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Authority record
Aho, Kalevi
https://lccn.loc.gov/n82063142 · Person · 1949-

Kalevi Ensio Aho was born on March 9, 1949, in Forssa, Finland.

He is a Finnish composer and professor. He began his interest in music at the age of ten when he discovered a mandolin in his home and began to teach himself how to play it. After learning how to read sheet music, Aho immediately started composing. He moved to Helsinki in 1968 to study at the Sibelius Academy. He studied composition at the Sibelius Academy under Einojuhani Rautavaara, graduating in 1971. He continued his studies for a year in Berlin with Boris Blacher. His teaching positions include music theory at the University of Helsinki (1974-1988), and a professorship at the Sibelius Academy (1988-1993). He was named composer-in-residence for the Lahti Symphony Orchestra in 1992. The conductor, Osmo Vänskä, has recorded many of his recent large-scale works with the orchestra. Aho has worked as a freelance composer with a state scholarship since 1993. He lives in Helsinki.

As of 2021, Aho has composed seventeen symphonies, thirty-seven concertos, five operas and several vocal works. His chamber music includes many quintets, quartets, sonatas, and solo works. He first came to fame with his first symphony (1969) and second-string quartet (1970).

Ahtik, Vito
Person

Vito Ahtik was a professor at the Department of Sociology of the Université du Québec à Montréal.

Aichinger, Gregor, 1564-1628
https://lccn.loc.gov/n82013153 · Person · 1564-1628

Gregor Aichinger was born circa 1565 in Regensburg, Germany.

He was a German composer. In 1584, after studying at the University of Ingolstadt, he became organist to the prominent Fugger family of Augsburg, and hence of the Church of St. Ulrich, Augsburg, a position he held until his death. He made two trips to Italy (1584-1588 and 1598-1601). By 1603, he was ordained. The great majority of his compositions are sacred vocal works with Latin texts.

He died on January 21, 1628, in Augsburg, Germany.

https://lccn.loc.gov/nr2006033324 · Person · 1870-1946

Alfred L. Aiken was born on July 6, 1870, in Norwich, Connecticut.

He was the first leader at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and served as governor of the Bank from November 1914 to December 1917. Following his graduation from Yale University in 1891, he joined State Mutual Life Assurance Company as a clerk, leaving after two years to become assistant manager of the New England department of New York Life Insurance Company. In 1903, Aiken decided to pursue a career in banking, becoming an assistant cashier at State National Bank in Boston. Eleven years later, in 1914, his banking career reached a capstone with his election as President of the newly created Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. As the Bank’s first president, Aiken was closely involved with the initial establishment of the discount rate policy. Benjamin Strong, Governor of the New York Fed at the time of Aiken’s tenure, commended Aiken for his policy, which enveloped all the member banks of the Boston Fed in the same system, each bank paying at the same rate to borrow from the Fed. After three years of service, Aiken resigned from the Boston Fed to become President of National Shawmut Bank, Boston. In 1924, he returned to his first career interest, rejoining New York Life as a vice president, becoming a chairman by 1940.

In 1896, he married Elizabeth Peck Hopkins, and after her death, he remarried Anna Colvin Hopkins in 1942. He retired in 1942 and died on December 13, 1946, In New York City, New York.

https://lccn.loc.gov/no2010104925 · Person · 1867-1946

Herbert Austin Aikins was born on March 1, 1867, in Toronto, Ontario, the son of the first dean of the Toronto Medical School.

He was a professor, clinical psychologist, author, and translator. After receiving an A.B. degree from the University of Toronto in 1887, Aikins became an instructor in philosophy at the University of Southern California. In 1891, he graduated from Yale University (Ph.D.) and began a series of one-year appointments at Yale, Trinity School, and Clark University. From 1894 until retirement in 1937, Aikins was a professor of philosophy, psychology, and mental hygiene at Flora Stone Mather College of Western Reserve University.

In 1895, he married Amie Florence Dean (1865–1932). He died on November 13, 1946, in Cleveland, Ohio.

Person · 1823-1904

James Cox Aikins was born on March 30, 1823, in York County, Ontario.

He was a politician and Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba (1882-1888). He received his early education in Upper Canada (Ontario) and graduated in 1843 from Victoria College and University, Cobourg. He represented the County of Peel in the Legislative Assembly of Canada from 1854 to 1861. In 1862, he was elected a member of the Legislative Council and continued until 1867. Following Confederation, he occupied a seat in the Senate until December 1869, when he became Secretary of State, a position he held until 1873. In 1878, when the Macdonald Government was returned to power, he again became Secretary of State. In 1880, he was made Minister of Inland Revenue but resigned in March 1882, and on September 22, 1882, he was appointed Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba. He served for five years and seven months (1888), and it was during his term the boundaries of the province were enlarged. In 1896, he was reappointed to the Senate. He was a Methodist and took an active part in the founding of Wesley College (now the University of Winnipeg).

In 1845, he married Mary Elizabeth Jane Somerset (1819–1899). He died on August 6, 1904, in Toronto, Ontario.

Aikman, Robert
https://lccn.loc.gov/n88676528 · Person · 1816-1900

Rev. Robert Aikman was born on June 29, 1816, in New York, New York.

He was an American Presbyterian minister. He was pastor of the Third Presbyterian Churches in Elizabeth and in Madison, New Jersey, for about forty years. For ten years, he served as chairman of the Synod’s Committee on Church Extension. Several of his sermons were published.

In 1849, he married Jerusha Leffingwell Stedman (1814–1865), and in 1866, he remarried Mary Greenleaf Knight (1828-1923). He died on May 12, 1900, in Madison, New Jersey.

Aimers, Jeffrey J.-F.
Person · Active 1947-1950s

Jeffrey J.-F. Aimers was born in Dublin and graduated from the Architectural Association School of Architecture in 1947. He worked in London and Dublin and later moved to Montreal where he worked for McDougall, Smith & Flemming from 1952 to 1954. In 1955 he joined the firm of Durnford, Bolton, Chadwick and Ellwood.

Jeffrey Aimers est né à Dublin et il a obtenu son diplôme du Architectural Association School of Architecture en 1947. Il a travaillé à Londres et à Dublin avant de s'établir à Montréal. Il a alors travaillé pour McDougall, Smith et Flemming de 1952 à 1954 et en 1955 il a commencé à travailler pour le cabinet de Durnford, Bolton, Chadwick et Ellwood.

Aimol, Thomas
Person · Active 1854

Thomas Aimol was a Registrar of the Province of Quebec in 1854.