jame

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James
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James
An English patronymic surname
James
A male given name popular since the Middle Ages. Also a common middle name

Heaven only knows why a man with a strong biblical name like James wants to be a president named Jimmy.

James
One of two Apostles, James the Greater and James the Less, often identified with James, brother of Jesus

Now the names of the twelve apostles are these; The first, Simon, who is called Peter, and Andrew his brother; James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother; Philip, and Bartholomew; Thomas, and Matthew the publican; James the son of Alphaeus, and Lebbaeus, whose surname was Thaddaeus; Simon the Canaanite, and Judas Iscariot, who also betrayed him.

James
One of the 12 Apostles. The son of Zebedee and brother of John, he preached in Spain and was martyred on his return to Judea. Traditionally regarded as the brother of Jesus, the author of the Epistle of James in the New Testament, and the first bishop of Jerusalem. One of the 12 Apostles. See table at Bible. Trinidadian author and historian noted for his Marxist writings and his novel Minty Alley (1936). American writer and critic whose works generally concern the confrontation of American and European culture. A pioneer in psychologically realistic fiction, he wrote numerous novels, such as The Bostonians (1886) and The Golden Bowl (1904). American out(Hukuk) After fighting in the Civil War as a Confederate guerrilla, he led a group of armed brigands that for 15 years robbed banks and trains in the West. He was murdered by a member of his own gang. American psychologist and philosopher. A founder of pragmatism and functionalism, he developed an approach to intellectual issues that greatly influenced American thought. His works include The Principles of Psychology (1890) and The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902). born May 1452 died June 11, 1488, near Stirling, Stirling, Scot. King of Scotland (1460-88). He succeeded his father, James II. Unlike the latter, he was unable to restore strong central government after his long minority. A weak monarch, he was confronted with two major rebellions. He evidently offended his nobles by his interest in the arts and by taking artists for his favourites. In 1488 two powerful border families raised a rebellion and won to their cause his son, the future James IV; James III was captured and killed at age
James
given name, male
James
Spanish Jaime known as James the Just born 1264 died Nov. 3, 1327, Barcelona, Aragon King of Aragon (1295-1327) and king of Sicily (as James I, 1285-95). He inherited the Sicilian crown on the death of his father (1285); when his brother died (1291) he inherited Aragon. He resigned Sicily (1295) and married the daughter of the king of Naples in order to make peace with the Angevins. Sardinia and Corsica were given to him in compensation for Sicily, but he was able to occupy only Sardinia (1324). born Oct. 14, 1633, London, Eng. died Sept. 16/17, 1701, Saint-Germain, France King of Great Britain (1685-88). He was brother and successor to Charles II. In the English Civil Wars he escaped to the Netherlands (1648). After the Restoration (1660) he returned to England and became lord high admiral in the Anglo-Dutch Wars. He converted to Catholicism 1668, and he resigned in 1673 rather than take the Test Act oath. By 1678 his Catholicism had created a climate of hysteria about a Popish Plot to assassinate Charles and put James on the throne, and successive Parliaments sought to exclude him from succession. By the time Charles died (1685), James came to the throne with little opposition and strong support from the Anglicans. Rebellions caused him to fill the army and high offices with Roman Catholics and suspend a hostile Parliament. The birth of his son, a possible Catholic heir, brought about the Glorious Revolution in 1688, and he fled to France. In 1689 he landed in Ireland to regain his throne, but his army was defeated at the Battle of the Boyne, and he returned to exile in France. born Oct. 16, 1430, Edinburgh, Scot. died Aug. 3, 1460, Roxburgh Castle, Roxburgh King of Scotland (1437-60). He succeeded to the throne on the assassination of his father, James I of Scotland. Because he was so young, the strong central authority his father had established quickly collapsed, and his first adult task was the restoration of monarchical authority. He strove to dominate the powerful Douglas family, and in 1452 he stabbed to death William, earl of Douglas, at Stirling Castle. He established a strong central government and improved the administration of justice. Turning his attention to the English, who had renewed their claims to rule Scotland, he attacked English outposts in Scotland and was killed during a siege of Roxburgh Castle. born March 17, 1473 died Sept. 9, 1513, near Branxton, Northumberland, Eng. King of Scotland (1488-1513). He unified his country, gaining control over all northern and western Scotland by 1493. He fought border skirmishes with England (1495-97) in support of a pretender to the English throne. His marriage (1503) to Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII, helped stabilize relations between the two countries, but in 1512 he allied with France against England. He invaded England in support of the French in 1513; his army was defeated at the Battle of Flodden, and James was killed. Spanish Jaime known as James the Conqueror born Feb. 2, 1208, Montpellier, County of Toulouse died July 27, 1276 King of Aragon and Catalonia (1214-76). The most renowned of the medieval kings of Aragon, he was educated by the Knights Templar, and his great-uncle ruled as regent until 1218. James helped to subdue rebellious nobles and took over the government of his kingdoms in 1227. He reconquered the Balearic Islands (1229-35) and Valencia (1233-38) but renounced his claims to lands in southern France. He also helped Alfonso X to suppress a Moorish rebellion in Murcia (1266), and he undertook an unsuccessful Crusade to the Holy Land (1269). born June 19, 1566, Edinburgh Castle, Edinburgh, Scot. died March 27, 1625, Theobalds, Hertfordshire, Eng. King of Scotland, as James VI (1567-1625), and first Stuart king of England (1603-25). He was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots, and Lord Darnley, and at age one James succeeded his mother to the Scottish throne. Controlled by a succession of regents, he became the puppet of contending intriguers Roman Catholics, who sought to bring his mother back to the throne, and Protestants. In 1583 he began to pursue his own policies as king, allying himself with England. On the death of Elizabeth I, he succeeded to the English throne as great-great-grandson of Henry VII. He quickly achieved peace and prosperity by ending England's war with Spain (1604). He presided over the Hampton Court Conference (1604), rejecting most of the Puritans' demands for reform of the Church of England but permitting preparation of a new translation of the Bible, the King James Version. His policies toward Catholics led to the Gunpowder Plot, and his growing belief in royal absolutism and his conflicts with an increasingly self-assertive Parliament led to his dissolution of Parliament from 1611 to 1621. With the death of Robert Cecil, he came under the influence of incompetent favourites. born 1394 died Feb. 20/21, 1437, Perth, Perth, Scot. King of the Scots (1406-37). The son and heir of Robert III, he was captured by the English in 1406 and held prisoner in London until 1424. During the 13 years in which he truly ruled Scotland (1424-37), he established the first strong monarchy the Scots had known in nearly a century. He weakened the nobility but did not entirely subdue the Highland lords, and he greatly improved the administration of justice for the common people. His murder in a Dominican friary by a group of rival nobles led to a popular uprising in favour of his widow and six-year-old son, who succeeded him as James II. Agee James Anderson James Maxwell Baldwin James Arthur Balfour of Whittingehame Arthur James 1st Earl Ballard James Graham Barrie Sir James Matthew Beard James James Pierson Beckwith James Thomas Bell Bennett James Gordon Biddle James Birney James Gillespie Black Sir James Whyte Blaine James Gillespie James Hubert Blake James Blanton Boswell James James Bowie James Earl Breslin James Bridger Brooks James L. Brown James James Nathaniel Brown Buchanan James Cabell James Branch Cagney James Callaghan of Cardiff Leonard James Callaghan Baron Cardigan James Thomas Brudenell 7th earl of James Earl Carter Cattell James McKeen James Beauchamp Clark Clark James H. Cockburn Sir Alexander James Edmund 10th Baronet Conant James Bryant James Scott Connors Cook James Frank James Cooper Cooper James Fenimore Cox James Middleton Craig Sir James Henry Crichton James Curley James Michael Nathaniel Currier and James Merritt Ives Dalhousie James Andrew Broun Ramsay marquess of Dana James Dwight Dean James Byron DeLancey James Dewar Sir James Dickey James Lafayette William James Dixon James Harold Doolittle Douglas Sir James Duke James Buchanan Durant William James and Ariel James Francis Durante Duryea Charles Edgar and James Frank Elgin James Bruce 8th earl of Ensor James Sidney Baron Farley James Aloysius Farrell James Thomas Robert James Fischer Fisk James Forrestal James Vincent Fox Charles James James Emory Foxx Francis James Bicheno Frazer Sir James George Froude James Anthony Fulbright James William Gadsden James Galway Sir James Garfield James Abram Geertz Clifford James Gibson James Jerome Glackens William James Graves Robert James Hall James Hall Sir James Hardie James Keir Hargreaves James Heckman James J. Henderson James Fletcher James Marshall Hendrix James Maury Henson Herne James A. James Ahearn Herrick James Bryan Herriot James James Alfred Wight Hertzog James Barry Munnik James Butler Hickok Hill James Jerome Hilton James Glen Trevor James Riddle Hoffa Hogg James Howe James Wong Hughes James Mercer Langston Edward James Hughes Hutton James Iredell James Ivory James Francis James Bay James Edward the Old Pretender James Francis Edward Stuart James III James II James the Just James IV James I James the Conqueror James River James Cyril Lionel Robert James Harry Haag James Henry James Saint James the Great James William Jeans Sir James Hopwood Johnson James Price Johnson James Weldon Jones James Earl James Warren Jones Joule James Prescott Joyce James Augustine Aloysius Kempton James Murray Kent James Laughlin James Lawrence James Levine James Lawrence Lind James Logan James Longstreet James Lowell James Russell James Melvin Lunceford MacDonald James Ramsay Mackenzie Sir James Macleod John James Rickard Madison James Maine Sir Henry James Sumner Mason James Mason James Murray Maxwell James Clerk McCartney Sir James Paul James Francis McHugh Meredith James Howard Merrill James Ingram Michener James Albert Mill James Monmouth James Scott duke of James Crofts James Fitzroy Monroe James Montrose James Graham 5th earl and 1st marquess of James Douglas Morrison Morton James Douglas 4th earl of Murray Sir James Augustus Henry Edward James Muggeridge Naismith James A. Nasmyth James Neilson James Beaumont James Thiong'o Ngugi Oglethorpe James Edward Ormonde James Butler 12th earl and 1st duke of Osborne John James Otis James James Cleveland Owens Pacino Alfredo James Paget Sir James Penney James Cash Polk James Knox Quayle James Danforth Raglan of Raglan FitzRoy James Henry Somerset 1st Baron Rapier James Thomas Ray James Earl Reston James Barrett Riley James Whitcomb Robinson James Harvey James Charles Rodgers Rosenquist James James Andrew Rushing Simpson Orenthal James Simpson Sir James Young Stanhope James Stanhope 1st Earl Stephen Sir James Fitzjames 1st Baronet Stewart James Maitland Stillman James Stirling Sir James Frazer James Ewell Brown Stuart Sumner James Batcheller James Francis Thorpe Thurber James Grover Thurmond James Strom James Joseph Tunney Van Der Zee James Augustus Joseph Walker James John Wallack James William Watson James Dewey Watt James Weaver James Baird Webb Sidney James and Beatrice Whistler James Abbott McNeill White James Springer and Ellen Gould Wilkinson James James Robert Wills Wilson James Harold Baron Wilson of Rievaulx Wilson James Wolfe James Audubon John James James Jesse and James Frank Jesse Woodson James and Alexander Franklin James
James
A book of the New Testament of the Bible, the general epistle of James
James
{i} one of the 12 apostles of Jesus; Henry James (1811-1892) American novelist; William James (1842-1910) American psychologist; name of several Scottish kings
James
An English surname derived from the given name
James
Two Apostles, and other characters in the New Testament
James
Js
James
Jas
james
a river that rises in North Dakota and flows southward across South Dakota to the Missouri a river in Virginia that flows east into Chesapeake Bay at Hampton Roads (New Testament) disciple of Jesus; brother of John; author of the Epistle of James in the New Testament writer who was born in the United States but lived in England (1843-1916) United States pragmatic philosopher and psychologist (1842-1910) United States outlaw who fought as a Confederate soldier and later led a band of outlaws that robbed trains and banks in the West until he was murdered by a member of his own gang (1847-1882)
james
United States outlaw who fought as a Confederate soldier and later led a band of outlaws that robbed trains and banks in the West until he was murdered by a member of his own gang (1847-1882)
james
James is a wonderfully customizable mail server that can receive and store your mail, manage lists, utilize MySQL for storage, and generate Eyebrowse-compatible mail archives on any Java-enabled platform
james
The owner of JamesWare Computing and the author of much of this website
james
A sovereign; a jacobus A gold coin circulated in the reign of James I Worth about 25s
james
a river in Virginia that flows east into Chesapeake Bay at Hampton Roads
james
a river that rises in North Dakota and flows southward across South Dakota to the Missouri
james
Another friend originally met online, on a different MU* We've met twice, the second time on an trip to Toronto (to meet more online people, of course!) You can get to know someone pretty well on a twelve hour drive He's currently in college in Indiana Also on Emerald, he plays the infamous Count Laren Go read the story, you'll understand
james
(New Testament) disciple of Jesus; brother of John; author of the Epistle of James in the New Testament
james
writer who was born in the United States but lived in England (1843-1916)
james
N T
james
A friend I am getting reacquainted with since his return to Tucson after living in Santa Fe for several months
james
United States pragmatic philosopher and psychologist (1842-1910)
james
a New Testament book attributed to Saint James the Apostle