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NORTHAMPTON

  • 1 Northampton

    сущ. Нортгемптон( шир)
    Northampton

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > Northampton

  • 2 Northampton

    (Place names) Northampton /nɔ:ˈɵæm(p)tən, -ɵˈh-, nəˈɵ-/

    English-Italian dictionary > Northampton

  • 3 Northampton

    1) Общая лексика: Нортгемптон, г. Нортгемптон
    2) География: (г.) Нортхемптон (адм. центр граф. Нортхемптоншир, Англия, Великобритания), Нортгемптоншир (графство Англии)

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Northampton

  • 4 Northampton

    [nɔː`θæm(p)təm]
    Нортгемптон
    Нортгемптон (Англия)
    Нортгемптон (США, штат Массачусетс)

    Англо-русский большой универсальный переводческий словарь > Northampton

  • 5 Northampton

    n геогр. н.
    Нортгемптон (шир)

    English-Ukrainian dictionary > Northampton

  • 6 Northampton

    [nɔ:maemptən]
    proper name
    ime angl. mesfa

    English-Slovenian dictionary > Northampton

  • 7 Northampton

    г. Нортхемптон (адм. центр граф. Нортхемптоншир, Англия, Великобритания); Нортгемптоншир (графство Англии)
    * * *
    I
    Нортгемптон (Великобритания, Англия)
    II

    Англо-русский географический словарь > Northampton

  • 8 Northampton

    • okres v USA
    • město - Velká Británie

    English-Czech dictionary > Northampton

  • 9 northampton

    (0) нортхемптон
    * * *
    Нортгемптон, см. Northamptonshire

    Новый англо-русский словарь > northampton

  • 10 Northampton

    [nɔ:ʹθæm(p)tən] n геогр.
    1. Нортгемптон; см. Northamptonshire
    2. г. Нортгемптон

    НБАРС > Northampton

  • 11 Northampton

    Нортхемптон Город в Великобритании (Англия), административный центр графства Нортхемптоншир. 184 тыс. жителей (1991). Крупная кожевенно-обувная промышленность, машиностроение. Впервые упоминается в 914.

    Англо-русский словарь географических названий > Northampton

  • 12 Northampton

    [nɔː'θæmptən]
    = Northamptonshire

    English-Ukrainian transcription dictionary > Northampton

  • 13 Northampton

    Нортгемптон

    English-Russian dictionary of technical terms > Northampton

  • 14 Northampton

    [ˌnɔː'θæm(p)tən]
    сущ.; геогр.
    1)
    а) Нортгемптон (город в Англии, в графстве Нортгемптоншир)
    б) = Northamptonshire Нортгемптон, Нортгемптоншир ( графство Англии)
    2) Нортгемптон (город в США, штат Массачусетс)

    Англо-русский современный словарь > Northampton

  • 15 Northampton

    Англо-русский синонимический словарь > Northampton

  • 16 Northampton

    n геогр. Нортгемптон

    English-Russian base dictionary > Northampton

  • 17 Northampton

    n
    ნორტჰემპტონი

    English-Georgian dictionary > Northampton

  • 18 Northamptonshire

    Northampton(shire) noun Нортгемптон(шир)

    Англо-русский словарь Мюллера > Northamptonshire

  • 19 Yeoman, Thomas

    SUBJECT AREA: Civil engineering
    [br]
    b. c. 1700 probably near Northampton, England
    d. 24 January 1781 London, England
    [br]
    English surveyor and civil engineer.
    [br]
    Very little is known of his early life, but he was clearly a skilful and gifted engineer who had received comprehensive practical training, for in 1743 he erected the machinery in the world's first water-powered cotton mill at Northampton on the river Nene. In 1748 he invented a weighing machine for use by turnpike trusts for weighing wagons. Until 1757 he remained in Northampton, mainly surveying enclosures and turnpike roads and making agricultural machinery. He also gained a national reputation for building and installing very successful ventilating equipment (invented by Dr Stephen Hales) in hospitals, prisons and ships, including some ventilators of Yeoman's own design in the Houses of Parliament.
    Meanwhile he developed an interest in river improvements, and in 1744 he made his first survey of the River Nene between Thrapston and Northampton; he repeated the survey in 1753 and subsequently gave evidence in parliamentary proceedings in 1756. The following year he was in Gloucestershire surveying the line of the Stroudwater Canal, an operation that he repeated in 1776. Also in 1757, he was appointed Surveyor to the River Ivel Navigation in Bedfordshire. In 1761 he was back on the Nene. During 1762–5 he carried out surveys for the Chelmer \& Blackwater Navigation, although the work was not undertaken for another thirty years. In 1765 he reported on land-drainage improvements for the Kentish Sour. It was at this time that he became associated with John Smeaton in a major survey in 1766 of the river Lea for the Lee Navigation Trustees, having already made some surveys with Joseph Nickalls near Waltham Abbey in 1762. Yeoman modified some of Smeaton's proposals and on 1 July 1767 was officially appointed Surveyor to the Lee Navigation Trustees, a post he retained until 1771. He also advised on the work to create the Stort Navigation, and at the official opening on 24 October 1769 he made a formal speech announcing: "Now is Bishops Stortford open to all the ports of the world." Among his other works were: advice on Ferriby Sluice on the River Ancholme (1766); reports on the Forth \& Clyde Canal, the North Level and Wisbech outfall on the Nene, the Coventry Canal, and estimates for the Leeds and Selby Canal (1768–71); estimates for the extension of the Medway Navigation from Tonbridge to Edenbridge (1771); and between 1767 and 1777 he was consulted, with other engineers, by the City of London on problems regarding the Thames.
    He joined the Northampton Philosophical Society shortly after its formation in 1743 and was President several times before he moved to London. In 1760 he became a member of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce, and in 1763 he was chosen as joint Chairman of the Committee on Mechanics—a position he held until 1778. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society on 12 January 1764. On the formation of the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers, the forerunner of the present Institution of Civil Engineers, he was elected first President in 1771, remaining as such until his illness in 1780.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    FRS 1764. President, Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers 1771–80; Treasurer 1771–7.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Yeoman, Thomas

  • 20 Wyatt, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Metallurgy, Textiles
    [br]
    b. April 1700 Thickbroom, Weeford, near Lichfield, England
    d. 29 November 1766 Birmingham, England
    [br]
    English inventor of machines for making files and rolling lead, and co-constructor of a cotton-spinning machine.
    [br]
    John Wyatt was the eldest son of John and Jane Wyatt, who lived in the small village of Thickbroom in the parish of Weeford, near Lichfield. John the younger was educated at Lichfield school and then worked as a carpenter at Thickbroom till 1730. In 1732 he was in Birmingham, engaged by a man named Heely, a gunbarrel forger, who became bankrupt in 1734. Wyatt had invented a machine for making files and sought the help of Lewis Paul to manufacture this commercially.
    The surviving papers of Paul and Wyatt in Birmingham are mostly undated and show a variety of machines with which they were involved. There was a machine for "making lead hard" which had rollers, and "a Gymcrak of some consequence" probably refers to a machine for boring barrels or the file-making machine. Wyatt is said to have been one of the unsuccessful competitors for the erection of London Bridge in 1736. He invented and perfected the compound-lever weighing machine. He had more success with this: after 1744, machines for weighing up to five tons were set up at Birmingham, Chester, Gloucester, Hereford, Lichfield and Liverpool. Road construction, bridge building, hydrostatics, canals, water-powered engines and many other schemes received his attention and it is said that he was employed for a time after 1744 by Matthew Boulton.
    It is certain that in April 1735 Paul and Wyatt were working on their spinning machine and Wyatt was making a model of it in London in 1736, giving up his work in Birmingham. The first patent, in 1738, was taken out in the name of Lewis Paul. It is impossible to know which of these two invented what. This first patent covers a wide variety of descriptions of the vital roller drafting to draw out the fibres, and it is unknown which system was actually used. Paul's carding patent of 1748 and his second spinning patent of 1758 show that he moved away from the system and principles upon which Arkwright built his success. Wyatt and Paul's spinning machines were sufficiently promising for a mill to be set up in 1741 at the Upper Priory, Birmingham, that was powered by two asses. Wyatt was the person responsible for constructing the machinery. Edward Cave established another at Northampton powered by water while later Daniel Bourn built yet another at Leominster. Many others were interested too. The Birmingham mill did not work for long and seems to have been given up in 1743. Wyatt was imprisoned for debt in The Fleet in 1742, and when released in 1743 he tried for a time to run the Birmingham mill and possibly the Northampton one. The one at Leominster burned down in 1754, while the Northampton mill was advertised for sale in 1756. This last mill may have been used again in conjunction with the 1758 patent. It was Wyatt whom Daniel Bourn contacted about a grant for spindles for his Leominster mill in 1748, but this seems to have been Wyatt's last association with the spinning venture.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    G.J.French, 1859, The Life and Times of Samuel Crompton, London (French collected many of the Paul and Wyatt papers; these should be read in conjunction with Hills 1970).
    R.L.Hills, 1970, Power in the Industrial Revolution, Manchester (Hills shows that the rollerdrafting system on this spinning machine worked on the wrong principles). A.P.Wadsworth and J.de L.Mann, 1931, The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire, 1600–1780, Manchester (provides good coverage of the partnership of Paul and Wyatt and of the early mills).
    E.Baines, 1835, History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain, London (this publication must be mentioned, although it is now out of date).
    W.English, 1969, The Textile Industry, London (a more recent account).
    W.A.Benton, "John Wyatt and the weighing of heavy loads", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 9 (for a description of Wyatt's weighing machine).
    RLH

    Biographical history of technology > Wyatt, John

См. также в других словарях:

  • Northampton — • Diocese in England Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Northampton     Northampton     † …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Northampton — Northampton, NY U.S. Census Designated Place in New York Population (2000): 468 Housing Units (2000): 205 Land area (2000): 9.077732 sq. miles (23.511218 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.102168 sq. miles (0.264613 sq. km) Total area (2000): 9.179900… …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

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  • Northampton, MA — U.S. city in Massachusetts Population (2000): 28978 Housing Units (2000): 12405 Land area (2000): 34.458001 sq. miles (89.245810 sq. km) Water area (2000): 1.139038 sq. miles (2.950095 sq. km) Total area (2000): 35.597039 sq. miles (92.195905 sq …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

  • Northampton, NY — U.S. Census Designated Place in New York Population (2000): 468 Housing Units (2000): 205 Land area (2000): 9.077732 sq. miles (23.511218 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.102168 sq. miles (0.264613 sq. km) Total area (2000): 9.179900 sq. miles… …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

  • Northampton, PA — U.S. borough in Pennsylvania Population (2000): 9405 Housing Units (2000): 4023 Land area (2000): 2.598733 sq. miles (6.730688 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.099729 sq. miles (0.258296 sq. km) Total area (2000): 2.698462 sq. miles (6.988984 sq. km) …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

  • Northampton — es una extensa población comercial y un distrito local de Inglaterra. Está situado sobre el río Nene en el condado de Northamptonshire. En el año 2002 tenía una población de 194,122 habitantes. En el pasado era un conocido centro manufacturero de …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Northampton —   [nɔː θæmptən], Hauptstadt der County Northamptonshire, Mittelengland, 179 600 Einwohner; wurde 1968 zur New Town bestimmt; katholischer Bischofssitz; Museen, Kunstgalerie. Northampton ist Hauptsitz der englischen Schuhindustrie, ferner… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Northampton — (spr. Nohrshämmt n), 1) Grafschaft in England, im Binnenlande gelegen; 47,75 QM., hügelig; Flüsse: Nee, Welland, Ouse u.a.; bringt Getreide, Gartenfrüchte, Flachs, Hopfen, Waid, die gewöhnlichen Hausthiere, Damhirsche; Töpferthon; 1851: 218,784… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Northampton — (spr. northämt n), 1) Stadt und Grafschaft im Innern Englands, am schiffbaren Neu, eine alle Stadt mit Häusern aus rötlichen Quadersteinen, zahlreichen Kirchen, unter denen besonders die Rundkirche St. Sepulchre s (von 1127) und die Kirche St.… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Northampton — (spr. nohrthämmt n). 1) Grafschaft im mittlern England, 2598 qkm, (1901) 338.064 E.; meist eben und gut bewässert. – Die Hauptstadt N. am Nen, (1904) 91.946 E.; normann. St. Peterskirche; Schuhfabrikation; Eisen und Messingwarenindustrie; Handel… …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

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