The WirelessTelegraphyActs are laws regulating radio communications in the United Kingdom . Wirelesstelegraphy as a concept is defined in British law as the sending of electro magnetic energy over paths not provided by a material substance. The term telegraphy , although best known in relation to the electric telegraph , relates to the sending of messages over long distances. Wirelesstelegraphy is differentiated from electrical telegraphy in that the messages are transmitted via electromagnetic means light or radio rather than via a physical electrical cable connection. The guardian of the UK s electromagnetic spectrum is the communications regulator, Ofcom . Brief history of the UK WirelessTelegraphyActsWirelessTelegraphy Act 1904 subsequently repealed WirelessTelegraphy Act 1906 subsequently repealed http www.statutelaw.gov.uk content.aspx?&ActiveTextDocId 1152475 WirelessTelegraphy ... 1251118 WirelessTelegraphy Act 1967 c. 72 Telecommunications Act 1984 made amendments to the 1949 Act Broadcasting Act 1990 made extensive amendments to the 1949 and 1967 Acts Broadcasting Act 1996 http www.statutelaw.gov.uk content.aspx?&ActiveTextDocId 1457173 WirelessTelegraphy Act 1998 ...?&ActiveTextDocId 2925965 WirelessTelegraphy Act 2006 c. 36 in force from 2007 02 08 consolidated wirelesstelegraphy legislation repealed the WirelessTelegraphy Act 1949 WirelessTelegraphyActs in other countries Cape Colony South Africa Electric Telegraphs Amendment Act 1902 required wireless masts to be licensed Ireland WirelessTelegraphy Act 1904 and 1906 pre independence acts repealed in 1926 WirelessTelegraphy Act 1926 the principal act WirelessTelegraphy Act 1956 concerned with use ... act in relation to television and interference WirelessTelegraphy Act 1972 concerned mainly ... Broadcasting And WirelessTelegraphy Act 1988 concerned mainly with unlicenced broadcasting Broadcasting ... in the United Kingdom Category Telecommunications law Category Telegraphy statute stub ... more details
Refimprove date December 2006 Wirelesstelegraphy is a historical term used today to apply to early radio ... decades of radio 1887 to 1920 before the term radio came into use. Wirelesstelegraphy originated ... century, but radio emerged as the most significant. Wirelesstelegraphy rapidly came to mean Morse ..., and military communication, and evolved into radioteletype networks. Wirelesstelegraphy is still ... wave , or just CW. The Brief history of the development Wireless , or Space Telegraphy s, detailed ... gave a classroom demonstration of wirelesstelegraphy to his students. By 1854 he was able to demonstrate ... Telegraphy, 1838 1899 , 1899, p. 29 ref Period 1838 1897 main invention of radio Wirelesstelegraphy ... played by Augusto Righi in wirelesstelegraphy. ref Nature, Volume 75 edited by Sir Norman Lockyer ... books.google.com books?id 6 RUAAAAMAAJ Wirelesstelegraphy and telephony popularly explained . New ... WirelessTelegraphy page 10 year 1903 publisher American School of Correspondence url http books.google.com ... oscillations are set up. ref name Maverswireless Maver s wirelesstelegraphy theory and practice ... . ref Text book on wirelesstelegraphy, Volume 1 By Rupert Stanley. Pg 299. ref de Moura Roberto ... to have conducted between 1890 and 1894 wireless transmissions in telegraphy and telephony over ... , he described and demonstrated in detail the principles of wirelesstelegraphy and radio. The apparatus ... Work with Alternating Currents and Their Application to WirelessTelegraphy, Telephony and Transmission ..., WirelessTelegraphy Its History, Theory and Practice . McGraw publishing company, 1905. http books.google.com ... of Marconi s devices and methods were derived. Marconi s US patent 676332 Apparatus for wirelesstelegraphy ... in the development of wirelesstelegraphy by the inductive conductive method. On June 4, 1897, he delievers ... the radio station at Niton, Isle of Wight , England. Marconi s wirelesstelegraphy was inspected ... known as a Morse Inker . ref ref James Erskine Murray 1907 . A handbook of wirelesstelegraphy its ... more details
Acoustic telegraphy was also known as harmonic telegraphy . During the late 19th century, inventor s developed methods of multiplexing transmitting more than one Telegram telegraph messages simultaneously over a single Electrical telegraph telegraph wire by using different Audio frequency audio frequencies or Channel communications channels , for each message. A telegrapher used a conventional Morse key to tap out the message in Morse code . The key pulses were transmitted as pulses of a specific audio frequency. At the receiving end a device Musical tuning tuned to the same frequency resonated to the pulses but not to others on the same wire. Inventors who worked on the acoustic telegraph included Charles Bourseul , Thomas Edison , Elisha Gray , and Alexander Graham Bell . Their efforts to develop acoustic telegraphy, in order to reduce the cost of telegraph service, led to the invention of the telephone . ref Standage, pages 195 199 ref Some of Thomas Edison s devices used multiple synchronized tuning fork s tuned to selected audio frequencies and which opened and closed electrical circuits at the selected audio frequencies. Acoustic telegraphy was similar in concept to present day FDMA , or Frequency Division Multiple Access, used with radio frequencies. The word acoustic comes from the Greek akoustikos meaning hearing, as with hearing of sound waves in air. Acoustic telegraphy devices were electromechanical and made musical or buzzing or humming sound waves in air for a few feet. But the primary function of these devices was not to generate sound waves, but rather to generate alternating electrical currents at selected audio frequencies in wires which transmitted telegraphic messages electrically over long distances. Patents US patent 0161,739 Improvement in Transmitters and Receivers for Electric Telegraphs Alexander Graham Bell, issued April 6, 1875 US patent 0166,095 ... TelPat.shtml Telephone Patents DEFAULTSORT Acoustic Telegraphy Category Telegraphy Category Multiplexing ... more details
Acts or ACTS may refer to Christianity Acts of the Apostles genre , a genre of early Christian literature Acts of the Apostles , the fifth book in the Bible s New Testament Adoration, Confession Contrition, Thanksgiving, Supplication or Intercession an acronym intended to illustrate the different purposes of Christian prayer Communications and television Aboriginal Christian Television System Advance Community Television Station , a television station in Trinidad and Tobago. Advanced Communications Technology Satellite ACTS , a satellite launched in 1993 by Space Shuttle Discovery on mission STS 51 American Christian Television Services, parent company of WTLW in Lima, Ohio American Christian Television System , a defunct television network run by the Southern Baptist Convention Associated Christian Television System, parent company of WACX in Orlando, Florida Air transport, spaceflight and technology Air Corps Tactical School , the first military professional development school for officers of the United States Army Air Service and United States Army Air Corps. CSTS Advanced Crew Transportation System , a proposed joint European Russian Japanese manned spaceflight system Computing, automation, computer networks .ACTS. is displayed as the refid of the NIST Internet Time Service Network Time Protocol NTP servers. http www.nist.gov physlab div847 grp40 its.cfm NIST information on ITS Traffic Service Position System Automated Coin Toll System Automated Coin Toll System , a system ... physlab div847 grp40 acts.cfm NIST information on ACTS Advanced Color Tracking System , color based visual object tracking for robots Transportation ACTS Nederland BV , railfreight company in the Netherlands ACTS, A broll c ontainer T ransport s ystem german or A fzet C ontainer T ransport S ysteem ... of cranes or lifting gear See also Act disambiguation ACT disambiguation disambig cs ACTS de ACTS nl ACTS sk ACTS ... more details
optic communication s. Early wireless work Main Wirelesstelegraphy David E. Hughes , eight ... title A story of wirelesstelegraphy publisher New York, D. Appleton and Co. year 1904 ref ref name ... of wirelesstelegraphy early on now the term is used to describe modern wireless connections such as in cellular ... for Physics for their contribution to wirelesstelegraphy. The electromagnetic spectrum Light, colors ...Otheruses In telecommunication s, wireless communication may be used to transfer information over short ... for radio communications . The term is often shortened to wireless . It encompasses various ... digital assistant s PDAs , and wireless network ing. Other examples of wireless technology include Global Positioning System GPS units, Garage door opener garage door openers and or garage doors , wireless ... thumb right 217px Handheld wireless radios such as this Maritime VHF radio transceiver use electromagnetic waves to implement a form of wireless communications technology. Wireless operations .... Wireless services Unreferenced section date December 2006 The term wireless has become a generic term describing the use of radio or light instead of wires to carry signals. Common examples of wireless ... mouse is a common example keyboards and printers can also be linked to a computer via wireless ... TV digital broadcasting to provide multiple channels to viewers. Wireless networks Wireless networking ... use is for mobile networks that connect via satellite. A wireless transmission method is a logical ... the use of wireless technology To span a distance beyond the capabilities of typical cabling ..., or To remotely connect mobile users or networks. Modes Wireless communication can be via radio ... , cellular network s and other wireless network s. Cordless The term wireless should not be confused .... Some cordless devices, such as cordless telephones, are also wireless in the sense that information is transferred from the cordless telephone to the telephone s base unit via some type of wireless Link ... more details
1 Rules for High Speed Telegraphy Championships . Entry categories HST competitions generally ... to measure the telegraphy speed at IARU HST events has changed. Before 2004, the Morse code Representation ... of real high speed telegraphy demonstrated by Fabian DJ1YFK of Dresden, Germany. High speed telegraphy ..., Wilko PA3BWK 1999 . http www.morsecode.nl hst.html High Speed Telegraphy European World Championships . Retrieved Dec. 6, 2005. http www.qsl.net dk5ke High Speed telegraphy and speed writing German Telegraphy page of Ludwig Szopinski, DK5KE Notes Reflist References refbegin Battey, E.L. W1UE. Flash W9ERU Wins Code Speed Contest . QST . Oct., 1936. p. 39. IARU Region I High Speed Telegraphy Working Group 2004 . http www.darc.de referate dx archives hstrules.pdf Rules for High Speed Telegraphy Championships ... W2UP. High Speed Telegraphy Competition in Macedonia . QST . 2005. Lindquist, Rick N1RL. World Championship in High Speed Telegraphy Set. QST . Apr. 1997, p. 75. Lindquist, Rick N1RL, ed. http www.arrl.org arrlletter 04 1210 Guinness World Records recognizes high speed telegraphy achievement . ARRL ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 In Canon Law Canonical Acts are the documents which prove an ecclesiastical procedure. ref CathEncy wstitle Canonical Acts ref References reflist RC stub Category Canon law ... more details
Unreferenced date July 2010 The Gagging Acts in the U.K. were the Treason Act 1817 and the Seditious Meetings Act 1817 . Category Acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom UK law stub ... more details
Acts of war or act of war may represent Casus belli , a justification for acts of war Tom Clancy s Op Center Acts of War , a 1997 novel Act of War Direct Action , a 2005 videogame based on the series by Dale Brown Act of War High Treason , a 2006 videogame based on the series by Dale Brown Jedi Council Acts of War , a 2001 comic book miniseries set in the Star Wars universe dab ... more details
Luke Acts is the name usually given by Biblical scholar s to the hypothetical composite work of the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles in the New Testament . Together they describe the Ministry of Jesus and the subsequent lives of the Apostles and the Apostolic Age . Both the books of Luke and Acts are anonymous narratives written for a person named Theophilus Biblical Theophilus ref Luke 1 3 Acts 1 1 ref . The book of Acts starts out with The former treatise have I made probably referring to Luke ref Acts 1 1, Authorised Version ref , and the author probably intended both books to be read together. Most scholars believe that they were written by the same person. Citation needed date May 2010 1 A traditional view holds that they were written by Luke the Evangelist Luke named in Colossians bibleverse nb Col 4 14 31 , a doctor and follower of Paul of Tarsus Paul , but some who date May 2010 doubt this view a date of between 50 and 150 AD is considered likely for the work s composition. Citation needed date August 2009 Some scholars ref CathEncy wstitle Acts of the Apostles In section Objections against the Authenticity Ferdinand Christian Baur Baur , Schwanbeck, De Wette, Davidson, Mayerhoff, Schleiermacher , Bleek, Krenkel, and others have opposed the authenticity of the Acts. ref dispute the Historical reliability of the Acts of the Apostles . The work is Hellenized and written ... of Acts. Marcion , a famous Christianity in the 2nd century 2nd century heretic , who used a modified form of Luke known as the Gospel of Marcion , did not use Acts, perhaps he was unaware of it or intentionally ... and mention Acts, specifically against Marcionism . References Robert J. Miller Miller, Robert J ... refer to Luke s work as Luke Acts . Polebridge Press, 1992. ISBN 0 944344 49 6 Joseph B. Tyson, http books.google.com.au books?id MU2U08v6aq0C&pg PA32 Marcion and Luke Acts A defining struggle , University ... series, mentions Luke Acts several times. Category Book of Acts Category Christian terms Christian ... more details
Unnatural Acts can refer to A sexual unnatural act Unnatural Acts radio series Unnatural Acts 1998 TV Series disambig Short pages monitor This long comment was added to the page to prevent it being listed on Special Shortpages. It and the accompanying monitoring template were generated via Template Longcomment. Please do not remove the monitor template without removing the comment as well. ... more details
mergefrom Book of the Chronicles of Solomon discuss Talk Acts of Solomon Merger proposal date December 2008 The similarly named Bible Biblical book is located at Song of Solomon . The Acts of Solomon is a lost text that may have been written by Iddo the Biblical prophet Iddo , who was the author of other lost texts. The book is described in bibleref 1Kings 11 41 . The passage reads And the rest of the acts of Solomon , and all that he did, and his wisdom, are they not written in the book of the acts of Solomon? This text is sometimes called The Book of the Acts of Solomon . http www.icwseminary.org lostbooks.htm , http www.studybibleforum.com spages Jude.htm Christian text stub Tanakh stub reli book stub See also Table of books of Judeo Christian Scripture Lost books of the New Testament Lost work Category Lost Jewish texts la Liber gestorum Salomonis tr S leyman n Tarihi kitap ... more details
Multiple issues wikify October 2010 orphan February 2009 update October 2010 CONSOLIDATION ACTS To consolidate Latin consolidare, from con , together, and solidus, firm is to press compactly together, put on a firm basis, and especially bring together into one strong whole. The practice of legislating for small portions of a subject only at a time, which is characteristic of the English parliament, produces as a necessary consequence great confusion in the statute law. The acts relating to any subject of importance or difficulty will be found to be scattered over many years, and through the operation of clauses partially repealing or amending former acts, the final sense of the legislature becomes enveloped in unintelligible or contradictory expressions. Where opportunity offers, the law thus expressed in many statutes is sometimes recast in a single statute, called a Consolidation Act. Among such are acts dealing with the customs, stamps and stamp duties, public health, weights and measures, sheriffs, coroners, county courts, housing, municipal corporations, libraries, trustees, copyhold, diseases of animals, merchant shipping, friendly societies, &c. These observations apply to the public general acts of the legislature. On the other hand, in settling private acts, such as those relating to railway and canal enterprise, the legislature always inserted certain clauses founded on reasons of public policy applicable to the business in question. To avoid the necessity of constantly re enacting the same principles in private acts, their common clauses were embodied in separate statutes, and their provisions are ordered to be incorporated in any private act of the description mentioned therein. Such are the Lands Clauses Acts, the Companies Clauses Acts and the Railways Clauses Acts . References 1911 Category Law ... more details
The Acts of Peter is one of the earliest of the apocrypha l Acts of the Apostles genre Acts of the Apostles . The majority of the text has survived only in the Latin translation of the Vercelli manuscript . It is mainly notable for a description of a miracle contest between Saint Peter and Simon Magus , and as the first record of the tradition that St. Peter was Cross of St. Peter crucified head down . The Acts of Peter was originally composed in Greek during the second half of the 2nd century, probably in Asia Minor . ref http wesley.nnu.edu biblical studies noncanon acts actpete.htm ref Consensus among academics points to it being based on the Acts of John , and traditionally both works were said to be written by Leucius Charinus , whom Epiphanius of Salamis Epiphanius identifies as the companion of John. In the text Peter performs miracles such as resurrecting smoked fish, and making dogs talk. The text condemns Simon Magus, a figure associated with gnosticism , who appears to have concerned the writer of the text greatly. Peter preaches that Simon is performing magic in order to convert followers through deception. In Peter s outrage, he challenges Simon Magnus to a contest in order to prove whose works are from a divine source and whose are merely trickery. Some versions give accounts of stories on the theme of a woman women who prefer paralysis to sex , sometimes, including in a version from the Berlin Codex , the woman is the daughter of Peter. It concludes describing Peter s martyrdom as upside down crucifixion, a tradition that is first attested in this work. These concluding chapters are preserved separately as the Martyrdom of Peter in three Greek manuscripts and in Coptic ... were affixed. See also Acts of Peter and Andrew Acts of Peter and the Twelve Acts of Peter and Paul ... Acts of Peter DEFAULTSORT Acts Of Peter Category 2nd century Christian texts Category Anti Gnosticism Category Apocryphal Acts Peter Category Petrine related books ca Fets de Pere es Hechos de Pedro ... more details
The Acts of Paul is one of the major works from the New Testament apocrypha , an approximate date given to the Acts of Paul is 160 CE. ref Jones, Timothy Paul Misquoting Truth , page 167. InterVarsity Press, 2007. ref The Acts were considered orthodox by Hippolytus writer Hippolytus , but were eventually regarded as heretical when the Manichaeans started using the texts. The discovery of a Coptic language Coptic version of the text, demonstrated that the text was composed of the Acts of Paul and Thecla the Epistle of the Corinthians to Paul the Third Epistle to the Corinthians the Martyrdom of Paul his death at the hand of Nero All of these constituent parts were often considered worth treating as separate texts, and frequently appeared independently, although scholars agree that they were originally part of the Acts of Paul . Besides the four main sections mentioned above, the remainder of the Acts exist only in fragments from the 3rd and 5th centuries The healing of Hermocrates from Edema dropsy The strife of the Ephesus Ephesian beasts The texts are a coherent whole, and generally thought to have been written by one author using oral traditions, rather than basing it on any of the other apocrypha or the orthodox canon. The main emphasis of the text is on Chastity and anti Gnosticism . According to Tertullian , the author was a priest in Asia Minor. The Epistle of the Corinthians to Paul and the Third Epistle of the Corinthians both appear in some editions of the Armenian Bible. Notes references External links http actapauli.wordpress.com Acta Pauli A website devoted to an international, scholarly discussion of the Acts of Paul . See also Leucius Charinus Books of the Bible DEFAULTSORT Acts Of Paul Category Apocryphal Acts Paul Category Pauline related books Category Anti Gnosticism Christianity stub it Atti di Paolo la Acta Pauli pl Dzieje Paw a pt Atos de Paulo ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Infobox Album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name Acts of Love Type Studio Artist Penny Rimbaud Cover Actsoflove.jpg Released 1985 Recorded 1984 1985 Genre Classical music Length Label Crass Records Producer Penny Rimbaud and Paul Ellis Reviews Last album This album Acts of Love br 1985 Next album The Death of Imagination br 2001 Dablink For the film known as Acts of Love in United Kingdom, see Carried Away 1996 film . Acts of Love is an album of 50 poems by Penny Rimbaud of the anarchist punk music punk band Crass , set to european classical music classical music composed and arranged by Penny Rimbaud and Paul Ellis, and performed by Steve Ignorant and Eve Libertine . Released in 1985 on Crass Records , the record was accompanied by a book of 50 paintings by artist Gee Vaucher . Crass DEFAULTSORT Acts Of Love Category 1985 albums Category Penny Rimbaud albums Category Crass albums 1980s punk album stub ... more details
orphan date December 2008 The Calico Acts 1690 1721 banned the import of textiles into England , followed by the restriction of sale of most cotton textiles. The English East India Company quickly embraced the demand for Calico textile calico , importing exotic textiles from around the globe into England and creating competition for domestic textile factories. The calico question was one of the major issues of National politics between the 1690s and the 1720s. Parliament began to see a decline in domestic textile sales, and an increase in imported textiles from places like China and India . Seeing the East India Company and their textile importation as a threat to domestic textile businesses, Parliament passed the Calico Acts as an attack on textile importation. Dissatisfied with the smuggling of outside textiles after the original Calico Acts in 1721 , Parliament passed a stricter addition to the original Calico Acts, this time, prohibiting the sale of most cottons, imported and domestic, and promoting the sale of wool. References br 1. Woodruff Smith, Consumption and the Making of Respectability, 1600 1800 Category Acts of the Parliament of England ... more details
The text of the pseudepigraphy pseudepigraphical Acts of Barnabas claims to identify its author as John, surnamed Mark John Mark , the companion of Paul, as if writing an account of Barnabas , the Cypriot Jew who was a member of the earliest church at Jerusalem through the services of Barnabas the convert Saul was welcomed into the apostolic community. Three pseudepigraphical works are linked with the name of Barnabas the Epistle of Barnabas , written between AD 70 and 135, this Acts and the medieval forgery Gospel of Barnabas . None of them were accepted into the Biblical canon . The language and the ecclesiastical politics of Acts of Barnabas reveal it to be a work of the 5th century, designed to strengthen the claims of the church of Cyprus to apostolic foundation as the site of Barnabas grave, and therefore of its bishops independence from the patriarch of Antioch . These are 5th century concerns, the independence of the Church of Cyprus having been declared by the First Council of Ephesus in 431 and confirmed by Emperor Zeno emperor Zeno in 488. It was translated and edited by M. R. James ref In The Apocryphal New Testament, Oxford Clarendon Press, 1924. ref his version has remained a standard in English. Some have mistakenly assumed that the reference to a gospel used by Barnabas referred to in the Acts of Barnabas was the medieval Islamist forgery, the Gospel of Barnabas . However, this is clearly false, as the quotation reveals Barnabas, having unrolled the Gospel, which we have received from Matthew his fellow labourer, began to teach the Jews. By omitting this emphasized phrase in quoting this passage, the impression may be given that there is a Gospel of Barnabas ..., vol. VIII Acts of Barnabas The Journeyings and Martyrdom of St. Barnabas the Apostle e text in English http www.ub.rug.nl eldoc dis theology i.czachesz c8.pdf The Commission of John Mark in the Acts of Barnabas Notes references Category 5th century Christian texts Category Apocryphal Acts Barnabas ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Infobox Album See Wikipedia WikiProject Albums Name Acts of the Unspeakable Type studio Artist Autopsy band Autopsy Cover Autopsy acts of the unspeakable.jpg Released 1992 Recorded June, 1992 br Starlight Sound, br Richmond, California, USA Genre Doom metal Doom deathgrind deathgrindcore metal Length 35 22 Label Peaceville Records Producer Autopsy band Autopsy Reviews Last album Fiend for Blood br 1992 This album Acts of the Unspeakable br 1992 Next album Shitfun br 1995 Acts of the Unspeakable is the third album by the USA American death metal band Autopsy band Autopsy . It saw a progression into punk inspired death metal. Track listing Meat 2 38 Necrocannibalistic Vomitorium 2 11 Your Rotting Face 3 55 Blackness Within 1 44 An Act of the Unspeakable 2 25 Frozen with Fear 0 30 Spinal Extraction 0 21 Death Twitch 2 13 Skullptures 2 32 Pus Rot 4 01 Battery Acid Enema 1 47 Lobotomized 0 51 Funereality 2 53 Tortured Moans of Agony 0 45 Ugliness and Secretions 1 09 Orgy in Excrements 1 57 Voices 2 07 Walls of the Coffin 1 18 All music by Autopsy band Autopsy . All lyrics by Chris Reifert . Credits Chris Reifert vocals, drums Danny Coralles guitar Eric Cutler guitar Josh Barohn bass guitar Recorded June, 1992 at Starlight Sound, Richmond, California , USA Produced by Autopsy band Autopsy Engineered by Bill Thompson Assistant Engineered by Malcolm Sherwood and Jeff Fogerty Painting and logo by Kent Mathieu Autopsy DEFAULTSORT Acts Of The Unspeakable Category Autopsy albums Category 1992 albums fr Acts of the Unspeakable it Acts of the Unspeakable ... more details
Peel s Acts as they are commonly known were Act of Parliament Act s of the Parliament of the United Kingdom . They consolidated provisions from a large number of earlier statutes which were then repealed. Their purpose was to simplify the criminal law. The term refers to the Home Secretary who sponsored them, Sir Robert Peel . The Acts were the product of a failed attempt to codification law codify the criminal law. There were two separate sets of broadly identical Acts for England and Ireland respectively. They were replaced by the criminal law consolidation Acts 1861 . List The first four Acts on this list consolidated 316 Acts, representing almost four fifths of all offences. ref http law.jrank.org pages 866 Criminal Law Reform England Legislation 1823 1849.html JRANK ref England The Criminal Statutes Repeal Act 1827 7 & 8 Geo.4 c.27 The Larceny Act 1827 7 & 8 Geo.4 c.29 92 statutes The Malicious Injuries to Property Act 1827 7 & 8 Geo.4 c.30 48 statutes The Offences against the Person Act 1828 9 Geo.4 c.31 56 statutes The Forgery Act 1830 11 Geo.4 & 1 Will.4 c.66 120 statutes The following Act was sponsored according to law.jrank.org by Earl Grey and may or may not qualify for inclusion The Coinage Offences Act 1832 2 & 3 Will.4 c.34 Ireland Repeals 9 Geo.4 c.53 Larceny 9 Geo.4 c.55 Malicious Injuries to Property 9 Geo.4 c.56 Offences Against the Person 10 Geo.4 c.34 References Reflist Category English criminal law Category United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 1861 Category 1861 in law English criminal law navbox UK legislation statute stub ... more details
The Acts of Uziah is a lost text that may have been written by Isaiah , who was one of King Uzziah s contemporaries. The book is described in bibleref 2Chronicles 26 22 . The passage reads Now the rest of the acts of Uzziah, first and last, did Isaiah the prophet, the son of Amoz, write. This manuscript is sometimes called Second Isaiah or The Book by the prophet Isaiah . http www.apologeticspress.org articles 42 Christian text stub Tanakh stub reli book stub See also Table of books of Judeo Christian Scripture Lost books of the New Testament Lost work Category Lost Jewish texts tr Uzziya n n tarihi ... more details
The Acts of John is a 2nd century Christian collection of narratives and traditions, well described as a library of materials http www.gnosis.org library actjohn.htm , inspired by the Gospel of John , long known in fragmentary form. The traditional author was said to be one Leucius Charinus , a companion of John, who was associated with several 2nd century Acts . As a description of acts attributed to one of the major apostles who had put their words down into the New Testament, together with the Acts of Paul it is considered one of the most significant of the apostolic Acts in the New Testament apocrypha . It was traditionally ascribed to Prochorus , one of the Seven Deacons discussed in Acts of the Apostles . It contains two apocrypha l journeys of John to Ephesus , filled with dramatic events, miracles such as the collapse of the Temple of Artemis just as John is in the theater preaching to try to convert Artemis followers, anecdotes and well framed melodramatic speeches. It may have originated as a Christianized wonder tale, designed for an urbane Hellenic audience accustomed to such things ... orchestra Trippett . Though the Acts of John was condemned as heretical, a large fragment ... editor , The Apocryphal Acts of John 1995 brought together a series of eleven essays by various authors on the Acts of John and a bibliography Kampen, Netherlands Pharos . http keur.eldoc.ub.rug.nl ... actsjohn.html Early Christian Writings Acts of John e text consisting of 115 brief chapters, translated by M.R. James, and introductory material 1924 . http www.ntcanon.org Acts of John.shtml Glenn Davis, The development of the Canon of the New Testament Acts of John http www.gnosis.org library actjohn.htm Gnostic Scriptures and Fragments Acts of John http www.musicweb international.com holst ... 1999 http www.newadvent.org fathers 0827.htm Church Fathers Acts of John abbreviated translation of the Latin version Category Apocryphal Acts John it Atti di Giovanni la Acta Iohannis pl Dzieje Jana ... more details
Wireless refers to the transfer of information signals without using wires. The term may also refer to Wireless LAN , a wireless local area computer network WiMAX , a wireless wide area computer network Bluetooth , a wireless system for data communications between devices Wireless phone, a less often used name for a mobile phone mobile cellular phone Wireless, an old British term for radio Wirelesstelegraphy , an early form of radio technology Wireless TV series , a Canadian animated series Music Wireless band , a Canadian rock band from the 1970s and 1980s WirelessWireless album WirelessWireless album , 1976 debut album by the band WirelessWireless album Wireless album , 2003 album by the band Threshold Wireless Festival , a music festival held every year since 2005 in Hyde Park, London Other Wireless Hill , Macquarie Island, Australia disambig ... more details
Infobox Film name Balancing Acts image Balancing Acts.JPG image size caption director Donna Schatz producer writer Donna Schatz narrator starring music Gary Tong cinematography Donna Schatz editing David Vinson distributor released 2005 runtime country USA language English language English budget preceded by followed by Balancing Acts is a 2005 Documentary film documentary by Donna Schatz that chronicles the lives of Chinese people Chinese acrobatics acrobat Man Fong Tong and his wife Magda Schweitzer, a Jewish acrobatics acrobat from Budapest, Hungary . The two met in Europe on the eve of World War II. They were both at the peak of their careers, performing at the Moulin Rouge and Cirque Medrano, and alongside acts such as Maurice Chevalier and Bill Bojangles Robinson. While their careers were full of success, the spread of Nazism brought them great hardships. Their marriage saw the trials of wartime Europe, post war poverty, the birth of two sons, and a difficult ten year separation from one another. Summary Director Donna Schatz s Balancing Acts pairs archival footage and photographs of Magda Schweitzer and Man Fong Tong s acts with private home videos and interviews to tell their life .... Image Man, balancing acts.jpg thumb left Man Fong Tong performing Magda and Man Fong traveled with their acts .... References cite web last C. first Lia title Inside the Balancing Acts of Chinese Acrobat Man ... id 780 accessdate August 1 cite web title Balancing Acts 2005 work publisher IMDb date 2005 url ... Acts Ed Sullivan Show Chinese variety art Acrobatics Physical comedy Physical theatre External links official http www.imdb.com title tt0455337 Balancing Acts imdb title 0455337 Balancing Acts http www.asianconnections.com a ?article id 780 Inside the Balancing Acts of Chinese Acrobat Man Fong Tong http www.99geigerroad.com producers.htm A short video excerpt of Balancing Acts Quicktime scroll down ... s biography published in 2008, entitled Balancing Acts, with a short chapter excerpt Category 2004 ... more details
File RapeBoston.jpg thumb 300px This British cartoon depicting the Intolerable Acts as an assault upon ... The Intolerable Acts or the Coercive Acts are names used to describe a series of laws passed by the Parliament ... in North America . The acts triggered outrage and resistance in the Thirteen Colonies that later ... . Four of the acts were issued in direct response to the Boston Tea Party of December 1773 the British ... favorable to the French Catholic inhabitants of the region. Many colonists viewed the acts as an arbitrary ... tax revenue from the colonies. Parliament believed that these acts, such as the Stamp Act 1765 Stamp Act of 1765 and the Townshend Acts of 1767, were a legitimate means of having the colonies pay their fair ... and Townshend Acts, Parliament adhered to the position that it had the right to legislate ..., a view expressed by the slogan No taxation without representation . After the Townshend Acts, some ... 1774. Parliament responded with a series of acts that were intended to punish Boston for this destruction ... 1803 London, 1813 17 1280 1281. ref blockquote The Boston Port Act , the first of the acts passed ... Acts. The Quebec Act was a piece of legislation unrelated to the events in Boston, and so is not always regarded as one of the Coercive Acts. The timing of its passage led colonists to believe .... ref Ammerman, In the Common Cause , 11 12. ref Effects Many colonists saw the Coercive Acts as a violation ... charters. They therefore viewed the acts as a threat to the liberties of all of British America, not just Massachusetts. Richard Henry Lee of Virginia, for example, described the acts as a most wicked ... Acts drew the revolting hate against Britain even further. As a result of the Coercive Acts, even more colonists wanted to go against Britain. Great Britain hoped that the Coercive Acts would isolate ... of some of the acts made it difficult for moderates in the colonies to speak in favor of Parliament. The acts unintentionally promoted sympathy for Massachusetts and encouraged colonists from the otherwise ... more details