talbot

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A brand of English motor car
An English surname thought to be of Norman (Germanic) origin
An earldom in the British peerage
A type of hound once used for hunting and tracking
{n} a spotted dog with a turned-up tail
An English surname thought to be of Germanic origin
British inventor and pioneer in photography who made photographic prints on paper treated with silver chloride (1838) and produced the first book illustrated with photographs (1844-1846). Shrewsbury Charles Talbot duke and 12th earl of Talbot William Henry Fox Salisbury Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne Cecil 3rd marquess of
A sort of dog, noted for quick scent and eager pursuit of game
English inventor and pioneer in photography who published the first book illustrated with photographs (1800-1877)
calotype
Charles Talbot duke and 12th earl of Shrewsbury
born July 24, 1660 died Feb. 1, 1718, London, Eng. English statesman. He inherited his father's title at age seven and was raised as a Catholic. He became a Protestant in 1679 and in 1688 was one of seven men who invited William of Orange to seize power from James II. After aiding the successful rebellion, Shrewsbury served William III as secretary of state (1689-90, 1694-99) and was created a duke in 1694. Shifting his allegiance from the Whigs, he served in a Tory administration as lord lieutenant of Ireland (1710-14) and was appointed by Queen Anne as lord high treasurer (1714). He obtained recognition of George I as the legitimate royal heir and assured the peaceful succession of the house of Hanover
Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil 3rd marquess of Salisbury
born , Feb. 3, 1830, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, Eng. died Aug. 22, 1903, Hatfield British prime minister (1885-86, 1886-92, 1895-1902). He served in Benjamin Disraeli's government as secretary for India (1874-78) and foreign secretary (1878-80), helping to convene the Congress of Berlin. He led the Conservative Party opposition in the House of Lords, then became prime minister on three occasions beginning in 1885, usually serving concurrently as foreign secretary. He opposed alliances, maintained strong national interests, and presided over an expansion of Britain's colonial empire, especially in Africa. He retired in 1902 in favour of his nephew, Arthur James Balfour
William Henry Fox Talbot
a British photographer who was the first to invent a way of making more than one photograph from the same negative (=image on a piece of film that shows dark areas as light and light areas as dark) (1800-1877). born Feb. 11, 1800, Melbury Abbas, Dorset, Eng. died Sept. 17, 1877, Lacock Abbey, near Chippenham, Wiltshire English chemist and pioneer photographer. In 1840 he developed the calotype, an early photographic process that improved on the daguerreotype; it involved the use of a photographic negative from which multiple prints could be made. In 1835 he published his first article documenting a photographic discovery, that of the paper negative. His The Pencil of Nature (1844-46) was the first book with photographic illustrations. Talbot also published many articles on mathematics, astronomy, and physics
talbot

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    Tal·bot

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    tälbıt

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    /ˈtalbət/ /ˈtælbət/

    Etimoloji

    [ 'tol-b&t, 'tal- ] (noun.) 1562. probably from Talbot, name of a Norman family in England.