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The Elder Scrolls Online, abbreviated ESO, is a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by ZeniMax Online Studios and published by Bethesda Softworks. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The game is a part of the Elder Scrolls series.
ESO 383-76 would be additionally recorded in many subsequent galaxy surveys, such as the survey of the Hydra–Centaurus Supercluster by L.N. da Costa et al in 1986, [10] and moreover a photometric catalogue by Lauberts and Valentijn in 1989 that made the first angular diameter measurements of the galaxy. [11]
Warden differs from Douhet in assigning leadership the highest priority, where Douhet espoused attacking the morale of populations. This made Warden's theory more applicable for attacking developing and weaker regimes, while Douhet's theories were based on stronger nations engaged in large conventional wars as was the concern in interwar Europe.
Warden's son Rupert Warden James (1893-1965) was a sea cadet at the Thames Nautical Training College (HMS Worcester) in the 1911 census. He died at Gosport in 1965. Warden’s older daughter Leslie Gertrude died unmarried in Westminster in 1956. [10] Her younger daughter Olivia Mary died, also unmarried, in Chelsea in 1982, aged ninety. [11]
HMS Lord Warden was the second and last ship of the wooden-hulled Lord Clyde class of armoured frigates [Note 1] built for the Royal Navy (RN) during the 1860s. She and her sister ship, Lord Clyde, were the heaviest wooden ships ever built and were also the fastest steaming wooden ships. They were also the slowest-sailing ironclads in the RN. [1]
The tunnel into which they fly is the Old Warden Tunnel near the village of the same name in Bedfordshire; the tunnel had only recently been closed, and in the panning shot through the railway cutting, the cooling towers of the now-demolished Goldington power station can be seen.
While this is the most-cited etymology, including by the Corps themselves, [8] some etymologists have noted the term's similarity to hláf-æta, the Old English term for a menial servant, lit. "loaf-eater", the counterpart of hlaford "loaf-warden" and hlæfdige, which became "lord" and "lady" respectively. [9]
The warden, who lives with his other child, his unmarried younger daughter Eleanor, performs his duties conscientiously. The story concerns the impact upon Harding and his circle when a zealous young reformer, John Bold, launches a campaign to expose the disparity in the apportionment of the charity's income between its object, the bedesmen ...