Gwynneth De Candia Vaughan
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Gwynneth De Candia Vaughan
Gwynneth may refer to: *Gwynneth Vaughan Buchanan (1886–1945), Australian zoologist *Gwynneth Coogan (born 1965), American former Olympic athlete, educator and mathematician *Gwynneth Flower, former chair of the National Meteorological Programme *Gwynneth Holt (1909–1995), British artist of ivory sculptures on religious subjects *Emma Gwynneth Ineson, QHC (born 1969), British Anglican bishop and academic, specialising in practical theology *Helen Gwynneth Palmer (1917–1979), prominent Australian socialist publisher *Gwynneth Smith (born 1965), Irish former cricketer See also *John Gwynneth John Gwynneth (or Guinete) (fl. 1511–1557), was a clergyman of Welsh nationality originating from Gwynedd, and was a composer of religious and liturgical vocal music for which he was awarded a doctorate in the University of Oxford. He held benef ... (or Guinete) (1511–1557), clergyman of Welsh nationality originating from Gwynedd * Gwyneth {{Given name ...
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Gwynneth Vaughan Buchanan
Gwynneth Vaughan Buchanan (1886–1945) was an Australian zoologist. She is best known for her work on animal morphology, culminating in the book ''Elements of Animal Morphology''. She was a lecturer, and then a senior lecturer, at the University of Melbourne from 1921 to 1944. Early life Buchanan was born on 21 November 1886, in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. She was the only child of Thomas Buchanan and Gwynneth Vaughan. Her father, Thomas Buchanan, was a banker. After her father's death in 1897, she moved to Melbourne to live with her mother. Her religious influences have Anglican origins. Education and career Buchanan graduated from the University of Melbourne with B.Sc. (first class honours) in March 1908. She also won the scholarship in biology for her final honours examination. In December the same year, she won the MacBain scholarship for her work in the field of Australian earth worms, which allowed her to continue in the same field of research until 1909, whe ...
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Gwynneth Coogan
Gwynneth "Gwyn" Coogan (born Gwynneth Hardesty; August 21, 1965 in Trenton, New Jersey) is an American former Olympic athlete, educator and mathematician. Hardesty attended Phillips Exeter Academy for two years, where she played squash and field hockey. She then attended Smith College, graduating in 1987, where she majored in math and took up running for the first time, and became the two-time NCAA Division III champion in the 3,000 meters. She qualified for the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, where she competed in the 10,000 meters. Four years later, she was an alternate for the women's marathon for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. She was the 1998 United States National Champion in the Marathon. Early and personal life Coogan went on to earn her Ph.D. in math from the University of Colorado in 1999, working primarily in number theory. She did post-doctorate work with Ken Ono at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, taught at Hood College, and currently teaches math at Ph ...
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Gwynneth Flower
Gwynneth Flower is a former chair of the National Meteorological Programme, a position she held until 2007. Flower is also a director of 2change Ltd, a management advisory business. Additionally, she has an interim management role in support of the Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom) developing a more commercial approach to business. In 1991 Flower set up CENTEC, the largest of the country's Training and Enterprise Councils, and was managing director of Action 2000,''People & Business'' by John Willcock.
The Independent, 11 March 1998. Retrieved 18 July 2011. which was responsible to the for ensuring that the UK economy did not suffer material disruptio ...
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Gwynneth Holt
Rose Gwynneth Cobden Holt (1909–1995), was a British artist known for her ivory sculptures on religious subjects. Her most famous work is a depiction of the ''Annunciation'', created circa 1946. Biography Holt was born in Wednesbury, Staffordshire in 1909. She was the eldest of three daughters and after attending St Anne's Convent in Birmingham, was accepted into Wolverhampton School of Art aged 16. There she studied under Richard Emerson and met a fellow student, T. B. Huxley-Jones, whom she married in 1934. They were both awarded places at the Royal College of Art but Holt did not take her place due to the financial burden on her family. Huxley-Jones studied under Richard Garbe, an eminent sculptor in ivory and tortoiseshell, materials not commonly used by sculptors at the time. He would influence the direction of both their work. In 1934, Huxley-Jones was appointed Head of Sculpture at Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen, where the couple were based for twelve years. It was ...
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Emma Gwynneth Ineson
Emma Gwynneth Ineson, (born 1969) is a British Anglican bishop and academic, specialising in practical theology. Since 2021, she has served as " Bishop to the Archbishops of Canterbury and York", i.e. assistant bishop on the staffs of both archbishops. From 2014 to 2019, she was Principal of Trinity College, Bristol, an evangelical Anglican theological college; and from 2019 to 2021, she was Bishop of Penrith, the suffragan bishop of the Diocese of Carlisle; she is to become area Bishop of Kensington in spring 2023. Early life and education Ineson was born in 1969 in Birmingham, England. She was brought up in Kenya and South Wales. She studied English language and linguistics at the University of Birmingham, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in 1992 and a Master of Philosophy (MPhil) degree in 1993. She undertook postgraduate research in the "power and authority in the language of worship" at Birmingham, and completed her Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree in ...
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Helen Gwynneth Palmer
Helen Gwynneth Palmer (9 May 1917 – 6 March 1979) was a prominent Australian socialist publisher after the Khrushchev Secret Speech of 1956 and the USSR's invasion of Hungary of the same year, which caused many leftists to leave the Communist Party of Australia. She was responsible for the financial and editorial publication of ''Outlook'', a non-dogmatic magazine of Australian socialism. Palmer's significance is her cultivation of an inclusive and tolerant left intellectual network in Sydney and Australia more broadly, which contributed strongly to the emergence of the Australian new left of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Palmer was additionally an author, educator, servicewoman, trade unionist and communist activist. Contributors to ''Outlook'' included the writer Stephen Murray-Smith and the historian Ian Turner, who wrote an article, "The Long Goodbye" for the final issue. "How to review over 13 years, 82 issues, of ''Outlook''?" his article began. "For 13 years, ''O ...
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Gwynneth Smith
Gwynneth Smith (born 1965) is an Irish former cricketer. She played eight Women's One Day International matches for Ireland women's cricket team. She was part of Ireland's squad for the 1988 Women's Cricket World Cup The 1988 Shell Bicentennial Women's World Cup was an international cricket tournament played in Australia from 29 November to 18 December 1988. Hosted by Australia for the first time, as part of the Bicentenary celebrations, it was the fourth edi ....Batting and fielding for Ireland women
Shell Bicentennial Women's World Cup 1988/89 – CricketArchive. Retrieved 29 August 2015.


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John Gwynneth
John Gwynneth (or Guinete) (fl. 1511–1557), was a clergyman of Welsh nationality originating from Gwynedd, and was a composer of religious and liturgical vocal music for which he was awarded a doctorate in the University of Oxford. He held benefices in England in Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire and London, and in North Wales at Clynnog Fawr. Although he was a polemicist for the Catholic faith, he maintained his ministry through the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI and Queen Mary, and was brother-in-law and executor of Stephen Vaughan (a supporter of the English Reformation). He is principally remembered, from the age of Thomas Tallis, as one of the other exponents of early Tudor period polyphony. Young life ;Origins and education John Gwynneth was the son of Dafydd ap Llewelyn ap Ithel of Castellmarch, Llanengan, Llŷn, Caernarfonshire: it was claimed that he was of the Welsh royal blood. Anthony à Wood remarks that he had great natural abilities but little or nothing to ...
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