Buffy Summers
If you're talking about Joyce Summers, Buffy's mother, she did have a boyfriend named Ted, who turned out to be a robot. She also had a 'thing' with Buffy's watcher, Rupert Giles.
There are several saints named Giles but none are patron saints.
'Rupert's Land' was named after Prince Rupert. It was owned and controlled by the Hudson's Bay Company. Prince Rupert was its first governor. It was a proprietory British commercial colony, mainly trading in furs. The name 'Rupert's Land' fell into disuse when it was transferred to and absorbed into Canada.
Rupert Murdoch
Prince Rupert was the leading member of the Company of Adventurers. Rupert's Land was named after him.
Rupert bath and glady bath
Rupert's Land wasn't given to Prince Rupert, it was named after him. It was the territory that drained into Hudson Bay. Prince Rupert was one of the original "Company of Adventurers" who were granted a Royal Charter on May 2, 1670, creating the Hudson's Bay Company. Rupert's Land was transferred from Britain to Canada on July 15, 1870.
Rupert's Land wasn't given to Prince Rupert, it was named after him. It was the territory that drained into Hudson Bay. Prince Rupert was one of the original "Company of Adventurers" who were granted a Royal Charter on May 2, 1670, creating the Hudson's Bay Company. Rupert's Land was transferred from Britain to Canada on July 15, 1870.
"The Watcher" is a thriller novel by Ross Armstrong about a woman named Lily who starts receiving surveillance footage of her own apartment. As the mysterious watcher's messages become increasingly threatening, Lily must uncover the stalker's identity before it's too late.
Yes one brother named James, and three sisters named Georgina, Samantha and Charlotte.
Rupert Boneham
Explorer Ernest Giles named the Gibson Desert after Alf Gibson, a young stockman who accompanied Giles on one of his expeditions, in 1874. On this journey, Giles was attempting to cross the desert from central Australia to Perth, but was thwarted by Aboriginal attack and lack of water. Lack of water caused Giles to send his packhorses back to their camp. A day or two later, Giles's horse was unable to continue, so the men began their return to the base camp, sharing Gibson's horse. On 23 April 1874, Giles instructed Gibson to return to the camp for help, leaving Giles to walk. Giles reached where they had left water kegs and continued on with a supply of water that lasted him six more days. On the third day of his trek, he saw that the packhorses had left their original course and headed south, deeper into the desert. Gibson had followed the tracks. After reaching the base camp the next day, Giles immediately took another man and attempted to search for Gibson, but no trace of him was ever found. In his journal, Giles noted that he named the waterless country Gibson's Desert, "after this first white victim to its horrors".