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1 Owen
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2 Owen
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3 Owen
m.1 Owen, Sir Richard Owen.2 Owen, Robert Owen. -
4 Owen-Messbrücke
Deutsch-Englisch Wörterbuch der Elektrotechnik und Elektronik > Owen-Messbrücke
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5 Owen, Robert
SUBJECT AREA: Textiles[br]b. 14 May 1771 Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Walesd. 17 November 1858 Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales[br]Welsh cotton spinner and social reformer.[br]Robert Owen's father was also called Robert and was a saddler, ironmonger and postmaster of Newtown in Montgomeryshire. Robert, the younger, injured his digestion as a child by drinking some scalding hot "flummery", which affected him for the rest of his life. He developed a passion for reading and through this visited London when he was 10 years old. He started work as a pedlar for someone in Stamford and then went to a haberdasher's shop on old London Bridge in London. Although he found the work there too hard, he stayed in the same type of employment when he moved to Manchester.In Manchester Owen soon set up a partnership for making bonnet frames, employing forty workers, but he sold the business and bought a spinning machine. This led him in 1790 into another partnership, with James M'Connel and John Kennedy in a spinning mill, but he moved once again to become Manager of Peter Drink-water's mill. These were all involved in fine spinning, and Drinkwater employed 500 people in one of the best mills in the city. In spite of his youth, Owen claims in his autobiography (1857) that he mastered the job within six weeks and soon improved the spinning. This mill was one of the first to use Sea Island cotton from the West Indies. To have managed such an enterprise so well Owen must have had both managerial and technical ability. Through his spinning connections Owen visited Glasgow, where he met both David Dale and his daughter Anne Caroline, whom he married in 1799. It was this connection which brought him to Dale's New Lanark mills, which he persuaded Dale to sell to a Manchester consortium for £60,000. Owen took over the management of the mills on 1 January 1800. Although he had tried to carry out social reforms in the manner of working at Manchester, it was at New Lanark that Owen acquired fame for the way in which he improved both working and living conditions for the 1,500-strong workforce. He started by seeing that adequate food and groceries were available in that remote site and then built both the school and the New Institution for the Formation of Character, which opened in January 1816. To the pauper children from the Glasgow and Edinburgh slums he gave a good education, while he tried to help the rest of the workforce through activities at the Institution. The "silent monitors" hanging on the textile machines, showing the performance of their operatives, are famous, and many came to see his social experiments. Owen was soon to buy out his original partners for £84,000.Among his social reforms were his efforts to limit child labour in mills, resulting in the Factory Act of 1819. He attempted to establish an ideal community in the USA, to which he sailed in 1824. He was to return to his village of "Harmony" twice more, but broke his connection in 1828. The following year he finally withdrew from New Lanark, where some of his social reforms had been abandoned.[br]Bibliography1857, The Life of Robert Owen, Written by Himself, London.Further ReadingG.D.H.Cole, 1965, Life of Robert Owen (biography).J.Butt (ed.), 1971, Robert Owen, Prince of Cotton Spinners, Newton Abbot; S.Pollard and J.Salt (eds), 1971, Robert Owen, Prophet of the Poor. Essays in Honour of theTwo-Hundredth Anniversary of His Birth, London (both describe Owen's work at New Lanark).RLH -
6 Owen-Messbrücke
f <el> ■ Owen bridge -
7 Owen, Patterson, & Owen
Law: OPOУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Owen, Patterson, & Owen
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8 Owen J. Roberts School District
School: OJRУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Owen J. Roberts School District
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9 Owen's King's Bench Reports
Law: Ow.Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Owen's King's Bench Reports
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10 Owen, Robert
(1771–1858) Gen MgtBritish industrialist, and social reformer. Owner of a factory at New Lanark that he ran on model lines, pioneering improved working and living conditions for his employees. Author of A New View of Society (1813). -
11 Roberto Owen
m.Robert Owen. -
12 Billy Bishop Regional Airport, Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada
Airports: YOSУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Billy Bishop Regional Airport, Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada
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13 Buddy Owen
Names and surnames: BO -
14 Charles Owen Dexter
Names and surnames: CODУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Charles Owen Dexter
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15 Howard B Owen
Names and surnames: HBO -
16 William Owen Artworks and Fine Art
Trademark term: WOAFAУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > William Owen Artworks and Fine Art
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17 Thomas, Hugh Owen
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 1833 Anglesey, North Walesd. 6 January 1891 Liverpool, England[br]Welsh orthopaedic surgeon, a founder of modern orthopaedics and inventor of Thomas's splints.[br]Eldest son of a bone-setter, he studied at University College London, Edinburgh and Paris and became a member of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1857. Three years later he commenced practice in Liverpool, but he was never appointed to the staff of a hospital. Over the next twenty years he not only developed his own approach to orthopaedic practice, but also promoted a number of advances in other aspects of medicine such as epilepsy.Of a mechanical (as well as musical) bent of mind, he had his own workshop and over some twenty years developed his pattern of splints for fractures. In 1877 Rushton Parker, later Professor of Surgery at Liverpool, expressed his admiration of the splints. This led to the publication of their details and shortly after to their wide acceptance.Thomas's nephew Robert Jones was collaborating with him on a book on orthopaedics at the time of his death and went on to continue the tradition of what has been called the Liverpool School of orthopaedics.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsHonorary MD University of St Louis c. 1880.Bibliography1875, Diseases of the Hip, Knee and Ankle-joints.Further ReadingA.W.Beasley, 1982, The origins of orthopaedies', Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 75.MG -
18 Оуэн
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19 мост Оуэна
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20 Водопад Оуэн
См. также в других словарях:
Owen — hace referencia a: Michael Owen, futbolista inglés; Owen Willans Richardson, físico británico, premio Nobel de Física en 1928; Richard Owen, médico, biólogo y paleontólogo británico; Owen una ciudad en el Distrito de Esslingen en Alemania; Robert … Wikipedia Español
OWEN (R.) — OWEN ROBERT (1771 1858) Né au pays de Galles, Robert Owen partit de rien et devint à vingt huit ans le propriétaire d’une importante manufacture de coton à New Lanark (Écosse). Industriel philanthrope, paternaliste et autoritaire, il en fait une… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Owen — Owen, Robert Owen, Wilfred * * * (as used in expressions) Gehry, Frank O(wen) Glendower, Owen Owen, Robert Owen, Robert Dale Owen, Wilfred Wister, Owen … Enciclopedia Universal
Owen's — may refer to: Owen s Defence, a chess opening Owen s Market, an Indiana grocery store chain owned by Kroger See also Owens (disambiguation) This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an … Wikipedia
Owen — Owen, WI U.S. city in Wisconsin Population (2000): 936 Housing Units (2000): 455 Land area (2000): 1.831942 sq. miles (4.744707 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.025901 sq. miles (0.067083 sq. km) Total area (2000): 1.857843 sq. miles (4.811790 sq.… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Owen, WI — U.S. city in Wisconsin Population (2000): 936 Housing Units (2000): 455 Land area (2000): 1.831942 sq. miles (4.744707 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.025901 sq. miles (0.067083 sq. km) Total area (2000): 1.857843 sq. miles (4.811790 sq. km) FIPS… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Owen [2] — Owen (spr. Oh n), 1) Grafschaft im Staate [532] Kentucky (Nordamerika), 16 QM., im Westen vom Kentucky River, im Osten vom Eagle Creek begrenzt; Producte: Mais, Weizen, Hafer, Tabak; 1819 organisirt u. genannt nach Oberst Abram Owen, welcher in… … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Owen [2] — Owen (spr. ō n), 1) John (latinisiert Audoenus oder Ovenus), neulat. Dichter, geb. 1560 zu Armon in Wales, gest. 1622 in London, studierte in Oxford die Rechte, nahm aber wegen Armut 1591 eine Schullehrerstelle in Cryleigh und 1594 in Warwick an … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Owen [2] — Owen (spr. ōĕn), Sir Rich., engl. Naturforscher, geb. 20. Juni 1804 zu Lancaster, Prof. und Oberaufseher der naturwiss. Fächer im Brit. Museum in London, gest. das. 16. Dez. 1892; schrieb: »Odontography« (2 Bde., 1840 45), »Lectures of… … Kleines Konversations-Lexikon
Owen — (Gérald Berthot, dit Thomas) (né en 1910) écrivain belge d expression française, l un des maîtres du genre fantastique. Parmi ses romans et ses nombr. contes, citons: Initiation à la peur (1942), Pitié pour les ombres (1961), le Rat Kavar (1975) … Encyclopédie Universelle
Owen — Celtic proper name, ultimately from Gk. eugenes well born; via Gael. Eoghann, O.Ir. Eogan, O.Welsh Eugein, Ougein. In Medieval records, frequently Latinized as Eugenius; the form Eugene emerged in Scotland by late 12c. The Breton form Even led to … Etymology dictionary