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Performance of Triumphs & Laments. One of Miller's most significant collaborators is the internationally acclaimed artist William Kentridge.His music to Kentridge's animated films and multimedia installations has been heard in some of the most prestigious museums, galleries and concert halls in the world, including MoMA, SFMOMA, The Guggenheim Museums (both New York and Berlin), Tate Modern ...
Rev. Rufus W. Miller, D.D. Brotherhood of Andrew and Philip was a fraternal evangelical religious organization founded in 1888 by Rufus W. Miller, of Philadelphia. He became president of the organization's general council. The organization held its first federal convention in New York City in 1893.
Philip Micklem (1876–1965), an Anglican priest who delivered the 1946 Bampton Lectures. The Bampton Lectures at the University of Oxford, England, were founded by a bequest of John Bampton. [1]
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
William Miller (February 15, 1782 – December 20, 1849) was an American clergyman who is credited with beginning the mid-19th-century North American religious movement known as Millerism. After his proclamation of the Second Coming did not occur as expected in the 1840s, new heirs of his message emerged, including the Advent Christians (1860 ...
While it seems then, that the vast majority of Miller’s followers were of local origin, his message was not limited to his local area—nor even to the United States. Miller preached across the border in Canada’s Eastern Townships on at least three occasions: in 1835, 1838 and 1840. He made a number of converts there and gained the support ...
Philip Edgcumbe Hughes (1915–1990) was an Anglican clergyman and New Testament scholar [1] whose life spanned four continents: Australia, where he was born; South Africa, where he spent his formative years; England, where he was ordained; and the United States, where he died in 1990, aged 75.
Philip Miller FRS (1691 – 18 December 1771) was an English botanist and gardener of Scottish descent. Miller was chief gardener at the Chelsea Physic Garden for nearly 50 years from 1722, and wrote the highly popular The Gardeners Dictionary .