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Thomas and Fuller
* 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 ( 1811 ) The Worthies of England, reprinted by John Nichols ( 1811 ) and by P. A. Nuttall ( 1840 ) Vol. 1 Vol. 2 Vol. 3 at books. google.
* 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 )

Thomas and English
Thomas Henry Huxley, an English biologist, coined the word agnostic in 1869.
The earliest recorded use of this term in English is in Thomas Hacket's 1568 translation of André Thévet's book on France Antarctique ; Thévet himself had referred to the natives as Ameriques.
The earliest recorded use of this term in English dates to 1648, in Thomas Gage's The English-American: A New Survet of the West Indies.
The first recorded English antitrinitarian was John Assheton who was forced to recant before Thomas Cranmer in 1548.
* 1630 Thomas Clifford, 1st Baron Clifford of Chudleigh, English politician ( d. 1673 )
The Baptist movement originated with Thomas Helwys, who left his mentor John Smyth ( who had moved into shared belief and other distinctives of the Dutch Waterlander Mennonites of Amsterdam ) and returned to London to start the first English Baptist Church in 1611.
Later General Baptists such as John Griffith, Samuel Loveday, and Thomas Grantham defended a Reformed Arminian theology that reflected more the Arminianism of Arminius than that of the later Remonstrants or the English Arminianism of Arminian Puritans like John Goodwin or Anglican Arminians such as Jeremy Taylor and Henry Hammond.
* 1571 Thomas Lupo, English composer and viol player ( d. 1627 )
* 1888 An audio recording of English composer Arthur Sullivan's " The Lost Chord ", one of the first recordings of music ever made, is played during a press conference introducing Thomas Edison's phonograph in London, England.
* 1785 Thomas De Quincey, English author ( d. 1859 )
* 1776 Thomas Bladen Capel English navy admiral ( d. 1853 )
* 1580 Thomas Middleton, English dramatist ( d. 1627 )
* 1816 Thomas Hazlehurst, English chapel builder ( d. 1876 )
Notable American restaurant chefs include Thomas Keller, Charlie Trotter, Grant Achatz, Alfred Portale, Paul Prudhomme, Paul Bertolli, Frank Stitt, Alice Waters, and celebrity chefs like Mario Batali, Alton Brown, Emeril Lagasse, Cat Cora, Michael Symon, Bobby Flay, Ina Garten, Todd English, Sandra Lee, and Paula Deen.
It was consecrated in 1197 with a dedication to the deceased Saint Thomas Becket, whom the king had met at the English court.
An early professed empiricist, Thomas Hobbes, known as an eccentric denizen of the court of Charles II of England ( an " old bear "), published in 1651 Leviathan, a political treatise written during the English civil war, containing an early manifesto in English of rationalism.
In the 18th century there were increasing numbers of such collections, including Thomas D ' Urfey's Wit and Mirth: or, Pills to Purge Melancholy ( 1719 20 ) and Bishop Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry ( 1765 ).
Thomas Carlyle translated Goethe ’ s novel into English, and after its publication in 1824, many British authors wrote novels inspired by it.
Haydn portrait by Thomas Hardy ( English painter ) | Thomas Hardy, 1792
Hedonism, for example, teaches that this feeling is pleasure — either one's own, as in egoism ( the 17th-century English philosopher Thomas Hobbes ), or everyone's, as in universalistic hedonism, or utilitarianism ( the 19th-century English philosophers Jeremy Bentham, John Stuart Mill, and Henry Sidgwick ), with its formula of the " greatest pleasure of the greatest number.
Thomas G. Tucker suggests a root in " cry " words and refers to English plaint, plaintiff, and so on.

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