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  1. Alexander John Ellis (n. 14 de junio de 1814-f. 28 de octubre de 1890), nombrado miembro de la Royal Society en 1864, fue matemático, filólogo y pionero en fonética, influyendo además la musicología.

  2. Alexander John Ellis FRS (14 June 1814 – 28 October 1890) was an English mathematician, philologist and early phonetician who also influenced the field of musicology.

  3. Alexander John Ellis (n. 14 de junio de 1814-f. 28 de octubre de 1890), nombrado miembro de la Royal Society en 1864, fue matemático, filólogo y pionero en fonética, influyendo además la musicología.

  4. This article examines early modern interactions between music-theoretical writings on tuning and consonance, natural philosophy (systematic, scientific understanding of the natural world), and the colonization of the American tropics. Part I argues that early modern music theorists leveraged justificatory frameworks inherited from ...

  5. Alexander J. Ellis (1885b:526) The Founder of Comparative Musicology? On 25 March 1885, a 71-year-old Englishman named Alexander John Ellis (Figure 1) read a paper "On the Musical Scales of Various Nations" at a meeting in London of the Society of Arts.1 At the end, Ellis received the Society's silver medal, a distinguished award.

  6. Ellis, Alexander John. Born Alexander John Sharpe in Hoxton, London, on the 14th June 1814, Ellis attended private boarding school at Walthamstow, London. While there he was offered the opportunity of a life of study and research on condition he adopted his mother’s maiden name, Ellis.

  7. 27 de nov. de 2012 · The essentials of phonetics; containing the theory of a universal alphabet, together with its practical application as an ethnical alphabet to the reduction of old language, written or unwritten, to one uniform system of writing; with numerous examples; adapted to the use of phoneticians, philologists, etymologists, ethnographists, travellers, a...