Extractions: LYTTELTON, G. L.LYTTON, IST BARON pleasant promenade and drive along the shore, and other appointments of a seaside resort, but it is less wholly devoted to holiday visitors than Blackpool, which lies 8 m. N.W. A Benedictine cell was founded here at the close of the I2th century by the lord of the manor, Richard Fitz-Roger. His son THOMAS (1744-1779), who succeeded as 2nd baron, played some part in the political life of his time, but his loose and prodigal habits were notorious, and he is known, in distinction to his father " the good lord," as the wicked Lord Lyttelton. He left no lawful issue, and the barony became extinct; but it was revived in 1794 in the person of his uncle WILLIAM HENRY, ist baron of the new creation (1724-1808), who was governor of S. Carolina and later of Jamaica, and ambassador to Portugal. The new barony went after him to his two sons. The 3rd baron (1782-1837) was succeeded by his son GEORGE WILLIAM LYTTELTON, 4th baron (1817-1876), who was a fine scholar, and brother-in-law of W. E. Gladstone, having married Miss Mary Glynne. He did important work in educational and poor law reform. He had eight sons, of whom the eldest, CHARLES GEORGE (b. 1842), became 5th baron, and in 1 Sir Thomas (or Thomas de) Littleton, the jurist, had three sons, William, Richard and Thomas. From the first, William, was
Parrish Author Files 10, Correspondence with George Routledge and Sons. 18, Lytton, Edward RobertBulwerLytton, 1st Earl of, 1831-1891 Miscellaneous Correspondence. http://libweb.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/aids/parrish/parrish2.html
Extractions: Box/Folder Ainsworth, William Francis, 1807-1896 Miscellaneous Correspondence Ainsworth, William Harrison, 1805-1882 Miscellaneous Correspondence, Undated and 1821-1849 Miscellaneous Correspondence, 1850-1881 Correspondence with Richard Bentley Letters to Samuel Cottam Letters addressed to Ainsworth (John Forster, Daniel Maclise, Charles Kean, Felicia Hemans) Letters to Charles Kent, Undated and 1850-1860 Miscellaneous Manuscript Material Miscellaneous Documents Manuscript of Beatrice Tyldesley, or The Lancashire Plot of 1694, an Historical Tale Manuscript of Beatrice Tyldesley Manuscript of Beatrice Tyldesley Manuscript of Beatrice Tyldesley (4), Additional Leaves Manuscript of Beau Nash Ainsworth, William Harrison, 1805-1882 Manuscript of Chetwynd Calverley Manuscript of Crichton Manuscript of The Fall of Somerset Galley Proof of St. James's Letters to Charles Kent, 1861-1879 Anderson, Wellwood Lines suggested on reading Mr. J. M. Barrie's first book entitled Better Dead Barham, Richard Harris, 1788-1845 Miscellaneous Correspondence Barnum, Phineas Taylor, 1810-1891
Pleasanton Public Library /All Items Baron 1803 1873 1 Lytton Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron 1803 1873 1 Lytton Edward GeorgeEarle Lytton Bulwer Lytton 1st Baron 1803 1873 see Lytton Edward http://millennium.ci.pleasanton.ca.us:90/kids/1899,1901/search/alytton edward bu
Sir Edward G. D. Bulwer-Lytton Sir Edward G. D. BulwerLytton A Brief Biography Philip V. Allingham, Contributing Editor, Victorian Web; Faculty of Education, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, Ontario http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/bulwer/bio.html
Extractions: ir Edward G. D. Bulwer-Lytton, the youngest of the three sons In 1820, at his mother's instigation, the London firm of J. Hatchard and Son published the Byronic Ismael: An Oriental Tale, with Other Poems , for which, even though sales were poor, young Edward received acknowledgement from Sir Walter Scott. The following year, Edward honed his mathematics skills under the tutelage of an Oxford scholar named Thomson, and in 1822 entered Trinity College, Cambridge, during the Easter term, transferring to Trinity Hall as a fellow-commoner in order to be excused from attending lectures. Through the Union Debating Society he became acquainted with the university's leading undergraduates, including the future historian Thomas Babington Macaulay , Alexander Cockburn (later, a chief justice), W. M. Praed, Charles Villiers, F. D. Maurice, Charles Buller, and Benjamin Hall Kennedy, who years later would piece together Bulwer's novel from his extant notes. While still at Cambridge, still working in the Byronic mode, he published Delmour; or, A Tale of a Sylphid, and Other Poems
Extractions: ed-, 1888) and F. Blass, Die Attische Beredsamkeit (2nd ed., 1887 1898); W. L. Devries, Ethopoiia. A rhetorical study of the types of character in the orations of Lysias (Baltimore, 1892). (R. C. J.; X.) See Arrian, Anab. v. 13, vi. 28; Justin xv. 3, 4, xvii. I; Quintus Curtius V. 3, x. 30; Diod. Sic. xviii. 3; Polybius v. 67; Plutarch, Dernetrius, 31. 52, Pyrrhus, 12; Appian, Syriaca, 62; Thirlwall, History of Greece, vol. viii. (1847); J. P. Mahaffy, Story of Alexanders Empire; Droysen, Hellenismus (2nd ed., 1877); A. Holm, Griechische Geschichte, vol. iv. (1894); B. Niese, Gesch. d. griech. u. snaked. Staaten, vols. i. and ii. (1893, 1899); J. Beloch, Griech. Gesch. vol. iii. (1904); Hunerwadel, Forschungen zur Gesch. des König3 Lysimachus (1900); Possenti, Ii Re Lisimaco di Tracia (1901); Ghione, Note sul regno di Lisimaco (Atti d. real. Accad. di Torino, xxxix.); and MACEDONIAN EMPIRE. (E. R. B.) LYSIPPUS, Greek sculptor, was head of the school of Argos and Sicyon in the time of Philip and Alexander of Macedon. His works are said to have numbered I 50o, some of them colossal. Some accounts make him the continuer of the school of Polyclitus; some represent him as self-taught. The matter in which he especially innovated was the proportions of the male As head of the great athletic school of Peloponnese Lysippus naturally sculptured many athletes; a figure by him of a man scraping himself with a strigil was a great favourite of the Romans in the time of Tiberius (Pliny, N.H. 34, 61); and this has been usually regarded as the original copied in the Apoxyomenus of the Vatican (GREEK ART, Plate VI. fig. 79). If so, the copyist has modernized his copy, for some features of the Apoxyomenus belong to the Hellenistic age. With more certainty we may see a copy of an athlete by Lysippus in the statue of Agias found at Delphi (GREEK ART, Plate V. fig. 74), which is proved by inscriptions to be a replica in marble of a bronze statue set up by Lysippus in Thessaly. And when the Agias and the Apoxyomenus are set side by side their differences are so striking that it is difficult to attribute them to the same author, though they may belong to the same school. (P. G.)
§occ}Ù 2 ?Edward Robert BulwerLytton Victor AlexanderGeorge Robert Bulwer-Lytton( ·? http://www.cnet-ta.ne.jp/p/pddlib/japanese/ri.htm