Turvey Abbey, Chapel Interior - Geograph
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Turvey Abbey, Chapel Interior - Geograph
Turvey may refer to: As a surname Sport * Anna Turvey (born 1980), Irish cyclist * Cedric Turvey (1917–1991), Australian rugby league footballer * Joanne Turvey (born 1969), British rower * Nathan Turvey (born 1977), Australian rules footballer * Oliver Turvey (born 1987), British racing driver Other * Brad Turvey (born 1978), Filipino actor * Cassius Turvey (2007–2022), Aboriginal Australian boy killed in Perth * Hugh Turvey (born 1971), British artist and photographer * John Turvey (1944–2006), Canadian social worker * Malcolm Turvey, British film studies professor * Michael Turvey, American psychology professor * Nick Turvey (1931–2006), South African pilot * Philip Turvey (1875–1955), Australian politician * Vincent Turvey (1873–1912), clairvoyant and parapsychologist Fictional characters * Kevin Turvey, 1980s British TV comedy character played by Rik Mayall Places * Turvey, Bedfordshire, England, a village * Turvey House, County Dublin, Ireland, m ...
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Anna Turvey
Anna Turvey (born 5 February 1980) is a bicycle racing, racing cyclist competing for Ireland. She holds the Irish National records for the 10 miles, 25 miles and 50 miles individual time trials. Career In 2013, while competing as an amateur triathlete, Turvey finished second in RTTC National 25-mile time trial and top 10 in The British Elite time trial. Turvey joined the Scottish Cycling Performance Program in November 2013 with a view to competing in the 2014 Commonwealth Games. Turvey qualified to represent Scotland at the Cycling at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, 2014 Commonwealth Games in the Road Time Trial and the Individual Pursuit on the track, finishing 9th in the road time trial and 12th in the individual pursuit. Turvey declared for Ireland in December 2015, qualifying through her Mother. Turvey won the individual time trial at the Irish National Cycling Championships in June 2016. In 2016, she rode for Ireland at the 2016 European Road Championships and in the 2016 UCI ...
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Nick Turvey
Roland Archer Nicolas Turvey (16 November 1931 – 26 March 2006) was a champion aerobatic and air show pilot in South Africa. Career Nick Turvey earned his flying wings in the South African Air Force in 1955. He later became Chief Instructor of the Johannesburg Light Plane Club, a popular flying club of that era. He was awarded Springbok Colours for aerobatics in 1965 and represented South Africa at the World Aerobatic Championships four times. In 1981, Turvey survived a crash in his red Pitts Special, ZS-ZAP at the Aviation Africa airshow, using his skills to avoid crashing into cars and spectators. He won the National Aerobatic Championships eight times. Turvey was also a committee member of the South African Air Force Association (SAAFA) from 1963 until shortly before his death. See also * Aerobatics * List of South Africans This is a list of notable and famous South Africans who are the subjects of Wikipedia articles. Academics Academics * Shulamith Behr, art hi ...
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Turvey Park, New South Wales
Turvey Park is an inner southern suburb of Wagga Wagga in southern New South Wales, Australia. Its boundaries are defined by Fernleigh Road to the south, Glenfield Road to the west, Coleman Street to the north and to the east by Willans Hill. Turvey Park is characterised by single detached dwellings, constructed in the period from the early 1900s through to the 1960s. These dwellings vary from the very substantial, as found in parts of Coleman Street and Grandview Parade, to the brick bungalows of the northern end of the suburb between Urana and Coleman Streets, to modest public housing, and a mixture of brick and fibro and weatherboard cottages at the southern end of the suburb. Another feature of Turvey Park are many corner shops, such on the corner of Heath and Urana Street, the corner of Norman and Coleman Streets, and the Corner of Bourke and Urana Streets. Turvey Park was named after the property "Turvey Park" established by Thomas Turvey (died 14 January 1889), a licensee a ...
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Turvey House And Gardens
Turvey House and Gardens are a country house, gardens and parkland, situated by the village of Turvey in Bedfordshire, England. The gardens and parkland are listed Grade II in Historic England's Register of Parks and Gardens. and the house is a Grade I listed building. The house is a venue for weddings, events and location shoots. History The Turvey Estate was bought in 1786 from Charles Henry Mordaunt, Fifth Earl of Peterborough, by Charles Higgins, Sheriff of London in that year. John Higgins, a cousin of Charles Higgins, acquired part of the estate, and in the 1790s he built Turvey House. The house was likely designed by the architect, John Wing of Bedford. On his death in 1813, the estate was inherited by his eldest son Thomas Charles Higgins, High Sheriff of Bedfordshire in 1823. During the period from then until his death in 1865 there were many changes to the estate: the house was enlarged with an upper storey added in the 1830s, and modifications to the parkland inclu ...
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Turvey House, County Dublin
Turvey House was a substantially altered 17th-century house, with tower house elements, synonymous with the townland of Turvey () near Donabate in North County Dublin. Turvey is said to be a reference to the Irish mythical character Tuirbe Tragmar ("thrower of axes"), father of Gobán Saor. At various stages, the house and surrounding lands formed the family seat of the Barnewall family. The house is said to have been constructed with stone from the ruins of the nearby Grace Dieu Abbey by either Sir Christopher Barnewall or Sir Patrick Barnewall. The house was demolished in controversial circumstances by a construction company, the Murphy Group, in 1987. History The house was the home of the notable Barnewall family for many generations. In 1570, James Stanihurst arranged for Sir Christopher Barnewall to hide the English Jesuit priest and martyr Edmund Campion in the house for a period of 10 weeks to keep him from the authorities and prevent his arrest. It is during thi ...
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Turvey, Bedfordshire
Turvey is a village and civil parish on the River Great Ouse in the Borough of Bedford, Bedfordshire, England, about west of Bedford town centre. The village is on the A428 road between Bedford and Northampton, close to the border with Buckinghamshire. The 2011 Census recorded the parish's population as 1,225. History Turvey is recorded in Domesday Book of 1086 as a parish in the Hundred of Willey. There are eight separate entries for Turvey, including a total of 44 households. The Mordaunt family obtained the manor by marriage in 1197 and were ennobled as Barons of Turvey in the 16th century. The Mordaunt family house, Turvey Old Hall, was replaced by Turvey House in 1792, by which time the estate had passed to the Higgins family. It was extended in the 19th century and still stands. There is a second large house in the village called Turvey Abbey, which was historically a family house, but is now a Benedictine monastery. The Church of England parish church of All Saint ...
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Kevin Turvey
Kevin Turvey was a British television comedy character, created by actor and comedian Rik Mayall, who featured in the BBC sketch show ''A Kick Up the Eighties'' in 1981. ''A Kick Up the Eighties'' Turvey, an awkward and socially inept character who spoke with a broad West Midlands accent, was a self-styled "investigative journalist" who still lived with his mother, wore a shapeless blue anorak, fancied a local girl called Theresa Kelly (who was never depicted), and rarely ventured outside his home town of Redditch, north Worcestershire. Each week, his 'investigations' amounted to little more than an over-excited, rambling, uninformed monologue delivered straight to camera, providing absolutely no insight into the subject-matter whatsoever. The Kevin Turvey segments used as theme music the third movement ''alla marcia'' from the ''Karelia Suite'' by Sibelius; the first movement, ''Intermezzo'', was the theme of ITV's ''This Week'' current affairs programme. Mayall went uncredited ...
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Vincent Turvey
Vincent Newton Turvey (1873-1912) was a British clairvoyant and engineer known in the field of parapsychology for his early book that records his out-of-body experiences. In 1902, Turvey suffered from serious health problems, he gave up his profession of engineering and took interest in occult philosophy and yoga Yoga (UK: , US: ; 'yoga' ; ) is a group of physical, mental, and spiritual practices or disciplines that originated with its own philosophy in ancient India, aimed at controlling body and mind to attain various salvation goals, as pra .... His book ''The Beginnings of Seership'' (1911) records his alleged clairvoyant and out-of-body experiences.Irwin, Harvey J. (1985). ''Flight of Mind: A Psychological Study of the Out-Of-Body Experience''. p. 45 See also * Oliver Fox * Sylvan Muldoon Publications *''The Beginnings of Seership; Or, Super-normal Mental Activity'' (1911) References 1873 births 1912 deaths Clairvoyants English occult writers English ...
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Philip Turvey
Philip Joseph Turvey (28 June 1875 – 27 October 1955) was an Australian educator and politician who was a Labor Party member of the Legislative Assembly of Western Australia from 1911 to 1914, representing the seat of Swan. Turvey was born in Glenorchy, Victoria, to Bridget (née Roach) and John Turvey. He moved to Western Australia in 1898 and began working for the Education Department as a country schoolteacher, at various points teaching in Northam, Greenbushes, Narrogin, and Mundaring. Turvey served on the Northam Town Council in 1906, and was also a vice-president of the State School Teachers Union.Philip Joseph Turvey
– Biographical Register of Members of the Parliament of Western Australia. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
He entered parli ...
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Michael Turvey
Michael T. Turvey (February 14, 1942 - August 12, 2023) was the Board of Trustees' Distinguished Professor of Experimental Psychology at the University of Connecticut and a Senior Scientist at Haskins Laboratories in New Haven, Connecticut. He is best known for his pioneering work in ecological psychology and in applying the dynamical systems approach to the study of motor behavior. He was the founder of the ''Center for the Ecological Study of Perception and Action''. His research spans a number of areas including: dynamic touch and haptics, interlimb coordination, visual perception and optic flow, postural stability, visual word recognition and speech perception. Along with William Mace and Robert Shaw, he was one of the leading explicators of the ecological psychology of J. J. Gibson. His pioneering work with J. A. Scott Kelso and Peter N. Kugler introduced the physical language of complex systems to the understanding of perception and action. He also helped introduce the ideas ...
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Cedric Turvey
Cedric William Turvey (1917-1991) was an Australian rugby league footballer who played in the 1940s. Playing career Turvey started his career as a local junior, progressing through to first grade via the Carlton Waratah's to the St George Presidents Cup team of 1939. After a short stint playing Rugby League for Lithgow, Turvey represented Country Seconds and N.S.W. in 1941 before returning to the St George Dragons for one season in first grade in 1942. whilst on leave from the AIF and the RAAF The Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) is the principal aerial warfare force of Australia, a part of the Australian Defence Force (ADF) along with the Royal Australian Navy and the Australian Army. Constitutionally the governor-general of Aus ... during World War II. Turvey played Five-Eighth in the Saints team that lost the 1942 Grand Final to Canterbury-Bankstown. He finished his St George career in Reserve grade in 1943. Turvey survived the war and finished his Rugby League ...
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Malcolm Turvey
Malcolm Turvey (born 1969) is a British film theorist. He is professor of film studies at Tufts University and an editor of the journal ''October October is the tenth month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian calendars. Its length is 31 days. The eighth month in the old calendar of Romulus , October retained its name (from Latin and Greek ''ôctō'' meaning "eight") after Januar ...''. He formerly taught at Sarah Lawrence College. Early life and education Turvey was born in North London, where he grew up, and attended the University of Kent. Career He taught at Sarah Laurence College in Westchester, NY, before accepting a position at Tufts University in Medford, MA. Turvey began at Tufts in the late 2010s, and has been the Department Head of the Film Department at Tufts. He has written several books, his most acclaimed being Play Time, an analytical work about Jaques Tati. Personal life Turvey lives in Massachusetts. Books *''Camera Obscura, Camera Lucida: Essay ...
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