Richard Dawes may refer to:
Richard Dawes was an English classical scholar.
Thomas Kidd was an English classical scholar and schoolmaster.
Carel Gabriel Cobet was a Dutch classical scholar.
David, Dave, or Dai Thomas may refer to:
Farnell is a surname, thought to originate from "Fern Hill". It is most common in the English county of Yorkshire. Notable people with the surname include:
Paul Morris may refer to:
Gerald Dawe is an Irish poet.
James Duff may refer to:
Richard Dawes was an English cleric and educationalist. He was the Dean of Hereford from 1850.
Gilkes is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Richard Bentley (1662–1742) was an English theologian, classical scholar and critic.
Driver is a surname of German origin, which referred to someone from the ancient Celtic tribe of Treveri who once inhabited the lower valley of the Moselle between France, Belgium and Germany. The name was originally Trever and has other variants such as Treviri, Triver, Trevor, or Trier. In England, it is an occupational surname meaning the driver of horses or oxen attached to a cart or plough, or of loose cattle. It is recorded since the thirteenth century.
Dawes is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Morant is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Richard Jebb may refer to:
Richard Knight may refer to:
Verity is a female first name and a surname. As a first name it derives from the Latin feminine noun veritas, meaning "truth". It is thus an equivalent of Alethea, a female first name first used in England circa 1585, derived from the ancient and modern Greek feminine noun αλήθεια, meaning "truth". It was adopted in England as a Puritan and Quaker virtue name, truthfulness being considered as a desirable attribute especially in a female, and following a new Protestant tradition of naming children after virtues instead of saints in order to avoid idolatry.
Canter is a surname. It is or has been borne in different countries by various unrelated families or families with no known connection to each other. These include English(?)-American Canters whose earliest known possible ancestor is an 18th-century Thomas Canter of Maryland; Jewish-American Canters such as the Kentucky author Mark Canter and the Canter family that opened Canter's Deli in Los Angeles; a learned medieval and early modern Canter family of Groningen and Friesland, prominent in various branches of learning and in politics; Canters who are related to the Caunter family of Devon, etc.
Morell is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include:
Elizabeth Anna Sophia Dawes (1864–1954) was a 19th-century British classical scholar and the first woman to receive a DLitt degree from the University of London.