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A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… trades assembled, and went in order through the town, with music and flags, but this has been given up; there is, …
Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066-1300
… Pontifical: a pontifical of the Use of Salisbury', Welsh Music History ii (1997) 65-99, suggesting an East Anglian …
A History of the County of Sussex
… The parish hall behind it was put up in 1931. 53 A Barnham choral society existed by 1929. 54 In 1965 there were several …
Alumni Oxonienses
… composer, organist of Chester Cathedral 1599, vicar choral of the holy and undivided Trinity, Dublin, 1609. See …
Old and New London
… horn! The mail-guards are the soloists, and very pleasant music they discourse; not a few of them are firstrate …
Survey of London
… Gesualdo (Gemaldo) Lanza (17791859), an Italian teacher of music, to provide a centre for music and the drama on an island site facing Euston Road and … the theatre was to be occupied by pleasure gardens, with a music gallery built against the theatre itself. In front of …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in City of York
… at Beverley and Ripon. The Bedern housed the Vicars Choral, who deputised for the canons at services in the … for St. Peter's Liberty. The surviving close of the Vicars Choral at Wells, though longer and more regular, may indicate … must have been nearly finished by 1346 when mass with music was celebrated in it in the presence of many clergy and …
Survey of London
… professional men, tailors and dressmakers, a professor of music, a lodging-house, two schools, and, perhaps, one or two … named: Edward May (philosophy and medicine), Thomas Hunt (music), Nicholas Phiske (astronomy), John Spidell (geometry), … fortification and architecture. Hunt, the professor of music, taught singing and the playing of the organ, lute, …
Alumni Oxonienses
… at Cambridge 1664, as Bynner, one of these names vicar choral of St. Asaph, 1661, rector of Cemmes, co. Montgomery, …
Displaying 131 - 140 of 3242