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481 - 492 of 953 for "首开股份2026年3月25日盯盘标准"

481 - 492 of 953 for "首开股份2026年3月25日盯盘标准"

  • LLOYD, JOHN (Einion Môn; 1792 - 1834), schoolmaster and poet in Y Gwyliedydd and in Seren Gomer - though, if the elegy can be trusted, he had himself taken a prominent part in the protest against enclosures of commons in Llandwrog and Llanwnda, Caernarfonshire. He wrote verse, not only in Welsh but also in English - in Seren Gomer, 1832, 55, there is a Welsh translation (by Eryron Gwyllt Walia) of a poem by Lloyd (1831) on Spring. He died 3 August 1834, aged
  • LLOYD, JOHN (1480 - 1523), musician Chapel, and was buried at the Savoy Church with the inscription - Johannes Floyd, Virtutis et religionis cultor. obiit 3 April 1523.'
  • LLOYD, OLIVER (1570/1 - 1625), dean of Hereford Born 1570 or 1571, a native of Montgomeryshire, and uncle of David Lloyd, dean of St Asaph. He matriculated 25 January 1588/9, became Fellow of All Souls, Oxford, and graduated B.C.L. 1597, and D.C.L. 1602, and was made advocate of Doctors' Commons 1609. When or where he started his career as a cleric is not clear, but his advance in it was evidently rapid, for in 1615 he was made rector of
  • LLOYD, RICHARD (1595 - 1659), Royalist divine and schoolmaster 5th son of Dafydd Llwyd o'r Henblas; his mother, daughter of Richard Owen Theodor of Penmynydd (sheriff of Anglesey in 1565 and 1573), and distantly related to the royal house, is also credited with some skill in poetry. Richard matriculated from Oriel College, Oxford (3 April 1612), and was presented to the rectory of Sonning and the vicarage of Tilehurst (Berks.), taking his B.D. in 1628 (7 May
  • LLOYD, RICHARD (1834 - 1917), pastor of the Campbellite Church of the Disciples of Christ, Criccieth buried in the Criccieth public cemetery on 3 March.
  • LLOYD, RICHARD (1771 - 1834), Calvinistic Methodist minister society at Gwalchmai in 1789, and began to exhort in 1794. He married in 1800, and went to keep a draper's shop at Beaumaris. Like his friend and fellow-islander John Elias, he was ordained at Bala in 1811. He died 25 May 1834, aged 63, and was buried at Llanfaes - John Elias was buried in the next grave. Lloyd is described as a witty and companionable man, a bit of a poet, and a good preacher.
  • LLOYD, SIMON (1756 - 1836), Methodist cleric printed in Cylchgrawn Cymdeithas Hanes y Methodistiaid Calfinaidd, x, 30-3). Sarah Bowen was of the family of Tyddyn, Llanidloes, well-known in the annals of Montgomeryshire Methodism - see Richard Bennett in Cylchgrawn Cymdeithas Hanes y Methodistiaid Calfinaidd, viii, 57-62, and frequent references in his Meth. Trefaldwyn Uchaf, and consult the index to John Wesley's Journals, ed. Curnock. Sarah Bowen
  • LLOYD, THOMAS (1673? - 1734), cleric and lexicologist son of Thomas Lloyd, attorney at law at Wrexham, of the family of Plas Madog, Llanfair Talhaearn, Denbighshire; the mother was a Myddelton. On 25 February 1688/9, 'aged 15,' he matriculated from Jesus College, Oxford (B.A. 1692, M.A. 1695); he took orders, served as curate in the Wrexham district, was tutor at Chirk castle, and became chaplain to Mary Myddelton of Croesnewydd, who bequeathed Plas
  • LLOYD, THOMAS (1765 - 1789), Unitarian minister and Academy tutor . He was a Unitarian of the school of Priestley. He died at the age of 24, and was buried in Llanwenog churchyard, 25 April 1789.
  • LLUELYN, MARTIN (1616 - 1682), poet and physician son of Martin Lluelyn of London; born 12 December 1616. His Welsh origin seems to be attested by his name. There is, besides, the description of his son George by Burney (History of Music, 1789, 3, 495 n.) as ' a Jacobitical, musical, and Welsh parson.' He was educated at Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford, where he graduated (B.A. 1640 and M.A. 1643). In the Civil War he joined the
  • LLWYD, HUMPHREY (c. 1527 - 1568), antiquary and map-maker letter in the first edition of his atlas Theatrum Orbis Terrarum (1570). The rest were all sent to Ortelius with a covering letter dated 3 August 1568. In this letter (NLW MS 13187E) Llwyd details the works and explains that his imminent death has forced him to send them in an unfinished state. Of the three works only one was textual; Commentarioli Britannicae descriptionis fragmentum, a short
  • LLYWELYN ap MOEL Y PANTRI (d. 1440) Llanwnnog, poet , cxxxiii); it is also suggested that his father ('Moel y Pantri') was the real author of two other poems attributed to Llywelyn in some MSS. (Iolo Goch ac Eraill, 1925 ed., cxxix). No details are known concerning the life of his son OWAIN, but a large number of his poems remain in manuscript, see Jones and Lewis, Mynegai; Bodewryd MS 1D; Brogyntyn MSS. 1, 2, 6; Cwrtmawr MS 312B; Gwysaney MS. 25; NLW MS