4,913 research outputs found
Jacob Bowman, Brownsville, letter to John Mathews
Jacob Bowman, Brownsville, letter to John Mathew
Jacob Bowman, Brownsville, letter to John Mathews, Zanesville
Wants J. Mathews to survey some land belonging to friends of J. Bowman
Accn2505_005_051
Certificate of Baptism for Aldie Price, signed by Isaac Bowman, Minister of the Brethren Church, on 1 September 1881. On the back are dates of the deaths of Jacob Myers and Delilah Leedy
Lightning Round: Mediasite Recording Suite
Jacob Bowman, Online Course and Materials Developer
Center for eLearnin
Jacob of Sarug's Homily on Tamar (Gen 38)
This small volume contains an edition (from Vatican ms. 117) of Jacob of Sarug’s homily on Tamar (420 lines long). The full title is “On Tamar and on the Mystery of the Church.” The biblical narrative on which the poem is based (Gen 38) gives Jacob the opportunity to discuss various women in the early part of biblical history and in Jesus’ lineage, as well as the fact that a woman who is called a prostitute is in that lineage. Jacob explains how Scripture’s language is used in this regard
Jacob Wassermann.
One of several renderings of the German author Jacob Wassermann by the painter and illustrator Suzanne Carvallo-Schülein.Digital ImageArtwork
Jacob of Serugh's Homilies on the Spectacles of the Theatre
This fascinating volume contains excerpts from four otherwise unedited (and untranslated) homilies from Jacob of Sarug on the theatre. These homilies, extant only in a single manuscript (BM Add. 17158), which is unfortunately poorly preserved, are unique for the light they cast on the Greek theatre in the Byzantine period. In this article, originally published in Le Muséon 48 (1935), Moss gives a substantive introduction to the selections presented from these homilies, and then presents the texts in Syriac and in English translation. Scholars and readers interested in Syriac literature, and in Jacob of Sarug in particular, as well as students of the history of the theatre, will find this work of great interest.Translated into English from the Syriac text
Jacob Read to John Kean, October 14, 1791
Jacob Read wrote to John, addressed to Philadelphia, PA, One of the Commissioners of Accounts of the U.S., via [illegible ship], Captain Art.
Jacob wrote about certificates. Names included: Bowman, McEvers, [William] Stephens, [John Faucheraud] Grimké, Colonel John L. B. [illegible], Tubly, and the widow.
In the postscript, Jacob said his brother, George Paddon Read, will visit Philadelphia and visit John.https://digitalcommons.kean.edu/lhc_1790s/1101/thumbnail.jp
Jacob Bowman, Brownsville, letter to John Mathews, Springfield [Putnam], Ohio
"I wish you to Make the Surveys I Requested you for Rezen Davis & Richd Pindell.
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