- Thomas Hobbes
Thomas Hobbes (5 April 1588 - 4 December 1679) was an English philosopher, whose famous 1651 book "Leviathan" established the agenda for nearly all subsequent Western political philosophy. Although Hobbes is today best remembered for his work on political philosophy, he contributed to a diverse array of fields, including history, geometry, theology, ethics, general philosophy, and what would now be called political science. - Paul Auster
Paul Benjamin Auster (born February 3, 1947, Newark, New Jersey) is a Brooklyn-based author. He is probably most famous for his collection, The New York Trilogy. He is also a poet, translator, editor, screenwriter, and, more recently, film director. - Julien Green
Julian Hartridge Green, or Julien Green, was a French born American author of several novels including "Léviathan" and "Each in His Own Darkness". He wrote primarily in French, but was not a French citizen. - Scott Kelly
Scott Kelly is one of three founding members of Oakland, California experimental hardcore band Neurosis. Has been writing and publishing music since 1985 with Neurosis, Tribes of Neurot, Blood and Time and his solo acoustic project. He has also appeared in other recordings, most notably Mastodon's "Leviathan" (2004) (on the song "Aqua Dementia") and "Blood Mountain" (2006) (on the song "Crystal Skull"). - Ian Edginton
Ian Edginton is a British comic book writer. He is one of the few British comic talents to follow the reverse trajectory to the one usually taken - he started with American comics and eventually ended up working for "2000 AD". Edginton sees part of the key to his success coming from good relationships with artists, especially D'Israeli and Steve Yeowell as well as Steve Pugh and Mike Collins. - D'Israeli
Matt Brooker, whose work most often appears under the pseudonym D'Israeli, is a British comic artist, colorist, writer and letterer. Other pseudonyms he uses include "Molly Eyre" (A pun on Molière), for his writing, and "Harry V. Derci"/"Digital Derci" for his lettering work. In 1988 he worked as the penciller on issues 7 to 12 of Mister X (Vortex) (volume two). His early work also includes the surreal "Timulo", … - Strobe Talbott
Nelson Strobridge "Strobe" Talbott III (born April 25, 1946 in Dayton, Ohio to Jo & Bud Talbott) is an American journalist associated with "Time" magazine, political scientist and diplomat who served as the Deputy Secretary of State from 1994 until 2001. He has also been a friend of Bill Clinton since their days as fellow Rhodes Scholars at the University of Oxford, where he translated Nikita Khrushchev's memoirs into English. - Samuel de Sorbiere
Samuel de Sorbière was a French philosopher and translator, best known for his promotion of the works of Pierre Gassendi and Thomas Hobbes. After relocating to the Netherlands, he published a French translation of Thomas More's "Utopia" in 1643. He arranged for the publication of Hobbes's "De Cive" in Amsterdam in 1647, published a French translation in 1649, published a French translation of "De Corpore Politico, or the Elements of Law" in 1652, … - Sandy Collora
Sandy Collora (born August 8 1968 in Long Island, New York) is an American film director and design artist, best known for the independent film "Batman: Dead End". Collora showed and artistic talent at a young age, and was reportedly disqualified from school art contests when judges thought his drawings were traced. After freelance assignments in comic books and gaming magazines, at age 17 he moved to Los Angeles to pursue his dreams in Hollywood. - Henry Digby
Admiral of the Blue Sir Henry Digby, GCB (20 January 1770 - 19 August 1842) was a senior British naval officer, who served in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars in the Royal Navy. He commanded HMS "Africa" at the Battle of Trafalgar, manoeuvering her into the French and Spanish fleet against orders, having been instructed by Nelson to avoid battle, fearing Digby's small ship of the line would be overwhelmed. Born in Bath to the Hon. - Oswald Wirth
Oswald Wirth (1860 - 1943) was a Swiss occultist, artist and author. He studied esotericism and symbolism with Stanislaus de Guaita, and created a set of Tarot trumps based on the Marseilles deck. His interests also included Freemasonry and astrology. Wirth is the artist responsible for the so-called Baphomet or Leviathan design of a goat head inside a pentagram that was modified for use as the logo for Anton LaVey's Church of Satan. - Stefan Lucks
Stefan Lucks is a researcher in the fields of communications security and cryptography. Lucks is known for his attack on Triple DES, and for extending Lars Knudsen's Square attack to Twofish, a cipher outside the Square family, thus generalising the attack into integral cryptanalysis. He has also co-authored attacks on AES, LEVIATHAN, and the E0 cipher used in Bluetooth devices, as well as publishing strong password-based key agreement schemes. - Henry Bayntun
Henry William Bayntun (1766 - 2 January 1815) was an officer in the Royal Navy. Bayntun was born in 1766 and entered the Royal Navy at an early age. He was commissioned lieutenant in 1783; given command of his first ship, the sloop HMS "Avenger"; and promoted by Sir John Jervis, after the reduction of Martinique in 1794. Later posted to the frigate HMS "Undaunted", Bayntun spent the next decade save a brief period in 1796 in the West Indies. - Edward Cowie
Edward Cowie (born Birmingham, England 1943) is an English composer, author and painter Experience of nature in his early years has influenced much of his work, such as the 1975 BBC Proms commission "Leviathan". His studies with Alexander Goehr and later with Witold Lutoslawski in Poland helped Cowie to develop a highly personal style, lyrical, freely atonal and rhythmically complex. Some of his later works have experimented with a return to tonality, … - Sir William Parker 1st Baronet
Admiral of the Fleet Sir William Parker, 1st Baronet, GCB (1 December 1781 – 13 November 1866) was born at Almington, Staffordshire, England. He was not related to the previous Admiral Sir William Parker. His father, George Parker, was the second son of Sir Thomas Parker, who had been lord chief baron of the exchequer. Sir Thomas Parker's nephew was John Jervis, 1st Earl of St Vincent. - Joseph Wallace Oman
Joseph Wallace Oman (1864-1941) was a Rear Admiral in the United States Navy and veteran of the Spanish-American War, the Philippine-American War, and World War I. He is a recipient of the Navy Cross. He was also the Governor of the United States Virgin Islands from 1919 to 1921. Oman was born in Light Street, Pennsylvania. He entered the United States Naval Academy in 1882 and graduated 4th in his class of 1886. - Arthur Hill 8th Marquess of Downshire
The 8th Marquess of Downshire, marksman and musical Marquess who re-settled his landed dynasty in North Yorkshire. The 8th Marquess of Downshire, the Hereditary Constable of Hillsborough Fort, who died on 18 December aged 74, successfully re-established his once-great Ulster-based landowning family in North Yorkshire after the Irish Land Acts and Bracknell New Town had largely deprived them of their original estates. - Marco Alberti
- Fabiola Tocca
- Eric Skipper
- Richard Marchewka
- Massimo Giovannucci
- Paola Giacomini
- Gaetanino Gorsetti
- Ed Thompson
- Field Gruser
- Steve Mesner
- Eric Graham
- Jeff Knaggs
- Leviathan
Le autodescrizioni sono per i froci e i pro-life. - Yan Leviathan
Avian - Queen Of The Insane. - Ernesto Leviathan
- Peter Leviathan
- Eros Leviathan
- Miss Leviathan
"But I don't want to go among. - Lt. Gen Leviathan
- Ken The Leviathan
- Leviathan
- Vic Vic Low/the Lyrical Leviathan
- Albino Leviathan
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