Argentier, the sister of the mountaineer and doctor Auguste Argentier (1830-1874) from Cogne, in order to promote mountaineering. The peak was thus named after her. Aostan canons thought about naming it ''Pic Pie'' in honour of Pope Pius IX, but decided against it as ''Pie'' in French means magpie. Ascent A marked path from Pila usually takes one to the summit, past various lake ...
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Phineas Redux
''Phineas Redux'' is a novel by Anthony Trollope, first published in 1873 as a serial in ''The Graphic''. It is the fourth of the " Palliser" series of novels and the sequel to the second book of the series, ''Phineas Finn''. Synopsis His beloved wife having died during pregnancy, Phineas Finn finds Irish society and his modest government position in Ireland dull and unsatisfying after the excitement of his former career as a Member of Parliament. Back in England, the Liberals are determined to overturn the Conservative majority in Parliament. As Finn had been considered the most promising of the younger set, he is encouraged to stand for Parliament again, and he takes the risk of giving up his salaried position. Returning to London, he renews his acquaintance with the wealthy widow Madame Max Goesler. In the past, she had offered to marry him and had been gently turned down; after an awkward first encounter, they renew their friendship. In the political arena, Finn loses t ...
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