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The Train of Thought: Anomalies By: Richard Dardis About the Book The “Train of Thought” continues to travel, travel, travel, with the greatest and biggest personalities to ever inhabit our world. Scientists, painters, poets, criminals, presidents, and more, all traveling along, sharing ideas and stories, all unsure of how they got there. As Albert Einstein, Max Plank, Neils Bohr take on the challenge of uncovering the purpose of the train’s existence and uncover a whole host of philosophical quandaries along the way. A blend of science fiction and historical fact, The Train of Thought weaves unique personalities together in a study of the global political and cultural atmosphere of our world through the last one hundred years and beyond and examines from a unique perspective the political strain particularly in the United States now based on the mistakes of the past.
While attempting to slowly unravel the 'Train of Thoughts' purpose and function Albert, Max, and Niels were forced to incorporate other scientists in order to continue the quest of uncovering it's true meaning and goal. Which takes us into the latter half of the 20th century and beyond with no definitive resolution. Carl Sagan, Stephen Hawking, and others help to continue the pursuit. A blend of science fiction and historical fact, The Train of Thought weaves unique personalities together in a study of the global political and cultural atmosphere of our world through the last one hundred years and beyond and examines from a unique perspective the political strain particularly in the United States now based on the mistakes of the past.
Edmund James married Mary Mitchell 23 June 1669 in Bradford, Massachusetts. They had two known sons, Edmund (1669/70-1682) and Benjamin (1673-1747).
When Henry II departed Ireland in 1172, he handed over to Hugh de Lacy I the generous gift of the land of Meath; an enormous tract of land which covered the modern counties of Meath, Westmeath, and parts of Longford and Offaly. The tithes of this land together with lands in Dublin were granted to his favoured house of Llanthony situated on his estates in the valley of Ewyas in Wales. The subsequent arrival in Ireland of the knights of Hugh de Lacy I and the settlement of many of his Irish lands is recorded in the charters contained in the Irish cartularies of Llanthony Prima andÃ?Â?Ã?Â?Secunda. The growth of the Llanthony estates in Ireland both in terms of landholding and the holding of...
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Gillian Kenny provides a coherent picture of the lives of women in medieval Ireland through an examination of their marital circumstances. By comparing and contrasting the differing lives of Anglo-Irish and Gaelic singlewomen, wives, widows and nuns of late medieval Ireland, the author tries to identify how their functions and roles in society were affected by the differing rights enjoyed and by the restrictions imposed by their different societies. The book is constructed to reflect thematically the standard marital progression of women in medieval Ireland (both Gaelic and Anglo-Irish) from singlewomen to wives to widows. The machinery of church and state dominated and controlled how women conducted their lives. Within these structures, however, women were able, to differing extents, to transmit and receive land and movables, to work for a living as tradeswomen, craftswomen or merchants, or to devote themselves to the spiritual life as singlewomen, wives or widows.