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Sabine (surname)
Sabine is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Charles Sabine (born 1960), English TV journalist and advocate for patients with degenerative brain disease * Clement Sabine (1831–1903), pastoralist in South Australia * David Sabine (born 1966), English cricketer * Sir Edward Sabine (1788–1883), Irish astronomer, scientist, ornithologist and explorer * Elizabeth Juliana Leeves Sabine (1807–1879), British translator of Alexander von Humboldt's ''Kosmos'' and assistant of her husband Sir Edward Sabine in his scientific work * Elizabeth Sabine (born 1923), Australian voice coach * George Holland Sabine (1880–1961), American professor and author of philosophy * Joseph Sabine (1770–1837), English lawyer and naturalist * Joseph Sabine (British Army officer) (c. 1661–1739), British general and Member of Parliament * Lorenzo Sabine (1803–1877), U.S. Representative from Massachusetts * Paul Earls Sabine (1879–1958), American acoustic engineer * Roy Sabine, Eng ...
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Charles Sabine
Charles Edward Sabine (born 20 April 1960, British Army Battalion HQ, Rinteln Rinteln () is a small town in Lower Saxony, Germany. It is located on the banks of the Weser river above the Porta Westfalica. The town of Rinteln is in the broad valley between the hills of the Weserbergland and the North Lippe Bergland. In rela ..., West Germany), is an Emmy Award-winning television journalist who worked for the US Network NBC News for twenty-six years, before becoming a global spokesman for patients and families suffering degenerative brain diseases. He is active throughout advocacy and charity sectors across four continents and founder of the Hidden No More Foundation. He has 2 children, Roman and Sabrina. Early life and career Sabine was educated at Brentwood School, England, then obtained a first class honours degree in Media Studies from Westminster University, where he was tutored by BBC Radio Producer Charles Parker. Sabine joined NBC in 1982 in London, and worked as a writ ...
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Clement Sabine
Clement Sabine (c. 1831 – 27 November 1903) was a manager of several large pastoral properties in the early days of South Australia. History Sabine was born in Bury St Edmonds, Suffolk to John Sabine and Adelaide Isham Sabine (née Eppes) and emigrated with his parents, two brothers and two sisters aboard the barque ''Derwent'', arriving at Port Adelaide in March 1853 He worked for several years as Clement Sabine & Co., customs and shipping agent, then from 1857 to 1894 as Adelaide agent for pastoralist and absentee landowner Price Maurice (1818–1894), who had sheep runs near Coffin's Bay and was largely responsible for the rise of Angora goat farming and breeding in South Australia. Properties managed by Sabine for Maurice included Pekina, O'Laddie. Tarcowie, Warrow, Lake Hamilton, Branfield, and "the ill-fated" Mt. Eba station. In 1900 he left for South Africa, to investigate purchase land there post-war, concluding it was hopeless. In 1902 he was found insolvent, and aro ...
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David Sabine
David John Sabine (born 6 June 1966) is a New Zealand born former English cricketer. Sabine played as a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm medium pace. He was born at Papakura near Auckland.David Sabine
. Retrieved 2019-04-17.
Sabine made a single appearance for against the
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Edward Sabine
Sir Edward Sabine ( ; 14 October 1788 – 26 June 1883) was an Irish astronomer, geophysicist, ornithologist, explorer, soldier and the 30th president of the Royal Society. He led the effort to establish a system of magnetic observatories in various parts of British territory all over the globe. Much of his life was devoted to their direction, and to analyzing their observations. Other research focused on the birds of Greenland, ocean temperatures, the Gulf Stream, barometric measurement of heights, arc of the meridian, glacial transport of rocks, the volcanoes of the Hawaiian Islands, and various points of meteorology. Early life Edward Sabine was born in Dublin to Joseph Sabine, a member of a prominent Anglo-Irish family who was visiting his Irish relatives at the time of his son's birth. The family connections with Ireland can be traced back to the 17th century. His mother, Sarah Hunt, died when he was just one month old. He was the couple's fifth son and ninth chil ...
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Elizabeth Juliana Leeves Sabine
Elizabeth Juliana Leeves (1807 – 1879) was an English scientist who assisted her husband Sir Edward Sabine in his scientific work and translated important scientific works from German into English. Life and work Born at Seaford in Sussex and baptised there on 26 October 1807, at Chichester in Sussex on 14 December 1826, when she was 19 years old, she married Edward Sabine. Leeves' translation from German into English of Alexander von Humboldt's '' Kosmos'', the first four volumes, was published first in Britain in 1849 and republished subsequently. She also translated Humboldt's two volume ''Aspects of Nature, in Different Lands and Different Climates; with Scientific Elucidations'', published in 1849. Her translation of François Arago's ''Meteorological Essays'' and ''Narrative of an Expedition to the Polar Sea'', was first published 1840 under the superintendence of her husband. Leeves also translated the writings of Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss on terrestrial magnetism. ...
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Elizabeth Sabine
Elizabeth Sabine (October 1923 – 7 December 2015) was a voice-strengthening specialist. She received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Los Angeles Music Awards in 2003 for her contributions to the field.Elizabeth Sabine winner at Los Angeles Music Awards in 200 Biography Sabine, who grew up in Australia, initially pursued a career in entertainment, gaining recognition as a vocalist on the live variety TV show In Melbourne Tonight. In 1974, she moved to Los Angeles where she befriended Robert Mazzarella,Elizabeth Sabine adopted the technique when introduced to Robert Mazzerella (LA Times article/ref> a local singing teacher and operatic tenor. Toward the end of the 1970s, Sabine discovered her ability to refine vocal techniques for hard rock and heavy metal music vocalists, whose voices often scream and yell. Her approach was designed to facilitate faster mastery of vocal skills compared to other available methods. Notable artists, including Axl Rose, singer of Guns N' Ros ...
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George Holland Sabine
George Holland Sabine (9 December 1880 – 18 January 1961), popularly known as Sabine, was a professor of philosophy, dean of the graduate school and vice president of Cornell University. He is best known for his authoritative work '' A History of Political Theory'', which traces the growth of political thought from the times of Plato to modern fascism and nazism. George Sabine was also a carpenter, a blacksmith, a cook, and a gardener. He also collected lithographs and etchings. In his review of ''A History of Political Theory'', Leland Jenks noted, "Sabine is the only textbook writer who is abreast of recent Rousseau scholarship, as represented by Hoffding, Lanson, Cassirer, and Hendel." Leland H. Jenks (1939) Social Forces 18(3):436 Biography He was born in Dayton, Ohio to Lorenzo D. Sabine and Eva Josephine Tucker. Sabine entered Cornell University in 1899, received his A.B. in 1903 and Ph.D. in 1906. He taught at Stanford University from 1907 to 1914. That year, he was appo ...
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Joseph Sabine
Joseph Sabine FRS ( ; 6 June 1770 – 24 January 1837) was an English lawyer, naturalist and writer on horticulture. Life and work Sabine was born into a prominent Anglo-Irish family in Tewin, Hertfordshire, the eldest son of Joseph Sabine. His younger brother was Sir Edward Sabine. Sabine practised law until 1808, when he was appointed Inspector General of Taxes, a position he held until 1835. He had a lifelong interest in natural history and was an original fellow of the Linnean Society, elected on 7 November 1779. Sabine was honorary secretary of the Royal Horticultural Society from 1810 to 1830, and treasurer, and received their gold medal for organising the accounts left in a state of disarray by Richard Anthony Salisbury. The society's gardens at Hammersmith, then Chiswick, were established under his guidance. He sent David Douglas and others to collect specimens, and initiated local societies as extensions of the society. He contributed around forty papers for their ...
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Joseph Sabine (British Army Officer)
General Joseph Sabine (c. 1661 – 24 October 1739) was a British Army officer who fought in the Nine Years' War, the War of Spanish Succession and the Jacobite rising of 1715. He was later a politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1727 to 1734, becoming Governor of Gibraltar in 1730. Early life Sabine was probably the son of Walter Sabine and grandson of Avery Sabine, alderman and mayor of Canterbury, who died in 1648. He joined the army at the time of the Glorious Revolution. In 1690 he married Hester Whitfield, daughter of Henry Whitfield, who, after having three sons who all died young, herself died at the age of 24. Military career Sabine was appointed captain lieutenant to Sir Henry Ingoldsby's regiment of foot on 8 March 1689 and became captain of the Grenadier company before 18 October 1689. He served in Ireland under William III, and was granted estates in county Kildare. On 13 July 1691, he became major of Colonel Charles Herbert's regiment. He took part in W ...
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Lorenzo Sabine
Lorenzo Sabine (February 28, 1803 – April 14, 1877) was a U.S. Representative from Massachusetts now more remembered for his research and publishing concerning the Loyalists of the American Revolution than as a public servant. Background and early life Born in New Concord (now Lisbon), New Hampshire, Sabine moved to Boston, Massachusetts, with his parents in 1811 and to Hampden, Maine, in 1814. He completed preparatory studies. At the age of eighteen, he moved to Eastport, Maine, and became employed as a clerk and afterwards engaged in mercantile pursuits. He was editor of the Eastport Sentinel. Founder of the Eastport Lyceum. Incorporator of Eastport Academy and Eastport Athenaeum. He served as member of the Maine House of Representatives in 1833 and 1834. Deputy collector of customs at Eastport 1841–1843. He moved to Framingham, Massachusetts, in 1848, having been appointed a trial justice. Sabine was elected as a Whig to the Thirty-second Congress to fill the vacancy ...
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Paul Earls Sabine
Paul Earls Sabine (22 January 1879 – 28 December 1958) was an American acoustic engineer and a specialist on acoustic architecture. Sound absorbing boards made of porous gypsum was sometimes known by the tradename ''Sabinite''. He was a director at the Riverbank Laboratories until his retirement in 1947. Sabine was born in Albion, Illinois, to Methodist pastor Charles and Rebecca Likely née McClure. He was educated at McKendree College (1899) before going to Harvard University from where he received a doctorate in 1915. He taught physics for a while and in 1919 he replaced his cousin Wallace Clement Sabine (who died from cancer) as director of the Riverbank Acoustical Laboratories (which later became a part of the Illinois Institute of Technology). He developed the work of his cousin and specialized in acoustic architecture and was a consultant for architects and involved in the design of the Radio City Music Hall, New York; Fels Planetarium, Philadelphia; and the House and Se ...
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Roy Sabine
Roy Sabine (birth unknown) is an English former rugby union and professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s and 1960s, and coached rugby league in the 1970s. He played rugby union (RU) for Duke of Wellington's Regiment ("The Dukes"), as a centre, i.e. number 12 or 13, and representative level rugby league (RL) for Yorkshire, and at club level for Keighley, as a , i.e. number 6, and coached at club level for Keighley. Roy Sabine served as a Private with the Duke of Wellington's Regiment. Coaching career Roy Sabine coached Keighley to the 1976 Challenge Cup semi-final during the 1975–76 season against St. Helens at Fartown Ground, Huddersfield Huddersfield is a market town in the Kirklees district in West Yorkshire, England. It is the administrative centre and largest settlement in the Kirklees district. The town is in the foothills of the Pennines. The River Holme's confluence into ... on Saturday 3 April 1976.Edgar, Harry (2008). ''Rugby League Journa ...
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