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         Conon Of Samos:     more detail
  1. 280s Bc Births: 280 Bc Births, 285 Bc Births, 286 Bc Births, 287 Bc Births, Archimedes, Chrysippus, Antiochus Ii Theos, Conon of Samos, Li Si
  2. People From Samos Prefecture: Ancient Samians, Pythagoras, Epicurus, Aristarchus of Samos, Conon of Samos, Aesop, Melissus of Samos
  3. Ancient Samos: Ancient Samians, Samian Colonies, Pythagoras, Epicurus, Aristarchus of Samos, Samothrace, Conon of Samos, Perinthus, Aesop
  4. 3rd-Century Bc Writers: Archimedes, Epicurus, Aristarchus of Samos, Dicaearchus, Theophrastus, Conon of Samos, Philochorus, Menander
  5. Ancient Samians: Pythagoras, Epicurus, Aristarchus of Samos, Conon of Samos, Aesop, Melissus of Samos, Duris of Samos, Telesarchus of Samos
  6. 220 Bc: 220 Bc Births, 220 Bc Deaths, Conon of Samos, Philo of Byzantium, Pacuvius, Attalus Ii Philadelphus, Molon, Aristarchus of Samothrace
  7. Conon of Samos: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001

21. The Queen's Hair: Tale Of An Odd Constellation Called Coma Berenices
But it was conon of samos, a court astronomer and mathematician, who eventually convincedthe disconsolate queen that the gods had taken the locks and put them
http://www.space.com/spacewatch/coma_berenices_020419.html
SEARCH: Spacewatch: Backyard Astronomy
advertisement
The Queen's Hair: Tale of an Odd Constellation
By Joe Rao

Special to SPACE.com
posted: 07:00 am ET
19 April 2002
Nearly overhead at around midnight, local daylight time, is the constellation that owes its name to a theft: Coma Berenices or Berenice’s Hair. Eratosthenes in the 3rd century BC was among the first to make note of this faint group of stars. It is actually a large, loose galactic star cluster some 250 light years away that appears as a faint shimmering patch of light on clear moonless nights. As a cluster, Coma Berenices is by far at its best in a pair of good binoculars. If, on the other hand, you attempt observation of it with a high-powered telescope the impression of a cluster will become totally lost because of the telescope’s narrower field of view. SPACEWATCH FRIDAY Visit SPACE.com each Friday to explore a new backyard astronomy feature. >>Go to Spacewatch Friday archive page
Images
An illustration of the Queen's Hair, Coma Berenices.
* Graphic made with Starry Night Software Coma Berenices is actually a galactic cluster of stars well beyond our own Milky Way Galaxy. This map will help you locate the loose grouping of stars.

22. Articles
It was the happy invention of this constellation by conon of samos (the royal astrologer)that consoled the royal pair after the theft of the tresses from the
http://www.shamanicastrology.com/articles16.htm
Home Email Us Events Books ... Logo Shop Articles Table of Contents Celebrating the Equinoxes
By Carolyn Brent
So Below experience of this As Above bi-annual event, giving us another potent clue about the importance of this seasonal timing. This understanding may inspire each of us to tune in and discover what significance the equinox timings represent for us individually and collectively. September Equinox Details
It is fascinating to note that the Zero Libra point, marking the September Equinox, is currently aligned with the North Galactic Pole. The North Galactic Pole lies 90 degrees north of the Galactic Plane in the constellation of Coma Berenices. This particular near exact alignment only happens for 144 years, during a 26,000 year cycle as the equinox and solstice points move one degree every 72 years. The exact alignment is happening now. One interpretation of the constellation Coma Berenices is that it represents long beautiful hair. Anne Wright's website on Fixed Stars gives this mythic description. This is

23. Berenice II Of Egypt - Wikipedia
The hair having by some unknown means disappeared, conon of samos, explained thephenomenon in courtly phrase, by saying that it had been carried to the
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berenice_II_of_Egypt
Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk
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Berenice II of Egypt
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Berenice , was the daughter of Magas, king of Cyrene , and the wife of Ptolemy III Euergetes I During her husband's absence on an expedition to Syria , she dedicated her hair to Venus for his safe return, and placed it in the temple of the goddess at Zephyrium . The hair having by some unknown means disappeared, Conon of Samos , explained the phenomenon in courtly phrase, by saying that it had been carried to the heavens and placed among the stars. The name Coma Berenices or Berenice's hair , applied to a constellation , commemorates this incident.

24. List Of Astronomical Topics - Wikipedia
Coalsack Cobalt Color Colour Comet Common Era Compton Gamma rayObservatory Cone nebula conon of samos Constellation Copenhagen
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_astronomical_topics
Main Page Recent changes Edit this page Older versions Special pages Set my user preferences My watchlist Recently updated pages Upload image files Image list Registered users Site statistics Random article Orphaned articles Orphaned images Popular articles Most wanted articles Short articles Long articles Newly created articles Interlanguage links All pages by title Blocked IP addresses Maintenance page External book sources Printable version Talk
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List of astronomical topics
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. This page aims to list articles on Wikipedia that are related to Astronomy Astrophysics and Cosmology . This is so that those interested in the subject can monitor changes to the pages by clicking on Related changes in the sidebar. The list is not necessarily complete or up to date - if you see an article that should be here but isn't (or one that shouldn't be here but is), please do update the page accordingly. Two astronomy related WikiProjects are being developed, please visit WikiProject Astronomical Objects and WikiProject Constellations
Numbers
1 Ceres 2 Pallas 3 Juno 4 Vesta ... 7066 Nessus
A
A New Theory of Magnetic Storms Aaronson, Marc

25. Archimedes Of Syracuse: Introduction
the great Library of Alexandria, where Euclid had worked, and he made friendshipswith other philosophermathematicians, most notably conon of samos with whom
http://cerebro.cs.xu.edu/math/math147/02f/archimedes/archintro.html
Archimedes of Syracuse
Introduction: the greatest of Greek mathematicians
In the third century BCE, Rome was involved in a series of military conflicts (the Punic Wars) with the Greek city-state of Carthage , situated across the Mediterranean Sea on the African coast . Caught in the middle of these conflicts was Syracuse, another city-state on the coast of Sicily, which was claimed by both sides. Initially allied with Carthage against Rome at the outset of the First Punic War in 263 BCE, Syracuse soon switched allegiance. The King of Syracuse, Hiero II , managed to keep war at bay by honoring this treaty with Rome, but the situation became precarious in the later years of the century as the Carthaginian general Hannibal was gaining the upper hand in Spain and Italy against poorly managed Roman armies. Archimedes (287 - 212 BCE), son of Phidias, an astronomer, was thought to have been a kinsman of Hiero. In his youth, Archimedes ventured to Alexandria in Egypt to avail himself of the best education to be found in the Greek world. There he would have been able to study the texts at the great Library of Alexandria, where Euclid had worked, and he made friendships with other philosopher-mathematicians, most notably Conon of Samos with whom he corresponded for many years. Archimedes eventually returned to Syracuse, where he earned fame as an "engineering consultant" to the king, inventing many clever devices for the military defense of the city: catapults, grappling hooks, and improvements to the architecture of the city walls.

26. Virtual Encyclopedia Of Mathematics
edward codazzi delfino cole frank nelson collingwood edward foyle collins john condorcetmarie jean antoine nicolas de caritat conon of samos coolidge julian
http://www.lacim.uqam.ca/~plouffe/Simon/supermath.html
Super-Index of Biographies of Mathematicians
abel niels henrik abraham bar hiyya ha-nasi abraham max abu kamil shuja ibn aslam ibn muhammad ... zygmund antoni
This index was automatically generated using a new tagging program written by Simon Plouffe at LaCIM

27. Archimedes: His Influence.
his works in the form of correspondence with the principal mathematicians of histime, including the Alexandrian scholars conon of samos and Eratosthenes of
http://octopus.phy.bg.ac.yu/web_projects/giants/archimedes.html
Archimedes
Click here for full size picture
Introduction
Archimedes, the most famous ancient Greek mathematician and inventor, was born c. 290-280 BC in Syracuse, the principal city-state in Sicily. He probably spent some time in Egypt early in his career, but he resided for most of his life in Syracuse, where he was on intimate terms with its king, Hieron II. Archimedes published his works in the form of correspondence with the principal mathematicians of his time, including the Alexandrian scholars Conon of Samos and Eratosthenes of Cyrene. He played an important role in the defense of Syracuse against the siege laid by the Romans in 213 BC by constructing war machines so effective that they long delayed the capture of the city. But Syracuse was eventually captured by the Roman general Marcus Claudius Marcellus in the autumn of 212 or spring of 211 BC, and Archimedes was killed in the sack of the city. Far more details survive about the life of Archimedes than about any other ancient scientist, but they are largely anecdotal, reflecting the impression that his mechanical genius made on the popular imagination. Thus, he is credited with inventing the Archimedes screw, a device for raising water, and he is supposed to have made two "spheres" that Marcellus took back to Romeone a star globe and the other a device (the details of which are uncertain) for mechanically representing the motions of the Sun, Moon, and planets. The story that he determined the proportion of gold and silver in a wreath made for Hieron by weighing it in water is probably true, but the version that has him leaping from the bath in which he supposedly got the idea and running naked through the streets shouting "Heur

28. History Of Astronomy: What's New At This Site On April 12, 2001
Christoph Kolumbus (14511506) Biography and references (Encycl. Brit.).conon of samos (c. 280 BC - c. 220 BC) Short biography (Encycl.
http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/new/new010412.html
History of Astronomy What's new
History of Astronomy:
What's new at this site on April 12, 2001
Several URLs have been updated.
Welcome / About
History of astronomy

29. History Of Astronomy: What's New At This Site On January 6, 2000
1612) Very short biography. conon of samos (c. 280 BC c. 220 BC)Very short biography. Copernicus, Nicolaus (1473-1543) Very short
http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/new/new000106.html
History of Astronomy What's new
History of Astronomy:
What's new at this site on January 6, 2000
Fifth anniversary
Astronomiae Historia / History of Astronomy started 5 years ago, on January 16, 1995. Some URLs have been updated.
Welcome / About
History of astronomy

30. Coma Berenices
It was the astronomer conon of samos who came to their rescue proclaiming thatAphrodite had accepted the gift of Berenice's hair, which now shown brightly
http://www.dibonsmith.com/com_con.htm
Coma Berenices
Transit Date of principal star:
9 April The constellation Coma Berenices refers to a classical story concerning the hair of Berenice, the wife of Ptolemy III of Egypt. While the story is an old one, the constellation is relatively new, being introduced by Tycho Brahe (1546-1601).
According to the story, Ptolemy had waged a long war on the Assyrians, since it was they who had killed his sister. As Ptolemy returned successfully from the war, his wife Berenice had her beautiful tresses ceremoniously clipped and given to Aphrodite, laid out on the temple altar. As the evening's festivities continued, the shorn hair was discovered to be missing. The priests might be sacrificed, if the queen's hair couldn't be found. It was the astronomer Conon of Samos who came to their rescue - proclaiming that Aphrodite had accepted the gift of Berenice's hair, which now shown brightly in the heavens next to Leo.
The stars that form the constellation really aren't that remarkable to look at, only a handful of fourth-magnitude stars, including three Bayer stars . Yet there are several fine binaries, eight Messier objects and the Coma Star cluster, not included in Messier's list.

31. Www.perkins-observatory.org/2001.columns/4-29-2001
queen. conon of samos, an astronomer and mathematician who who workedin Alexandria, came up with the lifesaving solution. He pointed
http://www.perkins-observatory.org/2001.columns/4-29-2001
Astronomy column for 4/29/2001 Bernice's Hair The bright star Arcturus in the constellation Bootes is rising in the east right now, a sure sign that spring is finally here and that summer can't be far behind. Above Arcturus is one of the strangest sights in the sky a large fuzzy patch that resolves into a dozen or so stars for the sharp-eyed observer. The simplest pair of binoculars will reveal even more stars. The constellation associated with the fuzzy patch, called Coma Berenices, has a long and checkered history. Few fuzzy patches get their own names, let alone their own constellations. Coma Berenices, or Berenice's Hair, did, but it took a long time to get there. Also, virtually all the constellations are named after great heroes, animal and human, from ancient mythology. Coma is the only constellation named after a real, historical person. For the longest time, Berenice's Hair wasn't considered a constellation at all. The ancient Greeks hooked the fuzzy patch up with nearby Leo, the Lion, picturing it as a puff of fur at the end of the lion's tail. By 150 AD, Ptolemy, the greatest of the Greek astronomers, refers to the stars as "a nebulous mass, called the lock,", i.e., of hair. Even earlier, around 200 BCE, the Greek scientist and writer Eristosthenes identified the puff of stars as Berenice's Hair in his famous work on constellation science and mythology called The Catasterisms. Both astronomers worked in Alexandria, the great seat of ancient scholarship at the mouth of the Nile River in northern Egypt. The Berenice in question must surely be Queen Berenice II of Egypt, who lived during the third century BCE, just before Eristosthenes wrote his book. By the first century AD, the designation was set forever by the Roman poet Hyginus in his Poetic Astronomy, even though he still considered the star patch as part of Leo. It took another 1500 years for the stellar grouping to become a constellation in its own right. In 1551, the Dutch star mapper Gerardus Mercator grabbed a few nearby stars and combined them with the fuzzy patch to form the official constellation Coma Berenices. In the process, the lion finally lost its tail. The real mystery is how the stars got to be associated with the hair of an ancient Egyptian Queen in the first place. About Queen Berenice little is known. During the third century BCE, she was first the sister and then the wife of the Egyptian pharaoh Ptolemy III Euergetes. (The pharaohs often married their close relatives to keep the royal bloodline pure.) Berenice was something of a warrior and horsewoman, distinguishing herself in battle before she married Ptolemy. According to Hyginus, Ptolemy left his new wife just a few days after their nuptials to make war on Asia. Berenice vowed to the gods that she would cut off her hair if Ptolemy returned safely. This had to be considered a major sacrifice. She was apparently quite attached to her long, amber-colored tresses. At the pharaoh's safe return, the now-hairless Berenice placed her hair on the altar of the temple dedicated to her mother Arisinoe. The next day, the hair was gone. The temple priests clearly had some serious explaining to do to a very angry pharaoh and a very bald queen. Conon of Samos, an astronomer and mathematician who who worked in Alexandria, came up with the life-saving solution. He pointed to the fuzzy patch at the tail of Leo and told the royal couple that Berenice's hair had gone to join the stars. The story has the ring of truth to it. We can imagine a desperate Conon in fear of his life raising his eyes toward heaven for inspiration and finding there a glorious patch of light.

32. Archimedes
the time. His teacher was named conon of samos. Conon was one of thegreatest influences that Archimedes had in his life. He taught
http://www.hyperhistory.net/apwh/bios/b2archimedes_p1ab.htm
Archimedes
Approx. 287 B.C.-212 B.C.
Mathematician, Inventor, Astronomer
"Give me a lever long enough and a place to stand, and I will move the world."
-Archimedes 230 BC.
These daring words were made by a man whose genius changed the worlds of science and math forever. Many historians consider Archimedes to be one of the greatest scientists in history and the greatest mathematician of all time. Archimedes' contributions to science and math include the discovery and development of the laws and principles of mechanics, buoyancy, hydrostatics, specific gravity, the lever, and the pulley; in addition, he discovered how to find the measurement of a circle and the volume of a solid. These discoveries and other inventions were the life and love of Archimedes. Archimedes grew up in the Greek city-state of Syracuse on the island of Sicily. His father was an astronomer named Phidias. Archimedes is known to be a relative of Hiero II, who was the king of Syracuse during Archimedes' life. Hiero and Archimedes were very close friends. However, nothing else is known about any other members of Archimedes' family. Archimedes lived in Syracuse for his whole life, except for when he went to school in Alexandria, and at one point it was up to Archimedes' inventions to save Syracuse from being taken by the Romans. Archimedes had a good education as a boy, for the Greeks loved knowledge and sent their sons to schools to become knowledgeable Greek citizens. Some of the subjects that he studied as a boy were poetry, politics, astronomy, mathematics, music, art, and military tactics. When Archimedes was in his teens he sailed to Egypt to study in Alexandria. There he went to a famous school of mathematics that had been founded by Euclid. Archimedes studied astronomy, physics, and mathematics with many other great minds of the time. His teacher was named Conon of Samos. Conon was one of the greatest influences that Archimedes had in his life. He taught Archimedes many things about life and science. Archimedes' studies in Alexandria became the foundation on which he built his career as a scientist and mathematician.

33. The Equiangular Spiral Spira Mirabilis
Building upon the work of conon of samos, Archimedes of Syracuse wrote adefinitive early work on the subject in 250 BC entitled On Spirals.
http://online.redwoods.cc.ca.us/instruct/darnold/CalcProj/Sp98/GabeP/Spiral.htm
Gabriel Peterson The Equiangular Spiral: Spira Mirabilis Gabriel Peterson Math 50C: Multivariable Calculus Abstract The purpose of this article is to develop the parametric equation for the plane curve of the equiangular spiral – also known as the logarithmic spiral or the logistique – from its geometric definition. Through analysis, it was found to be where a is an arbitrary constant and a is a constant angle made between the radial vector to any point on the curve and the tangent line at that point.
Introduction Most readers will have had at least some informal introduction to the elegant beauty of the spiral prior to reading this. Certainly, most will have witnessed the sublime geometry of a spiral in the vortex of water rushing down a drain, the tempest of a hurricane, the hypnotic pattern of a magician’s spiral, the shape of a snail’s shell, the inscrutable movement of the arms of a spiral galaxy like our own... The formal mathematical study of spirals – as did so many other rich intellectual traditions present today – began with the ancient Greeks. Building upon the work of Conon of Samos, Archimedes of Syracuse wrote a definitive early work on the subject in 250 BC entitled On Spirals.

34. Lunar Crater Statistics
167.3W. 57. Sir William; British rocket engineer, inventor (17721828). . Conon.21.6N. 2.0E. 21. conon of samos; Greek astronomer (c. 260 BC). Cook. 17.5S. 48.9E.46.
http://lunar.arc.nasa.gov/science/atlas/text/cratertex_c.html
A B C D ... Main Menu Latin Name Lat Long Diam Origin C.Herschel Caroline; British astronomer (1750-1848). C.Mayer "Christian; German astronomer, mathematician, physicist (1719-178" Cabannes Jean; French physicist (1885-1959). Cabeus "Cabeo, Niccolo; Italian astronomer (1586-1650)." Cailleux A Andre; French geologist (1907-1986). Cajal Santiago Ramon Y; Spanish doctor; Nobel laureate (1852-1934). Cajori Florian; American mathematician (1859-1930). Calippus Calippus of Cyzicus; Greek astronomer (c. 330 B.C.).

35. Moon Nomenclature - Craters
167.3W. 57. Sir William; British rocket engineer, inventor (17721828). . Conon,21.6N. 2.0E. 21. conon of samos; Greek astronomer (c. 260 BC). Cook, 17.5S. 48.9E.46.
http://lunar.arc.nasa.gov/printerready/science/geography_items/carters/craters_c
Results Overview Instruments Lunar Atlas ... Results
Craters
Back
A
B C ... WXYZ
Latin Name Lat Long Diam Origin C.Herschel Caroline; British astronomer (1750-1848). C.Mayer "Christian; German astronomer, mathematician, physicist (1719-178" Cabannes Jean; French physicist (1885-1959). Cabeus "Cabeo, Niccolo; Italian astronomer (1586-1650)." Cailleux A Andre; French geologist (1907-1986). Cajal Santiago Ramon Y; Spanish doctor; Nobel laureate (1852-1934). Cajori Florian; American mathematician (1859-1930). Calippus Calippus of Cyzicus; Greek astronomer (c. 330 B.C.). Cameron Robert Curry; American astronomer (1925-1972). Camoens Luis de; Portugueseauthor (1524-1530). Campanus "Campano, Giovanni; Italian astronomer (c. 1200-unkn)." Campbell Leon; American astronomer (1881-1951); William W.; American astrono Cannizzaro Stanislao; Italian chemist (1826-1910). Cannon Annie J.; American astronomer (1863-1941). Cantor Georg; German mathematician (1845-1918); Moritz; German mathe Capella Martianus; Roman astronomer (c. A.D. 400-unkn).

36. University News Service Starwatch
The affair ended happily, however, when the astronomer conon of samos announced thatAphrodite had accepted Berenice's gift and placed it in the heavens beside
http://www1.umn.edu/urelate/newsservice/usables/starwatch/02_04.html
Return to news service home Today's news News clips archive News digest News release archives Subscribe to online publications Frequently asked questions Beats Tips sheet Experts database Famous U of M alumni and faculty APRIL An unexpected visitor has shown up in our neighborhood. Comet Ikeya-Zhang (ee-KAY-uh JONG), now low over the northwest horizon after sunset, can be spotted with binoculars against dark skies. It careened around the sun March 18 and is now heading away from Earth. The comet reached its maximum brightness in late March, but should be visible for much of April.
Ikeya-Zhang, discovered independently by two amateur astronomers, appears to be the same as a comet first spotted in 1661. Now, 341 years later, it's again swooping through our sector of the solar system. Look for Ikeya-Zhang on the 5th, when it will be close to the Andromeda galaxy, a fuzzy patch between the Great Square of Pegasus and Cassiopeia's Chair. The comet will next pass between Cassiopeia and Deneb, the brightest star in Cygnus, on its way toward Draco. It will be up all night in late April for observers in most of the United States and all of Canada and Europe. On the 30th it will pass closest to Earth, 38 million miles away. A chart of its location is on the Web at www.rog.nmm.ac.uk/leaflets/images/comets/ikeya_zhang/ikeya_zhang.gif

37. ~From Baal To Bukadawin~
The astronomer, conon of samos, declared it had been wafted to heaven. Hencethe constellation Coma Berenices, hair of Berenice, near that of Leo.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Sparta/6787/b.html
A B C D ... Z Baal or Bel- The chief god of the Phœnicians and Carthaginians.
Bacchus- The god of wine; he taught the cultivation of the grape and the preparation of its juice. His male followers were the satyrs and women devotees were known as bacchae or bacchantes. Greek drama developed from festivals in honor of Dionysus, the name usually given to him by the Greeks.
Balarama- In Hindu mythology, the half-brother of Krishna, who was (unlike Krishna), fair skinned.
Balder- In Norse mythology, the god of light and peace, son of Odin and Frigga. His mother asked everything in the world (animate and inanimate) to swear an oath that they would not harm her son. But the mistletoe was neglected in swearing this oath and Loki, the god of mischief and lies, was jealous of Balder. So he gave a dart of mistletoe to Hoder, the blind god of darkness, and aimed it at Balder. He died and the city of Asgard mourned. Hel, the queen of the underworld, allowed Balder to return to Asgard on the condition that every object in the world weep for him. Only Loki refused to shed a tear and the gods imprisoned him in a magic net and bound him to three stones. Balder was therefore condemned to die.
Balmung- In Norse mythology, the sword of Seigfried forged by Wieland, or Völand.

38. Full Alphabetical Index
Translate this page Cole, Frank (406*) Collingwood, Edward (479*) Collins, John (310) Condamine, Charlesde La (480*) Condorcet, Marie Jean (696*) conon of samos (104) Coolidge
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Plains/4142/matematici.html
Completo Indice Alfabetico
Cliccare su una lettera sottostante per andare a quel file. A B C D ... XYZ Cliccare sotto per andare agli indici alfabetici separati A B C D ... XYZ Il numero di parole nella biografia e' dato in parentesi. Un * indica che c'e' un ritratto.
A
Abbe , Ernst (602*)
Abel
, Niels Henrik (286*)
Abraham
bar Hiyya (240)
Abraham, Max

Abu Kamil
Shuja (59)
Abu'l-Wafa
al'Buzjani (243)
Ackermann
, Wilhelm (196)
Adams, John Couch

Adams, Frank

Adelard
of Bath (89)
Adler
, August (114) Adrain , Robert (79) Aepinus , Franz (124) Agnesi , Maria (196*) Ahlfors , Lars (725*) Ahmed ibn Yusuf (60) Ahmes Aida Yasuaki (114) Aiken , Howard (94) Airy , George (313*) Aitken , Alexander (825*) Ajima , Chokuyen (144) Akhiezer , Naum Il'ich (248*) al'Battani , Abu Allah (194) al'Biruni , Abu Arrayhan (306*) al'Haitam , Abu Ali (269*) al'Kashi , Ghiyath (73) al'Khwarizmi , Abu (123*) Albanese , Giacomo (282) Albert of Saxony Albert, Abraham Adrian (121*) (158*) Alberti , Leone (181*) Alberto Magno, San (109*) Alcuin di York (237*) Aleksandrov , Pave (160*) Alembert , Jean d' (291*) Alexander , James (163) Amringe , Howard van (354*) Amsler , Jacob (82) Anassagora di Clazomenae (169) Anderson , Oskar (67) Andreev , Konstantin (117) Angeli , Stefano degli (234) Anstice , Robert (209) Antemio of Tralles (55) Antifone il Sofista (125) Apollonio di Perga (276) Appell , Paul (1377) Arago , Dominique (345*) Arbogasto , Louis (87) Arbuthnot , John (251*) Archimede di Siracusa (467*) Archita of Tarentum (103) Argand , Jean (81) Aristeo il Vecchio (44) Aristarco di Samo (183) Aristotele Arnauld , Antoine (179)

39. BREWER: Dictionary Of Phrase And Fable, 125-126
She suspended her hair in the temple of the wargod, but it was stolen the firstnight, and conon of samos told the king that the winds had wafted it to heaven
http://www.bootlegbooks.com/Reference/PhraseAndFable/data/125.html
The First Hypertext Edition of
The Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
T HE D ICTIONARY OF P HRASE AND F ABLE BY E. C OBHAM B REWER
F ROM THE N EW AND E NLARGED E DITION OF Previous page
Table of contents and search form
Bent Inclination; talent for something. Out of my bent, not in my way, not in the range of my talent. Bent on it, inclined to it. As a thing bent is inclined, so a bent is an inclination or bias. Genius or talent is a bent or bias.
Hazlitt: Table Talk. They fool me to the top of my bent, i.e. as far as the bow can be bent without snapping. ( Hamlet, iii. 2.) ( See Bend. Benvolio Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet, iii. 1.) Beppo The contraction of Giuseppe, and therefore equal to our Joe. Husband of Laura, a Venetian lady. He was taken captive in Troy, turned Turk, joined a band of pirates, grew rich, and, after several years' absence, returned to his native land, where he discovered his wife at a carnival ball with her cavaliero servente. He made himself known to her, and they lived together again as man and wife. ( Byron: Beppo.

40. The Connective Issue - News/Op-Ed
An astronomer named conon of samos, solemnly pointed to a comet rapidly coming intoview, and announced that the gods had placed Berenice's hair among the stars
http://www.tuftsissue.com/032601/News_OpEd/032601News_OpEd.htm
In the News And the envelope please... Kiran, 20 months old and a bundle of black curls, cradled Winnie the Pooh tightly with her left arm - while Tiger dangled precariously from her mouth. At the same time, Kira held dad's hand, looking up to watch mom open a nondescript envelope - seemingly wondering what all the fuss was about ... [Full Text] TUSM M'01 Match Results Photos - by Matthew Lemaitre , MD/MALD'04 It’s 12:00 am. ...Tomorrow’s the big CT Bio exam. And, your time management skills have been, well, less than perfect. No problem. You’ve got broadband Internet access. You brew some coffee, recline back in your chair, laptop in hand, and press “Show Overlay.” Instantly, the abstract world of cellular biology is made clear.

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