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2 unusual facts about USS PCS-1376


USS PCS-1376

Later in her career, she was named Winder after Winder, Georgia, becoming the only U.S. Navy ship of that name.

PCS-1376 was laid down on 13 October 1942 at the Wheeler Shipbuilding Corporation in Whitestone, New York; launched on 3 April 1943, sponsored by Mrs. J. E. Flipse; and commissioned on 9 July 1943, with Lieutenant (j.g.) Jack Pierpont Morgan, III, USNR, son of the American financier J. P. Morgan, Jr., in command.


An Arundel Tomb

The poem describes a medieval tomb that can be found in Chichester Cathedral; the tomb is of Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel (d. 1376), and his second wife, Eleanor of Lancaster (d. 1372), with their dogs at their feet.

Carlo I Tocco

Leonardo I Tocco (who was count of Cephalonia 1357–1376 and duke of Leukas 1362–1376) was himself the son of Guglielmo II Tocco (governor of Cephalonia 1328–1335) and Margherita Orsini, sister of Nicholas Orsini and John II Orsini, rulers of Epirus and counts of Cephalonia.

Foča

With Gornje Podrinje Foča was part of the old Serbian State up to 1376, when it was attached to the Bosnian State under the reign of King Tvrtko.

Hee-kyung

Song Hui-gyeong (1376–1446), Joseon Dynasty male scholar and official

Henry of Niemodlin

Henry maintained a long-lasting dispute with the Bishop of Wroclaw, Przecław z Pogorzeli for the possession of the Jawornik castle, which only ended with the Bishop's death in 1376.

History of the English line of succession

# Edmund Mortimer (b. 1376), brother of Roger and great-grandson of Edward III

Jaunpur district

Firoz Shah III began the construction of the Atala mosque in 1393 on the site of the Atala Devi temple which he had demolished in 1376.

John Peche

John married 1st Alice Hayward (b. 1310), and had a daughter, Joan Peche (b. 1332), and a son John Pecche (1332–1376) who was born in Hampton-in-Arden, Warwickshire.

Jonen

In 1376 Duke Leopold of Austria pledged the rights to the low justice in the Kelleramt (of which Jonen was part) to Gottfried Milliner of Zurich.

Kamyanyets

In 1366, it was incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and in 1376 it was burnt by Teutonic Crusaders but rapidly rebuilt.

Lay Abbey

This was the case, for example, of the lay abbey of Aramits, built in "domengeadure", that is to say as a noble house by Gaston Phoebus around 1376.

Margaret of the Palatinate

Margaret of the Palatinate (1376 – 26 August 1434, Einville-au-Jard) (German Margarete von der Pfalz) was the daughter of Rupert of Germany and his wife Elisabeth of Nuremberg.

Newaya Maryam

During his reign, Haqq ad-Din II of the Walasma dynasty gained control of the kingdom of Ifat on the southeastern frontier of Ethiopia in 1376, and began raids against the Empire.

Ostwald, Bas-Rhin

The plague of 1348 and mercenary raids in 1365 and 1376 decimated the population.

Ralph de Stafford, 1st Earl of Stafford

On 25 December 1357, she married Sir John de Sutton III (1339 – c. 1370 or 1376), Knight, Master of Dudley Castle, Staffordshire.

Richard FitzAlan

Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel (c. 1306–1376), English nobleman and medieval military leader

Sieglinde Hartmann

As researcher, she mainly focuses on Medieval German literature, especially Oswald von Wolkenstein (ca. 1376/77-1445), a widely travelled knight, considered to be the most important German composer and poet of the Late Middle Ages.

St. George's Oratory, Padua

George's Oratory, in Padua, Italy, is a Roman Catholic church built by the Marquis Soragna Raimondino Lupi in 1376 as family chapel after the family had settled down in Padua.

Wenceslaus I, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg

On 23 January 1376 Wenceslas married Cecilia of Carrara (d. 1435), daughter of Francis of Carrara (born 29 September 1325 in Padua – died 6 October 1393 in Monza), Count of Padua.


see also