-
Gregor von
Feinaigle (22
August 1760 – 27
December 1819) was a
German mnemonist and
Roman Catholic monk.
Feinaigle was born in
Ueberlingen on 22 August...
- Sowersby, 1661;
extracts in
Gregor von
Feinaigle's New Art of Memory, 3rd ed., 1813. A
simplified form of
Feinaigle's method was
published by Aimé
Paris (Principes...
- both
consonants and
vowels to
represent the digits. In 1808
Gregor von
Feinaigle introduced the
improvement of
representing the
digits by
consonants (but...
-
remained uninhabited between 1802 and 1813. In 1813,
Professor Gregor von
Feinaigle leased the
building from
Wingfield and
opened it as a school. To support...
-
Luxemburg School, near Dublin, one of
those established by
Gregor von
Feinaigle. In 1831 he
entered Trinity College, Dublin,
where he
graduated B.A. in...
- Messrs. John Brown, John
Howard Clark, Davy, Doswell,
Charles Gregory Feinaigle, Gilbert, Gosse, Hamilton, D. Hammond, W. B. Hays, Jones, Kay, Mann, W...
-
Christian Ac****, from 1809;
Samuel Wesley, in 1809 and 1811.
Gregor von
Feinaigle, in 1811; John
Mason Good in 1811–2;
Olinthus Gilbert Gregory in 1812;...
-
enrolled in the
first year. The
school is
still open today.
Gregor von
Feinaigle, a
former Cistercian and educationalist,
moved to
Dublin in 1813. He gave...
- Almanack, was also
involved in the project.
Headmaster Charles Gregory Feinaigle (c. 1817 – 10
March 1880),
before 1860
spelled "Feinagle",
opened a private...
- He was, with Bonwick, W. A. Cawthorne,
Arthur E. Dodwell,
Charles G.
Feinaigle, P. Fox,
James Macgowan, Nesbit, W. Pepper, Rider, Ross, and E. W. Wickes...