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Anthony Trollope | A Wisdom Archive on Anthony Trollope |  | Anthony Trollope A selection of articles related to Anthony Trollope |  |
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Anthony Trollope, Anthony Trollope - Biography, Anthony Trollope - Quotations, Anthony Trollope - Reputation, Anthony Trollope - Trollope on radio, Anthony Trollope - Trollope on television, Anthony Trollope - Works, Anthony Trollope - Chronicles of Barsetshire, Anthony Trollope - Other, Anthony Trollope - Palliser series
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Anthony Trollope |  |  |  | Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia - Anthony TrollopeAnthony Trollope (April 24, 1815 – December 6, 1882) was one of the most successful, prolific and respected English novelists of the Victorian era. Some of Trollope's best-loved works, known as the Barsetshire Chronicles, revolve around the imaginary county of Barsetshire, but he also wrote penetrating novels on political, social, and inter-gender issues and conflicts of his day.
Trollope's popularity continues into the present day (some famous fans being Sir Alec Guinness, who never travelled without a Trollope novel, ex-Pri ...
Including:
Read more here: » Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia - Anthony Trollope |
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 |  |  | Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia II - Anthony Trollope - BiographyAnthony Trollope was born in London, the son of a barrister, Thomas Anthony Trollope, and his wife Frances, who would later become a successful writer. Thomas Trollope was a clever and well-educated man, a Fellow of New College, Oxford, but his bad temper led to failure at the bar, his ventures into farming were unprofitable, and he lost the inheritance on which he was counting when an elderly uncle married and started a family. Nonetheless he was from a genteel background, with connections to the landed gentry, and wished his sons to be edu ...
See also:Anthony Trollope, Anthony Trollope - Biography, Anthony Trollope - Reputation, Anthony Trollope - Trollope on television, Anthony Trollope - Trollope on radio, Anthony Trollope - Works, Anthony Trollope - Chronicles of Barsetshire, Anthony Trollope - Palliser series, Anthony Trollope - Other, Anthony Trollope - Quotations Read more here: » Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia II - Anthony Trollope - Biography |
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 |  |  | Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia II - Winchester College - HistoryWinchester College was founded in the fourteenth century by William of Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester and Chancellor to Richard II, and the first seventy poor scholars entered the school in 1394. Historically, the school also took a few paying students, known as "Commoners". Originally there were only about 10, rising steadily until the early 19th century, when their numbers were approximately equal to those of the Scholars. In the late 1850s and throughout the 1860s, the numbers expanded dramatically as nine new boarding houses were built. O ...
See also:Winchester College, Winchester College - History, Winchester College - Winchester Notions, Winchester College - Winchester College Football, Winchester College - Former pupils, Winchester College - List of Boarding Houses, Winchester College - Winchester Quotations, Winchester College - External link Read more here: » Winchester College: Encyclopedia II - Winchester College - History |
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 |  |  | Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia II - Vicar - AnglicanIn the Church of England, vicar is the ordinary title given to certain parish priests. Historically, Anglican parish clergymen were divided into rectors, vicars, and perpetual curates. These were distinguished according to the way in which they were remunerated. The church was supported by tithes — taxes (traditionally, as the etymology of tithe suggests, of ten percent) levied on the agricultural output of the parish. These were divided into greater tithes levied on wheat, hay and wood, and lesser tithes levied ...
See also:Vicar, Vicar - Roman Catholic, Vicar - Anglican, Vicar - Ulster, Vicar - Notable vicars, Vicar - Lutheran usage Read more here: » Vicar: Encyclopedia II - Vicar - Anglican |
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 |  |  | Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia II - British literature - Old English literatureMain Article: Anglo-Saxon literature
The earliest form of the English language developed after the settlement of the Saxons and other Germanic tribes in England after the withdrawal of the Romans and is known as Old English or Anglo-Saxon. The most famous work in Old English is the epic poem Beowulf. (The oldest surviving text in English is Caedmon's hymn of creation.) The precise date of the manuscript is debated, but most estimates place it close to AD 1000.
Chronicles contained a range of historical and literary accounts, for example: Historia ecclesi ...
See also:British literature, British literature - Old Celtic literature, British literature - Old English literature, British literature - Late medieval literature in England, British literature - Other medieval literatures, British literature - Early modern English literature to 1660, British literature - English language literature from 1660 to the late 18th century, British literature - Non English language literatures from the 16th century to the 19th century, British literature - 19th century English language literature, British literature - The Romantics, British literature - The 19th century novel, British literature - Victorian poets, British literature - Ireland, British literature - Wales, British literature - Scotland, British literature - English language literature since 1900, British literature - Non English language literatures since 1900, British literature - Literary prizes Read more here: » British literature: Encyclopedia II - British literature - Old English literature |
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 |  |  | Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia II - List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Christianity
List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Roman Catholic Church.
Adso of Melk (Benedictine)- The Name of the Rose novel & movie
Brother Brace - RuneScape
Brother Cadfael (Benedictine) - mystery novels by Edith Pargeter
Caraccioli - (Dominican) - A General History of the Robberies and Murders Of the most notorious Pyrates by Charles Johnson
Friar Carl - Van Helsing
Friar Domingo - Shogun, played by Michael Hordern in ...
See also:List of fictional clergy and religious figures, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Christianity, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Roman Catholic Church, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Eastern Orthodox Church, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Anglican/Episcopal Churches, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Protestantism, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Unspecified/Pre-schism/Other religious workers, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Shinto, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Priests, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Miko, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Kuro Miko, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Buddhism, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Mahayana, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Vajrayana, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Judaism, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Ainu religion, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Fictional Religions, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Yevonism from Final Fantasy X, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - The Church of Aram from The Elder Gods, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Bajoran Religion from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Nisan Religion from Xenogears, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Ethos from Xenogears, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Omnianism from Discworld, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - The Order of Wen the Eternally Surprised from Discworld, List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Other/Unclassified Read more here: » List of fictional clergy and religious figures: Encyclopedia II - List of fictional clergy and religious figures - Christianity |
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 |  |  | Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia II - Novel - History
Novel - Traditions of Prose Fiction: The Ancient World.
As Pierre Daniel Huet noted in 1670, the tradition of epic works went back as far as Virgil and Homer. The regular format was verse, suiting the purpose of tradition in a culture of oral performances. Today, we see this tradition as going back even further, to the epic of Gilgamesh.
It is more difficult to speak of the influence of the shorter performances of regular storytelling on the medieval traditions which led to the ...
See also:Novel, Novel - Novel/Romance: Unstable Words, Novel - History, Novel - Traditions of Prose Fiction: The Ancient World, Novel - The Romance 1100-1500, Novel - The Emergence of the Novel 1200-1500, Novel - State of Affairs: The Market around 1700, Novel - The Second Rise of the Novel or the New Romance 1700-1800, Novel - The Market of Classics and the Reform of the Novel 1700-1800, Novel - To be Discussed: The Novel turning into Literature 1740-1800, Novel - Sentimentalism Psychology and a New Individual 1750-1850, Novel - The 19th century and the Novel as the object of great Discussions, Novel - The 20th Century: From Modernism to Postmodernism, Novel - Individual Novels Discussed, Novel - Asian works, Novel - The 13th century, Novel - The 14th century, Novel - The 15th century, Novel - The 16th century, Novel - The 17th century, Novel - The 18th century, Novel - The 19th century, Novel - The 20th century, Novel - Genre novels, Novel - Literature, Novel - Contemporary Views of the History of the Novel, Novel - Secondary Literature Read more here: » Novel: Encyclopedia II - Novel - History |
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 |  |  | Anthony Trollope: Encyclopedia II - Brideshead Revisited - Plot summaryAfter an unpleasant chance first encounter, protagonist Charles Ryder, a student at an unnamed college (though critics have suggested Waugh used Hertford College as his model) at the Oxford University, and Lord Sebastian Flyte, an undergraduate at Christ Church, the younger son of an aristocratic family, become friends. Sebastian takes Charles to the palatial home of his family, Brideshead Castle, where Charles eventually meets the rest of the Flyte fa ...
See also:Brideshead Revisited, Brideshead Revisited - Plot summary, Brideshead Revisited - Television adaptation in 1981, Brideshead Revisited - Catholic Themes, Brideshead Revisited - The Nature of the Relationship between Charles and Sebastian, Brideshead Revisited - Characters, Brideshead Revisited - Pop culture references Read more here: » Brideshead Revisited: Encyclopedia II - Brideshead Revisited - Plot summary |
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