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1618 play by Barten Holyday
Technogamia, or the Marriages of the Arts is a Jacobean era stage play, an allegory written by Barten Holyday that was first performed and published in
Technogamia
Type of divination
et Incantationibus ac Venificiis (1583: xii.); and Barten Holyday's Technogamia, or the Marriage of the Arts (1618: II. iii. ll. 89-146 (G2v)). Richard
Coscinomancy
English clergyman, author and poet
1615; he was appointed Archdeacon of Oxford by King Charles I in 1626. Technogamia was his only play. In 1618, the year it was produced, Holyday served
Barten_Holyday
Loyal Subject Peter Heylin – Theomachia (in Latin) Barten Holyday – Technogamia Ben Jonson – masques Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue For the Honour of
1618_in_literature
Nabbes's Microcosmus, Randolph's The Muses' Looking Glass, Barten Holyday's Technogamia, and William Strode's The Floating Island, among others. In the view
Pathomachia
Holyday for Nathaniel Butter. (He also printed Holyday's only play, Technogamia, for John Parker.) For Edward Blount, Stansby printed an English translation
William_Stansby
James I later in the year. August 26 – Barten Holyday's allegorical play Technogamia, originally produced at Christ Church, Oxford in 1618, is staged before
1621_in_literature
English publisher
Middleton's The Phoenix (also 1630); the second quarto of Barten Holyday's Technogamia (also 1630); the first quarto of Shackerley Marmion's A Fine Companion
Richard_Meighen
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Boy/Male
Arabic, Indian, Muslim, Punjabi, Sikh, Sindhi
One who Lives in Splendour; Glitter
Boy/Male
Australian, Bengali, Indian, Indonesian, Russian
Gift from God
Girl/Female
Arabic
Greatest. A- the Supreme Being in the Muslim faith.
Girl/Female
Australian, Danish, German, Swedish
Sweetness of Face; Favour; Grace; Transparent Like Water
Male
Hungarian
Pet form of Hungarian Ferenc, FERI means "French."
Surname or Lastname
English and (especially) Scottish (of Norman origin), and French
English and (especially) Scottish (of Norman origin), and French : nickname from Anglo-Norman French graund, graunt ‘tall’, ‘large’ (Old French grand, grant, from Latin grandis), given either to a person of remarkable size, or else in a relative way to distinguish two bearers of the same personal name, often representatives of different generations within the same family.English and Scottish : from a medieval personal name, probably a survival into Middle English of the Old English byname Granta (see Grantham).Probably a respelling of German Grandt or Grand.The U.S. president General Ulysses S. Grant (1822–85), born in OH, was the descendant of a Puritan called Matthew Grant, who landed in Massachusetts with his wife, Priscilla, in 1630. This family of Grants continued in New England until Captain Noah Grant, having served throughout the Revolution, emigrated to PA in 1790 and later to OH.
Surname or Lastname
English, German, and Swiss German
English, German, and Swiss German : from an agent derivative of Middle English, Middle High German rennen ‘to run’, hence an occupational name for a messenger, normally a mounted and armed military servant.English, German, and Swiss German : variant of Rayner 1, Reiner.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Compensation, Consoling
Girl/Female
Arabic, Indian
Cute; Beautiful; Faith; Innocent
Boy/Male
Muslim
The last
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