File Teachings of Jesus 35 of 40. the wicked husbandmen. Jan Luyken etching. Bowyer Bible.gif thumb 300px The Wicked Husbandmen from the Bowyer Bible , 19th century. The Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen is a parable of Jesus found in three of the four Canonical gospels Gospel of Luke Luke niv Luke 20 9 19 20 9 19 , Gospel of Mark Mark niv Mark 12 1 12 12 1 12 , and Gospel of Matthew Matthew niv Matthew 21 33 46 21 33 46 , and in the non canonical Gospel of Thomas . It describes a householder planting a vineyard and letting it out to husbandmen, who failed in their duty. This parable was about chief ... winepress in it, and built a tower , and let it out to Leasehold estate husbandmen , and went into a far country And when the time of the fruit drew near, he sent his servants to the husbandmen, that they might receive the fruits of it. And the husbandmen took his servants, and Assault beat one, and Murder ... my son. But when the husbandmen saw the son, they said among themselves, This is the heir come ... husbandmen? They say unto him, He will miserably destroy those wicked men, and will let out his vineyard unto other husbandmen, which shall render him the fruits in their seasons. Jesus saith unto them ..., and thus that they are the husbandmen. The term husbandman is translated as tenant or farmer in the New ... to be worked for God s benefit but the husbandmen seem to want to keep the produce, indeed ... of Jesus ref Jesus being the son of the parable. The husbandmen could also be seen as all of human ... Matthew also has the priests say that the husbandmen should be thrown out, a joke on them when they later realize they are the husbandmen, although Mark and Luke have Jesus say that to them. Both Luke ... Paulist Press 1989 ISBN 978 0 8091 3059 7 Parables of Jesus DEFAULTSORT Parable Of The Wicked Husbandmen Category Parables of Jesus Wicked Husbandmen, The Parable of The Category 1st century in religion ... Maus simple Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen sr sh Pri a o zlim vinogradarima ... more details
Adam of Melrose died 1222 was Abbot of Melrose and Bishop of Caithness , famously burned to death by the Husbandry husbandmen of Caithness . He rose to the position of Abbot in 1207, and on 5 August 1213, was elected to the bishopric of Caithness, then based at Halkirk . On 11 May 1214, he was consecrated by William de Malveisin , Bishop of St. Andrews , with Walter Capellanus Walter , Bishop of Glasgow , and Bricius de Douglas Bricius , Bishop of Moray assisting. Adam, along with Bishop Walter and Bishop Bricius , visited Rome in 1218, to obtain absolution from Pope Honorius III for the sentence excommunication imposed on King Alexander II of Scotland Alexander II and the whole Kingdom of Scotland . When Adam returned to Caithness in 1219, he began to encounter problems from the inhabitants of his diocese. Bishop Adam had increased the episcopal tax imposed on the province s husbandmen, raising it from a span unit of length span of butter from every twenty cow s, to a span from every ten cows. On 11 September 1222, a group of husbandmen gathered at Halkirk to protest against the bishop s tax increase. After some initial discussions, the company grew angry and killed Serlo, Dean religion Dean of Newbattle near Dalkeith , the Bishop s friend and advisor. Adam attempted to offer terms, but the infuriated husbandmen forced the bishop to flee into his kitchen, and in the kitchen they burned him to death. Adam s body was interred in the church of Skinnet . In 1239, Adam s successor Gilbert de Moravia otherwise known as Saint Gilbert of Dornoch moved the body to the Dornoch Cathedral newly established Cathedral at Dornoch . References John Dowden Dowden, John , The Bishops of Scotland , ed. J. Maitland Thomson, Glasgow, 1912 Ross Harper, Ian, Notable Bishops and Ministers of Dornoch Cathedral , Historylinks Museum, Dornoch External links DNB Cite wstitle Adam of Caithness start box s rel ca succession box before Patrick title Abbot of Melrose years 1207 13 after Hugh de C ... more details
saved book title Parables of Jesus subtitle cover image Cl Fd Saint Eutrope vitrail1B.jpg cover color Parables of Jesus Main article Parables of Jesus Parable Canonical parables Parable of the barren fig tree Barren Fig Tree Parable of the budding fig tree Budding Fig Tree Counting the cost Parable of Drawing in the Net Drawing in the Net Parable of the Faithful Servant Faithful Servant Parable of the Friend at Night Friend at Night Parable of the Good Samaritan Good Samaritan Parable of the great banquet Great Banquet Parable of the Growing Seed Growing Seed Parable of the Hidden Treasure Hidden Treasure Lamp under a bushel Lamp Parable of the Leaven Leaven Parable of the Lost Coin Lost Coin Parable of the Lost Sheep Lost Sheep Parable of the Master and Servant Master and Servant Parable of the Mustard Seed Mustard Seed New Wine into Old Wineskins Parable of the Pearl Pearl Pharisee and the Publican Parable of the Prodigal Son Prodigal Son Parable of the Rich Fool Rich Fool Rich man and Lazarus Parable of the Sower Sower Parable of the strong man Strong Man Parable of the talents or minas Talents Parable of the Tares Tares Parable of the Ten Virgins Ten Virgins Parable of the Two Debtors Two Debtors Parable of the Two Sons Two Sons Parable of the Unjust Judge Unjust Judge Parable of the Unjust Steward Unjust Steward Parable of the unforgiving servant Unforgiving Servant Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen Wicked Husbandmen Parable of the Wise and the Foolish Builders Wise and Foolish Builders Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard Workers in the Vineyard Non canonical parables Parable of the assassin Assassin Parable of the empty jar Empty Jar Category Wikipedia books on Christianity Parables of Jesus ... more details
Gerrhos Greek language Greek reed swamp is a place in Scythia essential to interpreting Herodotus world map, for it formed one of the corners of the great square that defined Scythia. A more familiar Gerrhos or reed swamp &mdash from the Alexandria n point of view &mdash lay to the east of the mouth of the Nile . Herodotus drew a meridian geography meridian between the two Gerrhoi that in Scythia was considered the source of the Boristhenes Dnieper . In the words of Herodotus IV.53 As far inland as the place named Gerrhos, which is distant forty days voyage from the sea, its course is known, and its direction is from north to south but above this, no one has traced it, so as to say through what countries it flows. It enters the territory of the Scythian Husbandmen after running for some time through a desert region&hellip It is the only river besides the Nile the sources of which are unknown&hellip Livio Catullo Stecchini , the unrivalled historian of Geodesy earth measuring , assigned as Gerrhos , the area of swamps to the northeast of Smolensk , today considerably reduced by Blytt Sernander post glacial warming and drying of the climate and by the conscious drainage and intrusion of agriculture. Later classical historians and geographers, such as Pomponius Mela mislocated this Gerrhos . See also Solokha kurgan External links http www.metrum.org mapping gerrhos.htm Livio Catullo Stecchini, The Mapping of the Earth Gerrhos Category Former place names Category Scythia nl Gerrhos ... more details
to Oliver Cromwell Cromwell , the council of state, nobility, gentry, soldiers, husbandmen ... husbandmen and improvers, from Adam to Solomon, as well as that of God himself, the great Husbandman ... more details
Infobox scientist name Darrett B. Rutman image replace this image male.svg image size 150px birth date March 4, 1929 birth place nationality United States field Historian work institutions University of Florida alma mater doctoral advisor doctoral students known for prizes Darrett B. Rutman 4 March 1929 11 April 1997 was a noted historian of early America. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Virginia in 1959. He was a distinguished scholar and served on the History faculties of the University of Minnesota, 1959 1968, the University of New Hampshire , 1968 1984, and the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida Gainesville , 1984 1996. He died of an aortic aneurysm on April 11, 1997. http query.nytimes.com gst fullpage.html?res 9802EFDE163FF937A25757C0A961958260 Several of his books were co authored by his wife, Anita H. Rutman. Bibliography American Puritanism faith and practice , Darrett B. Rutman 1970, reprinted 1977 ISBN 0 393 00842 8 The Great Awakening event and exegesis , edited by Darrett B. Rutman 1970 ISBN 0 471 74725 4 Paperback ISBN 0 471 74726 2 Husbandmen of Plymouth farms and villages in the Old Colony, 1620 1692 , Darrett B. Rutman 1967 The morning of America, 1603 1789 , Darrett B. Rutman 1971 ISBN 0 395 04333 6 The Old Dominion essays for Thomas Perkins Abernethy , Rutman, Darrett B. 1964 A Place in Time Middlesex County, Virginia 1650 1750 , by Darrett B. Rutman, Anita H. Rutman 1984 ISBN 0 393 30318 7 A Place in Time Explicatus , by Darrett B. Rutman, Anita H. Rutman 1984 ISBN 0 393 01820 2 Small worlds, large questions explorations in early American social history, 1600 1850 , Darrett B. Rutman with Anita H. Rutman 1994 ISBN 0 8139 1529 5 Paperback ISBN 0 8139 1530 9 Rutman, Darrett B. Winthrop s Boston Portrait of a Puritan Town, 1630 1649 , 1965 ISBN 0 8078 0942 X Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Rutman, Darrett B. ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH March 4, 1929 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1997 P ... more details
, he sent him also last unto them, saying, They will reverence my son. But those husbandmen ... do? he will come and destroy the husbandmen, and will give the vineyard unto others. And have ... around. Mark therefore explicitly states the husbandmen to be the priests and teachers, and perhaps ... ity. Most modern translations use the term tenants , renters, instead of husbandmen. The owner is God ... the parable of the husbandmen to all the people, not just the priests. Unnamed Espionage spies from ... more details
For bishop, see Phocas, Bishop of Sinope Phocas the bishop of Sinope Infobox saint name Saint Phocas birth date death date 303 AD? ref His date of death is sometimes given as 117 AD, and that he was killed during the reign of Trajan . ref feast day September 22 July 23 March 5 venerated in Roman Catholic Church Eastern Orthodox Church image imagesize 250px caption birth place death place titles beatified date beatified place beatified by canonized date canonized place canonized by attributes patronage gardeners sailors hospitality agricultural workers boatmen farm workers farmers fieldhands gardeners husbandmen mariners market gardeners sailors watermen major shrine relics were claimed by Vienne and Antioch suppressed date issues Saint Phocas , sometimes called Phocas the Gardener or Phocas of Sinope , is venerated as a martyr by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches. His life and legend may have been a fusion of three men with the same name Phocas of Antioch , Phocas, Bishop of Sinope Phocas the bishop of Sinope , and Phocas the Gardener. ref http www.highbeam.com doc 1O100 PhocasofSinope.html Phocas of Sinope The Oxford Dictionary of Saints HighBeam Research Bot generated title ref Christian tradition states that he was a gardener who lived at Sinop, Turkey Sinope , on the Black Sea , who used his crops to feed the poor and also aided persecuted Christians. During the persecutions of Diocletian , he provided hospitality to the soldiers who were sent to execute him. The soldiers, not knowing that their host was their intended victim, agreed to his hospitality. Phocas also offered to help them find the person who they sought. As the soldiers slept, Phocas dug his own grave and also prayed fervently. In the morning, when the soldiers awoke, Phocas revealed his identity. The soldiers hesitated and offered to report to their commander that their search had been fruitless. Phocas refused this offer and bared his neck. He was then decapitation decapitated and buried ... more details
Use British English date July 2011 Use dmy dates date July 2011 Infobox UK place country England official name Newchurch civil parish Newchurch latitude 50.66454 longitude 1.20834 population unitary england Isle of Wight map type Isle of Wight lieutenancy england Isle of Wight region South East England constituency westminster Isle of Wight UK Parliament constituency Isle of Wight post town SANDOWN postcode district PO36 postcode area PO dial code 01983 os grid reference SZ560852 Newchurch is a village and civil parish ref http www.statistics.gov.uk geography geographic area listings downloads EnglishParishes&WelshCommunities N&C 2004.xls English Parishes & Welsh Communities N&C 2004 ref on the Isle of Wight . It is located between Sandown and Newport, Isle of Wight Newport in the southeast of the island. Anthony Dillington, owner of the Knighton Gorges Manor in Newchurch wrote to his son Robert in 1574 that, This is the very Garden of England, and we be privileged to work in it as Husbandmen....... File Newchurch All Saints Church & The Pointer Inn geograph.org.uk 121023.jpg left thumb Newchurch All Saints Church & Pointer Inn Newchurch obtained its name from the new church built in 1087 by the Normans Norman monks of Lyra . The Newchurch Parish for many centuries stretched from the north to south coasts of the Island by the early Nineteenth Century the growing resort towns of Ventnor and Ryde were included within its boundaries. The present day parish includes Newchurch Village, Apse Heath , Winford, Isle of Wight Winford , Whiteley Bank , Alverstone , Alverstone Garden Village , Queen s Bower , Princelett and Mersley . Public transport is provided by Wightbus bus route 23, operating between Newport, Isle of Wight Newport and Shanklin . ref name Wightbus route 23 cite web year 2008 url http www.travelinesoutheast.org.uk se XSLT TTB REQUEST?language en&command direct&net set&line 08023&sup A&project y08&contentFilter TIMINGPOINTS&outputFormat 0&itdLPxx displayHeade ... more details
Adam de Tyninghame was a 14th century cleric and, as his name suggests, a probable native of Tyninghame in East Lothian . Adam appears in the records as rector of Falkirk under Holyrood Abbey from 1344, and by 1360 he was the secretary of William Douglas, 1st Earl of Douglas . ref name Dowden 117 Dowden, Bishops of Scotland , p. 117. ref In 1378, he was sent as one of four ambassadors sent to France for the Scottish king. ref name Dowden 117 He was Dean religion Dean of the diocese of Aberdeen briefly dean of Diocese of Dunblane Dunblane in 1361 ref name Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 81 Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae , p. 81. ref from 1362 until 1380, ref name Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 81 the year in which he was elected as Bishop of Aberdeen . ref Dowden, Bishops of Scotland , pp. 116 7 Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae , p. 4. ref In 1382 Bishop Adam was engaged in a struggle with the husbandmen of Fermartyne Formartine , who had not paid their second tithe s, and Adam had to get an order from the Lieutenant of Scotland, Robert III of Scotland John , Earl of Carrick , to enforce payment. ref name Dowden 117 Adam, however, did not enjoy a good relationship with Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan , who was the main warlord of the north and brother of Carrick. ref Keith, Historical Catalogue , p. 112. ref He continued his close relationship with the Douglases, his first patrons, and at different points in the 1380s can be found wintessing documents by Margaret, Countess of Mar , window of the first Earl of Douglas and mother to the second. ref Keith, Historical Catalogue , p. 111. ref Adam died on 18 September 1389. ref Dowden, Bishops of Scotland , pp. 118 Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae , p. 4. ref Notes reflist 2 References John Dowden Dowden, John , The Bishops of Scotland , ed. J. Maitland Thomson, Glasgow, 1912 Keith, Robert, An Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops Down to the Year 1688 , London, 1924 D. E. R. Watt Watt, D.E.R. , Fasti Ecclesiae Scotinanae Medii Aevi ad annum 1638 , 2nd D ... more details
John Alday floruit fl. 1570 , was an English translator of semi philosophical and classical works in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I , and is described by Tanner as a resident in London. The book by which he is chiefly known is an English version of two French pamphlets, published in 1558, and it bears the title Theatrum Mundi, the Theatre or rule of the worlde, wherein may be sene the running race and course of every mans life, as touching miserie and felicity, wherein be contained wonderful examples and learned deuises to the ouerthrowe of vice and exalting of vertue. Whereunto is added a learned and maruellous worke of the excellencie of mankinde. Written in the French and Latin tongues by Peter Boaystuau i.e., Pierre Boaistuau , surnamed Launay , and translated into English by John Alday. London, H. D. for Thomas Hacket, 16mo. The book was dedicated to Sir William Chester , alderman of London, and verses in its praise appear on the back of the title page. It is undated, but, having been licensed towards the end of 1566 Arber s Transcript of the Stationers Register, i.366 , the translation was probably published early in the next year. The work contains several pieces of verse, and on their account Ritson numbered Alday among the English poets of the sixteenth century Bibliographia Poetica, p.  114 . The longest piece is entitled A complaint of the pore husbandmen in meter. A second edition of the work appeared in 1574, printed by H. Bynneman for Thomas Hacket. From his address to the reader there, we gather that Alday claimed to be the first to use the word theatre in an English book, or to introduce into England the simile comparing human life to the stage. A third edition of the work was published in 1581, and there it was stated that John Alday had perused, corrected, and amended the English rendering, the old translation being corrupted. The latter part of the book Of the Excellencie of Mankinde is frequently referred to by Robert Burton scholar Robert Bu ... more details
. The second caste consists of the Husbandmen, who appear to be far more numerous than the others. They devote ... are armourers, while others make the implements that husbandmen and others find useful ... more details
of Jesus 35 of 40. the wicked husbandmen. Jan Luyken etching. Bowyer Bible.gif center 100x100px Wicked Husbandmen Tenants in the Vineyard link Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen style padding left ... of the Tares Parable of the Rich Fool Rich Fool Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen Wicked Husbandmen ... Husbandmen Bibleverse Matthew 21 33 41 TNIV Bibleverse Mark 12 1 9 TNIV Bibleverse Luke 20 9 16 ... 01 7 TNIV Gospel of Thomas Thomas 107 br Gospel of Truth 31 32 12 Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen ... more details
Refimprove date December 2009 Stephen Bachiler c. 1561 1656 was an England English clergyman who was an early proponent of the separation of church and state in United States America . Early life An early graduate of Oxford University Oxford St. John s College, 1586 , he was vicar of Wherwell , Hampshire 1587 1605 when ousted for Religious fanaticism Puritanical leanings under King James I of England James I . Bachiler married Helena Mason, the widow of Revd. Thomas Mason clergyman Thomas Mason of Odiham , Hampshire Mary, the daughter of Helena and Thomas Mason, was married to Richard Dummer , who also became involved in the founding of the Plough Company. ref cite book title The Family of Dummer last Dummer first Michael year June 2005 edition 7th chapter 5 Richard and Early Days in New England publisher location isbn page 24 url accessdate ref Plough Company In 1630 he was a member of the Company of Husbandmen in London and with them, as the Plough Company, obtained a 1,600 mile 4,000  km grant of land in Maine from the Plymouth Council for New England . The colony was called Lygonia after Cecily Lygon, mother of New England Council president Sir Ferdinando Gorges . Bachiler was to be its minister and leader. Although the settlers sailed to America in 1631, the project was abandoned. Lynn, MA Bachiler was 70 years old when he reached Boston in 1632, and gathered his followers to establish the First Church of Lynn then Saugus, Massachusetts Saugus . He incurred the hostility of the Puritan theocracy in Boston, casting the only dissenting vote among ministers against the expulsion of Roger Williams theologian Roger Williams . Despite his age, he was uncommonly energetic, and throughout some two decades pursued settlement and church endeavors, always engaged in controversy and confrontation with Massachusetts Bay Colony Bay Colony leaders. New Hampshire In 1638, Bachiler and others successfully petitioned to begin a new plantation at Winnacunnet, to which he gave ... more details
Was Not Supportive ref Rejection of the cornerstone Gospel Jesus Main Parable of the Wicked Husbandmen ... talk of Jesus as the stone which the builders or husbandmen rejected. bibleverse 1Peter 2 7 discusses ... more details
Hippodamus of Miletos or Hippodamos, Greek 498 BC &mdash 408 BC was an ancient Greeks Greek architect , urban planner , physician , mathematician , meteorologist and philosopher and is considered to be the father of urban planning , the namesake of Hippodamian plan of city layouts grid plan . He was born in Miletos and lived during the 5th century BC, on the spring of the Ancient Greece classical epoch. His father was Euryphon. His plans of Greek cities were characterised by order and regularity in contrast to the more intricacy and confusion common to cities of that period, even Athens . He is seen as the originator of the idea that a town plan might formally embody and clarify a rational social order. Personality He is referred to in the works of Aristotle , Stobaeus , Strabon , Hesychius of Miletus Hesychius , Photius, and Theano. He evidently had a reputation as a lover of attention. According to Aristotle s description in Politics , Some people thought he carried things too far, indeed, with his long hair, expensive ornaments, and the same cheap warm clothing worn winter and summer. Achievements File Piraeus map 1908.jpg thumb 300px Map of Piraeus, showing the grid plan of the city According to Aristotle in Politics Aristotle Politics , Hippodamos was a pioneer of urban planning and he devised an ideal city to be inhabited by 10,000 men ref http classics.mit.edu Aristotle politics.2.two.html Artistotle, politics II VIII ref free male citizens , while the overall population including the correspondent women, children and slaves would reach 50,000 people. He studied the functional problems of cities and linked them to the state administration system. As a result he divided the citizens into three classes soldiers, artisans and husbandmen , with the land also divided into three sacred, public and private . For Pericles he planned the arrangement of the harbour town Peiraeus at Athens in the middle of the fifth century BC. When the Athenians fo ... more details
File Silvanus BritMu023a.jpg thumb Bronze statue of Silvanus, said to be from Nocera Inferiore Nocera in southern Italy. Silvanus Latin language Latin of the woods was a Ancient Rome Roman tutelary deity of woods and fields. As protector of forests sylvestris deus , he especially presided over plantations and delighted in trees growing wild. ref name Tibullus Tibullus II.5.27, 30. ref ref name Lucan Marcus Annaeus Lucanus Lucan . Pharsalia III.402. ref ref name Pliny Pliny the Elder . Naturalis historia XII.2. ref ref Ovid . Metamorphoses I.193. ref He is also described as a god watching over the fields and husbandmen, protecting in particular the boundaries of fields. ref name Epodes Horace . Epodes II.21 22. ref The similarly named Etruscan mythology Etruscan deity Selvans may be a borrowing of Silvanus, ref Robert Schilling, Silvanus, in Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press, 1992, from the French edition of 1981 , p. 146 http books.google.com books?id Uf2 kHAs22sC&pg PA146&dq 22borrowed from the Latin 22 22Etruscan Selvans 22&hl en&ei WgHcTLLtE8fOnAe5npkX&sa X&oi book result&ct result&resnum 1&ved 0CCgQ6AEwAA v onepage&q 22borrowed 20from 20the 20Latin 22 20 22Etruscan 20Selvans 22&f false online , concurring with Dum zil , Archaic Roman Religion , p. 616. ref or not even related in origin. ref Peter F. Dorcey, The Cult of Silvanus A Study in Roman Folk Religion Brill, 1992 , pp. 10 12 http books.google.com books?id 1YzWMQecwH4C&pg PA10&dq 22A popular theory traces Silvanus back to the Etruscan divinity Selvans 22&hl en&ei RhfcTKbpOIrfnQfb1LUW&sa X&oi book result&ct result&resnum 1&ved 0CCUQ6AEwAA v onepage&q 22A 20popular 20theory 20traces 20Silvanus 20back 20to 20the 20Etruscan 20divinity 20Selvans 22&f false online , noting earlier efforts to press an Etruscan language Etruscan etymology on Silvanus. ref Silvanus is described as the divinity protecting the flocks of cattle, warding off wolves, and promoting their fertility. ref name Tibul ... more details
The Bishop of Caithness was the ecclesiastical head of the Diocese of Caithness , one of Scotland s 13 medieval bishoprics. The first referenced bishop of Caithness was Aindr as, Bishop of Caithness Aindr as , a Gaels Gael who appears in sources between 1146 and 1151 as bishop. Aindr as spent much if not all of his career outside his see. Other bishops before Aindr as are possible, but none is documented. King David I of Scotland , is credited with founding many bishoprics, and it is possible that Caithness was one of them. Little documented history exists before the reign of King David. The earliest bishops resided at Halkirk , with a castle at Scrabster . Bishop Gilbert de Moravia moved the episcopal seat to Dornoch in what is now Sutherland then regared as part of Caithness , and the bishopric remained at Dornoch Cathedral for the remainder of its existence. The Bishopric of Caithness links with Rome ceased to exist after the Scottish Reformation , but continued, saving temporary abolition between 1638 and 1661, under the episcopal Church of Scotland until the Revolution of 1688. Episcopacy in the established church in Scotland was permanently abolished. class wikitable align left width 25 Tenure width 35 Incumbent width 40 Notes valign top bgcolor ffffec small See left small Some lists give Angerius Brito this is in fact Bishop Angerius of Catania in Sicily. Catania and Caithness were often written identically. See G. W. S. Barrow , Angerius Brito, Cathensis Episcopus , in Traditio , xxvi, 1970 , p.  351. valign top bgcolor ffffec small 1147 x 1151 1184 Aindr as of Caithness small First known bishop of Caithness famously, Aindr as is named as a source by the writer of de Situ Albanie . valign top bgcolor ffffec small 1184 x 1199 1202 John of Caithness small valign top bgcolor ffffec small 1213 1222 Adam of Melrose small Formerly Abbot of Melrose was burned to death in his kitchen by the husbandmen of Caithness. valign top bgcolor ffffec small 1222 x 1223 124 ... more details
Lygonia was a proprietary province in pre colonial Maine , created through a grant from the Plymouth Council for New England in 1630 to lands then under control of Sir Ferdinando Gorges . The grant was named for his mother, Cicely Lygon Gorges. The original patent has been lost, but from a 1686 abstract of title, it assigned ...unto Bryan Bincks, John Dye, John Smith & others their Associates their heirs & Assigns for Ever, Two Islands in the River Sagadahock Sagedahock , near the South Side thereof about convert 60 mi km from the Sea & also all the Tract containing convert 40 mi km in Length & convert 40 mi km in breadth upon the South side of the River Sagadahock, with all Bayes, Rivers, Ports, Inletts, Creeks, etc. together with all Royalties & Privileges within the Precincts thereof calling the same by the Name of the Province of Ligonia with power to make Laws etc. ref Farnum Papers , p. 128. ref Geographical interpretation of the grant s bounds is that it encompassed some convert 1600 sqmi km2 between Cape Porpoise and today s Kennebec River , ref Maine Bicentennial Atlas , p. 4 and Plate Seven. ref so large that its size may have been unintended, since it took in a large part of Gorges own grant for his Province of Maine . But it was never repudiated, and survived later challenges in English courts. Assignees of the patent were members of the Plough Company of London, set up by the Council for New England to encourage settlement within the northeasterly portion of Gorges domain. The intention was to support Gorges scheme for permanent settlements with a mixed economy of farming and production of forest products for trade to augment the fishing enterprises already established along the Maine seaboard. The would be settlers of the Plough Company were classified by John Winthrop as members of a small religious sect known as Familist s, most of them farmers, and associated as the Company of Husbandmen . They chose as their minister Stephen Bachiler , who although ... more details