Difference between revisions of "Archive:Brief Lives"

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'Brief Lives,' chiefly of Contemporaries, set down by John Aubrey, between the Years 1669 & 1696, Edited from the author's mss. by Andrew Clark Vol. II. (I - Y), Published 1898 Clarendon Press Oxford
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{{breadcrumb2|Archives|Archive:Extracts}}
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Clark, Andrew, ed., ''Brief Lives, chiefly of Contemporaries, set down by John Aubrey, between the Years 1669 & 1696'', Vol. II. (I - Y) (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1898).
  
 
page 297
 
page 297
  
James Whitney (1593 - 166-)
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'''James Whitney''' (1593 - 166-)
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* '''Parson Whitney''' was a great nomenclator of Oxford men, being an old fellow there; and were he alive now would be 81.
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** My old cosen, '''parson Whitney''', told me that in the visitation of Oxon in Edward VI's time they burned mathematical bookes for conjuring bookes, and, if the Greeke professor had not accidentally come along, the Greeke testament had been thrown into the fire for a conjuring booke too.
  
* Parson Whitney was a great nomenclator of Oxford men, being an old fellow there; and were he alive now would be 81.
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** My old cosen, parson Whitney, told me that in the visitation of Oxon in Edward VI's time they burned mathematical bookes for conjuring bookes, and, if the Greeke professor had not accidentally caome along, the Greeke testament had been thrown into the fire for a conjuring booke too.
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Transcribed by: Adrian Benjamin Burke, Esq.
  
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Copyright © 2007, 2008, [[User:Abburke|Adrian Benjamin Burke, Esq.]], and the [[Whitney Research Group]].
  
Transcribed by: Adrian Benjamin Burke, Esq.
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[[Category:England]]
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[[Category:Oxfordshire, England]]
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[[Category:Oxford, Oxfordshire, England]]

Latest revision as of 00:08, 3 May 2010

Archives > Archive:Extracts > Brief Lives

Clark, Andrew, ed., Brief Lives, chiefly of Contemporaries, set down by John Aubrey, between the Years 1669 & 1696, Vol. II. (I - Y) (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1898).

page 297

James Whitney (1593 - 166-)

  • Parson Whitney was a great nomenclator of Oxford men, being an old fellow there; and were he alive now would be 81.
    • My old cosen, parson Whitney, told me that in the visitation of Oxon in Edward VI's time they burned mathematical bookes for conjuring bookes, and, if the Greeke professor had not accidentally come along, the Greeke testament had been thrown into the fire for a conjuring booke too.

Transcribed by: Adrian Benjamin Burke, Esq.


Copyright © 2007, 2008, Adrian Benjamin Burke, Esq., and the Whitney Research Group.