Sunday, June 5, 2011

Alan Watson

Alan Watson

Alan Watson

Professor W.A.J. 'Alan' Watson (b. 1933) is a Scottish law and legal history expert, and is regarded as one of the world's foremost authorities on Roman law, comparative law, legal history, and law and religion. He is credited for coining the term "legal transplants". Watson began his academic career at Oxford University, before taking the Douglas Chair in Civil Law at the School of Law of his alma mater, the University of Glasgow. He now serves as Distinguished Research Professor and holds the Ernest P. Rogers Chair at the University of Georgia School of Law. He is also Visiting Professor at the Edinburgh University School of Law, where he held the Chair in Civil Law from 1968 until 1981. Watson regularly serves as a distinguished lecturer at leading universities in the United States and such countries as Italy, Holland, Germany, France, Poland, South Africa, Israel and Serbia. He has attended several sessions regarding the development of a common law for the EU, including one in Maastricht in 2000, and, at the request of the U.S. Agency for International Development, served as a member of the two-person U.S. team helping to revise the draft civil code for the new Republic of Armenia. He is an honorary member of the Speculative Society and serves as North American secretary of the Stair Society. He is an editorial board member of a number of learned journals. In 2005, the University of Belgrade's Law School established the Alan Watson Foundation in honour of his worldwide scholarship. Watson was honored by his international colleagues in 2000-01 when two collections of essays were presented in his honor: an American volume, Lex et Romanitas: Essays for Alan Watson, and the European volume, Critical Studies in Ancient Law, Comparative Law and Legal History.



[Adventures Of A Despatch Rider]

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Aristo Of Pella

Aristo Of Pella

Aristo of Pella, Jordan (Gr. ) (mid 2nd century) was a hellenized Jewish Christian writer, who like Hegesippus represents a school of thought more liberal than that of the Pharisaic and Essene Ebionites. Aristo is cited by Eusebius for a decree of Hadrian respecting the Jews, but he is best known as the writer of a Dialogue between an Alexandrian Jew named Papiscus, and Jason (who represents the author) on the witness of prophecy to Jesus Christ, which was approvingly defended by Origen against the reproaches of Celsus (Contra Celsum, iv.52). His writings were perhaps used by Justin Martyr in his own Dialogue with Trypho, and probably also by Tertullian and Cyprian; only quotations have survived of his writings.



[Aristo Of Pella]


Tags: benjamin rosenbaum  g henty  charlotte lennox  young allison  jack williamson  frank harris  frederic cozzens  albert henri de sallengre  ernest hervilly  

Friday, June 3, 2011

Annie Payson Call

Annie Payson Call

Annie Payson Call (1853-1940) was a Waltham author. She wrote several books and published articles in the The Ladies' Home Journal. Many articles are reprinted in her book "Nerves and Common Sense". The common theme of her work is mental health.


F Call's Books:


[Acanthus And Wild Grape | In A Belgian Garden]

Brian Pearce

Brian Pearce

Brian Pearce

Brian Leonard Pearce (19152008) was a British Marxist politician, historian, and translator.


J Pearce's Books:


[Drolls From Shadowland]


Tags: duncan campbell scott  robert silverberg  anne douglas sedgwick  camille lemonnier  erckmann chatrian  rog phillips  broughton brandenburg  benjamin perley poore  wallace mcmullin  

Baron Dholbach

Baron Dholbach

Paul-Henri Thiry, Baron d'Holbach (8 December 1723 21 January 1789) was a French-German author, philosopher, encyclopedist and a prominent figure in the French Enlightenment. He was born Paul Heinrich Dietrich in Edesheim, near Landau in the Rhenish Palatinate, but lived and worked mainly in Paris, where he kept a salon. He is best known for his atheism, and for his voluminous writings against religion, the most famous of them being the System of Nature (1770).



[Letters To Eugenia]


Tags: enrico castelnuovo  frank riley  william carleton  george barr mccutcheon  fyodor dostoevsky  dutton cook  francis lynde  charles the first  

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Gelett Burgess

Gelett Burgess

Gelett Burgess

Frank Gelett Burgess (January 30, 1866 - September 18, 1951) was an artist, art critic, poet, author, and humorist. An important figure in the San Francisco Bay Area literary renaissance of the 1890s, particularly through his iconoclastic little magazine, The Lark, he is best known as a writer of nonsense verse.



[More Goops And How Not To Be Them | The Goop Directory | The Purple Cow | The Rubaiyat Of Omar Cayenne | All Fair | Are You A Bromide]


Tags: elliot donnell  achmed abdullah  caroline lamb  charles heavysege  georg buchner  heinrich von kleist  charles colby  charles king  captain kincaid  

Corra May Harris

Corra May Harris

Corra Mae Harris (1869 - 1935), an American writer, was born Corra Mae White in Elbert County, Georgia. Her formal education was limited to teacher training at nearby female academies, though she never graduated from any of the schools she attended. In 1887 she married Methodist minister and educator Lundy Howard Harris (1858-1910). They had one child survive to adulthood, a daughter she named Faith (1887-1919).



[A Circuit Rider Wife | The Co Citizens | The Jessica Letters An Editor Romance]