• Thumbnail for Edward Lhuyd
    Edward Lhuyd FRS (1660 – 30 June 1709), also known as Edward Lhwyd and by other spellings, was a Welsh naturalist, botanist, herbalist, alchemist, scientist...
    18 KB (1,721 words) - 04:32, 17 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Turned A
    use of Peano's notation by Bertrand Russell. Turned a presented in Edward Lhuyd's Archaeologia Britannica, 1707. Turned a in William Pryce's Archaeologia...
    6 KB (578 words) - 17:57, 9 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Megalosaurus
    teeth. It was generally a robust and heavily muscled animal. In 1699, Edward Lhuyd described what he believed to have been a fish tooth (called Plectronites)...
    99 KB (11,524 words) - 16:09, 28 June 2024
  • Old Welsh until the 18th century when it was identified as Cornish by Edward Lhuyd. Some Brittonic glosses in the 9th-century colloquy De raris fabulis...
    129 KB (13,345 words) - 02:43, 17 July 2024
  • the native peoples of the Atlantic fringe as Celts by Edward Lhuyd in the 18th century. Lhuyd and others (notably the 17th century Breton chronologist...
    62 KB (6,557 words) - 11:20, 9 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Celtic languages
    The term "Celtic" was first used to describe this language group by Edward Lhuyd in 1707, following Paul-Yves Pezron, who made the explicit link between...
    66 KB (5,735 words) - 00:58, 9 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Red Book of Hergest
    suggests that Edward Lhuyd then held the manuscript on loan, but that the college was able to retrieve it only 13 years later, after Lhuyd's death. The book...
    11 KB (1,192 words) - 23:09, 7 January 2024
  • Maryland State Senate 1878 and 1892 Edward Henry Lloyd (1825–1889), Australian politician from New South Wales Edward Lhuyd (1660–1709), Welsh naturalist,...
    2 KB (270 words) - 21:32, 16 November 2019
  • Thumbnail for Bangor-on-Dee
    Dunawd is believed to have been built. By the late 1690s, the historian Edward Lhuyd recorded that the village still had only 26 houses, but by the end of...
    8 KB (774 words) - 01:13, 25 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Maen Achwyfan
    coined by Pennant to suit his derivation of the name"; he noted that Edward Lhuyd referred to the stone as "Maen y Chwyvan", and that he recorded a 1388...
    9 KB (1,088 words) - 22:46, 8 July 2024