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Fuller and Thomas
* Andronicus, or the Unfortunate Politician, a 1646 satire by Thomas Fuller
He was educated at the King's School, Worcester, under Henry Bright whose teaching is recorded favourably by Thomas Fuller, a contemporary writer, in his Worthies of England.
* August 16 – Thomas Fuller, English churchman and historian ( b. 1608 )
** Thomas Fuller, English churchman and historian ( d. 1661 )
Lyle R. Wheeler, Leland Fuller, and Thomas Little were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Black-and-White Art Direction and Interior Decoration but lost to Cedric Gibbons, William Ferrari, Paul Huldschinsky, and Edwin B. Willis for Gaslight.
French essayist Montaigne, who gave a spirited defense of Seneca and Plutarch in his Essays, was himself considered by Pasquier a " French Seneca "; similarly, Thomas Fuller praised Joseph Hall as " our English Seneca ".
In his book History of the Worthies of England, the 17th century historian Thomas Fuller refers to Carshalton for its walnuts and trout.
From 1896 to 1900, Thomas Wafer Fuller of Minden, a descendant of a prominent area family, served as the state senator from Webster and the surrounding parishes of Bossier and Bienville.
John Crook, John Clapper, Henry Coons, John Warner, Major Thomas Frothingham, who was an officer in the Continental army during the War of the Revolution ; N. Smith, Reuben Underwood, David Arnold, and families bearing the names of Fethers, Ford, Davis, Cook, Emmons, Culver, Farrell, Pratt, Lewis, Wells, Huntley, Wickham, Fuller, Strope, Hegeman, Sheppard, Higgenbottom, De Freest, Rykert, Woodworth, Hayes, Townsend, Richmond, Cornwell, Carmichael, Stone, Russell, Frear ( probably Frere ), Guyot, Kelly, Kerner, Jacobs, Simmons, Comb, Calkins, Kilmer and others.
In 1673 James Davenant, a Fellow since 1661, complained to William Fuller, then Bishop of Lincoln, about Provost Say's conduct in the election of Thomas Twitty to a Fellowship.
Bishop Fuller appointed a commission that included the Vice-Chancellor, Peter Mews, the Dean of Christ Church, John Fell, and the Principal of Brasenose, Thomas Yates.
As 17th century historian Thomas Fuller remarked more succinctly, Baldwin " caught many fish, and his death in eating them.
* Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White-Lyle R. Wheeler, Leland Fuller, Thomas Little, Claude E. Carpenter
It included many of the authors from the original anthology as well as younger English poets like Thomas Blackburn, Edwin Brock, Hilary Corke, John Fuller, Ted Hughes, Edward Lucie-Smith, Anthony Thwaite, and Hugo Williams.
Thomas Fuller
Thomas Fuller ( 1608 – 16 August 1661 ) was an English churchman and historian.
The eldest son of Thomas Fuller, rector of Aldwinkle St Peter's, Northamptonshire, he was born at his father's rectory and was baptised on 19 June 1608.
At Broadwindsor, early in 1641, Thomas Fuller, his curate Henry Sanders, the churchwardens, and five others certified that their parish, represented by 242 adult males, had taken the Protestation ordered by the speaker of the Long Parliament.
Engraved title page of the third edition of Historie of the Holy Warre by Thomas Fuller, 1647
About 1652 Fuller married his second wife, Mary Roper, youngest sister of Thomas Roper, 1st Viscount Baltinglass, by whom he had several children.
* Bailey, J. E. ( 1874 ) The Life of Thomas Fuller, with Notices of his Books, his Kinsmen and his Friends.
* Fuller, Thomas ( 1840 ) The History of the University of Cambridge: from the Conquest to the year 1634.
* Fuller, Thomas ( 1891 ) Collected Sermons ; edited by J. E. Bailey ; completed by W. E. A. Axon.
* Thomas Fuller, The History of the Holy War ( 1840 edition, at the Internet Archive )

Fuller and 1811
In 1811, a pyramid-shaped building, often referred to as " The Pyramid ", was erected in the churchyard of the Church of St. Thomas à Becket in Brightling as a future mausoleum for Jack Fuller.

Fuller and Worthies
In 1868 he brought out a bibliography of the writings of Richard Baxter, and from that year until 1876 he was occupied in reproducing for private subscribers the “ Fuller Worthies Library ,” a series of thirty-nine volumes which included the works of Thomas Fuller, Sir John Davies, Fulke Greville, Henry Vaughan, Andrew Marvell, George Herbert, Richard Crashaw, John Donne and Sir Philip Sidney.
B. Grosart in Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library, vol.
The change of names is mentioned in seventeenth-century works by Richard James (" Epistle to Sir Harry Bourchier ", c. 1625 ) and Thomas Fuller ( Worthies of England, 1662 ).
The Countess of Pembroke's Emanuell, hexameters on the nativity and passion of Christ, with versions of some psalms, were reprinted by Alexander Grosart in the third volume of his Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies ’ Library ( 1872 ).
Grosart's collection of Dyer's works ( Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library, vol.
Thomas Fuller notes in Worthies of England that Feckenham was the last clergyman to be " locally surnamed ".
B. Grosart in the Miscellanies of the Fuller Worthies Library ( 1871 );
An edition, with memorial introduction and notes, was included ( 1869 ) in Dr AB Grosart's Fuller Worthies Library ; and the Metamorphosis of Tobacco was included in JP Collier's Illustrations of Early English Popular Literature, vol.
The change of names, from " Oldcastle " to " Falstaff ," is mentioned in seventeenth-century works by Richard James ( Epistle to Sir Harry Bourchier, c. 1625 ) and Thomas Fuller ( Worthies of England, 1662 ).
Thomas Fuller, in his Worthies of England states: " I am credibly informed that the mystery of Shipwrights for some descents hath been preserved successfully in families, of whom the Petts about Chatham are of singular regard.
B. Grosart ( Fuller Worthies Library, 1869 ).
There is no contemporary evidence, however, that he was a member of Queens ' College, Cambridge as was claimed by Thomas Fuller in his Worthies Of England of 1662 and often repeated.
* Thomas Fuller, Worthies of England ( ii.
One early headmaster, Henry Bright is mentioned in Thomas Fuller ’ s Worthies of England, and is commemorated in Worcester Cathedral.
* Thomas Fuller, The History of the Worthies of England P. Austin Nuttall ( Published by T. Tegg, 1840 )

Fuller and England
* October 29 – Fuller Baptist Church is founded in Kettering, England.
Fuller was born in 1878, in Chichester, West Sussex, England.
In the spring of 1904, Fuller was sent with his unit to India, where he contracted enteric fever in autumn of 1905 ; he returned to England the next year on sick-leave, where he met the woman he married in December 1906.
In An Alarum to the Counties of England and Wales ( 1660 ) Fuller argued for a free and full parliament — free from force, as he expressed it, as well as from abjurations or previous engagements.
By the time she was in her 30s, Fuller had earned a reputation as the best-read person in New England, male or female, and became the first woman allowed to use the library at Harvard College.
Fuller was an avid reader ; by the time she was in her 30s, she had earned a reputation as the best-read person, male or female, in New England.
Fuller was sent to Europe in 1846 by the New York Tribune, specifically England and Italy, as its first female foreign correspondent.
Since the 1990s Day's works have been included in major exhibitions by museum curators, notably in the solo Day retrospective at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in 2000 / 2001 and similar shows at the Royal Photographic Society in England and the Fuller Museum of Art.
Born at Staines, Middlesex in England, the son of a successful London barrister, Reginald Grant Watson, and Lucy, née Fuller, a strong-minded woman with an interest in natural history and literature, ' Peter ' ( as he was called ) visited Australia first as a child in 1890, soon after the death of his younger brother.
These include Daniel Mckenzie and Andy Fuller who both received an U18 England cap in 2000.
Andrew Fuller, who had been secretary of the Society in England, had died in 1815, and his successor, John Dyer, was a bureaucrat who attempted to reorganize the Society along business lines and manage every detail of the Serampore mission from England.
Fuller started his football career with Jamaican side Tivoli Gardens before he moved to England with Crystal Palace.
( From Thomas Fuller, Church History of England, 1837 ).

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