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His principal works (for complete list see Echard) are:
Echard wrote that the title "Gazetteer's" was suggested to him by a "very eminent person" whose name he chose not to disclose.
Robertus Echard, died.
But Jacques Echard shows that no man of that name belonged to either order in the twelfth or thirteenth century.
Quetif and Echard, Script.
Laurence Echard - The History of England vol.
But Echard says that he had searched in vain for these letters, and it is possible that Grierson left no writings.
For more than twenty years Echard resided in Lincolnshire, chiefly at Louth, and wrote a number of works.
World Federation of Democratic Youth (Christian Echard, general secretary)
Laurence Echard, translator:
In 1715 Laurence Echard's Classical Geographical Dictionary was published.
Wood gloats over his miseries, Echard and Zachary Grey load his memory with reproaches.
Jacques Quétif-Jacques Echard, Script.
Scriptores Ordinis Praedicatorum, by Quetif and Echard, Lut.
In or about 1722 Echard was presented by George I to the livings of Rendlesham and Sudborne in Suffolk.
A near contemporary and historian, Laurence Echard, in his History of England speaks of Keble as being then a man of "little practical experience".
The SF Escaut was commanded by General Echard, then General Béjard from May 1940.
Shogaku Zenshin Stephen Echard Musgrave, who retired from the Zen institute of San Diego due to ill health.
Haliday introduced two historians, Laurence Echard and Edmund Calamy, in a London social meeting with Richard Ellys.
"By his particular temper and management," said Laurence Echard in his History of England, "he weathered the late great storm with more success than many other great men."
Brandon Wynn, Ty Echard, Kris Done and Jeff Treleaven earned All-America honors.
In 1718 he wrote a vindication of his grandfather and several other persons against certain reflections cast upon them by Laurence Echard in his History of England.
Capitaine Raoul Cesar Robert Pierre Echard was a World War I flying ace credited with seven aerial victories.
The authorship has been erroneously ascribed by Quétif and Echard, in their 'Scriptores Ordinis Prædicatorum,' to Father Ambrose Burgis.
QUÉTIF AND ECHARD, SS.