Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mary_Findlater> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 59 of
59
with 100 triples per page.
- Mary_Findlater abstract "Mary Williamina Findlater (28 March 1865, Lochearnhead – 22 November 1963, St Fillans) was a Scottish novelist.Born in Perthshire as the daughter of a minister of the Free Church of Scotland, Findlater wrote novels and poetry both alone (Songs and Sonnets, 1895; Betty Musgrave, 1899; A Narrow Way, 1901; The Rose of Joy, 1903; and others) and together with her sister Jane (Tales That Are Told, 1901; Beneath the Visiting Moon, 1923; etc.), with whom she lived until the latter's death in 1946. Their best-known and most widely admired collaboration is the novel Crossriggs (1908), re-issued in 1986 by Virago Press.".
- Mary_Findlater country Scotland.
- Mary_Findlater country United_Kingdom.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageID "1709823".
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageLength "1328".
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageOutDegree "15".
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageRevisionID "704846696".
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink A_Narrow_Way.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Betty_Musgrave.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Category:1865_births.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Category:1963_deaths.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_British_novelists.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_women_writers.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Category:Scottish_women_novelists.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Free_Church_of_Scotland_(1843–1900).
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Jane_Findlater.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Scottish_novelists.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Lochearnhead.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Perthshire.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink St_Fillans.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink The_Rose_of_Joy.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLink Virago_Press.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mary Findlater".
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mary".
- Mary_Findlater by "yes".
- Mary_Findlater id "Findlater,+Mary".
- Mary_Findlater name "Mary Findlater".
- Mary_Findlater onlinebooksby "yes".
- Mary_Findlater viaf "117209777".
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Gutenberg_author.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Internet_Archive_author.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Library_resources_box.
- Mary_Findlater wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Scotland-writer-stub.
- Mary_Findlater subject Category:1865_births.
- Mary_Findlater subject Category:1963_deaths.
- Mary_Findlater subject Category:20th-century_British_novelists.
- Mary_Findlater subject Category:20th-century_women_writers.
- Mary_Findlater subject Category:Scottish_women_novelists.
- Mary_Findlater hypernym Novelist.
- Mary_Findlater type Agent.
- Mary_Findlater type Person.
- Mary_Findlater type Writer.
- Mary_Findlater type Person.
- Mary_Findlater type Writer.
- Mary_Findlater type Agent.
- Mary_Findlater type NaturalPerson.
- Mary_Findlater type Thing.
- Mary_Findlater type Q215627.
- Mary_Findlater type Q36180.
- Mary_Findlater type Q5.
- Mary_Findlater type Person.
- Mary_Findlater comment "Mary Williamina Findlater (28 March 1865, Lochearnhead – 22 November 1963, St Fillans) was a Scottish novelist.Born in Perthshire as the daughter of a minister of the Free Church of Scotland, Findlater wrote novels and poetry both alone (Songs and Sonnets, 1895; Betty Musgrave, 1899; A Narrow Way, 1901; The Rose of Joy, 1903; and others) and together with her sister Jane (Tales That Are Told, 1901; Beneath the Visiting Moon, 1923; etc.), with whom she lived until the latter's death in 1946.".
- Mary_Findlater label "Mary Findlater".
- Mary_Findlater sameAs Q6779532.
- Mary_Findlater sameAs m.05q6cl.
- Mary_Findlater sameAs Q6779532.
- Mary_Findlater wasDerivedFrom Mary_Findlater?oldid=704846696.
- Mary_Findlater isPrimaryTopicOf Mary_Findlater.