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Cornish and historian
Lord Grey and Sir William Herbert led the attack and contemporary Exeter historian John Hooker wrote that ' the Cornish would not give in until most of their number had been slain or captured.
Samuel Penhallow ( July 2, 1665 – December 2, 1726 ) was a Cornish colonist and historian in early American.
* Henry Jenner, Cornish historian and language expert
Dr Mark Stoyle, a Devon historian, noted that " People are quite aware in Devon that the Cornish make political capital by claiming to be different.
In the 17th century, historian Richard Carew wrote of Cornish wrestling ...
* 1602, in his survey of Cornwall historian Richard Carew writes about Cornish hurling.
The latter agreement, according to 12th century West Country historian William of Malmesbury, ended rights of residence for Cornish subjects in Exeter, and fixed the Cornish boundary at the east bank of the River Tamar.
Elizabethan historian William Camden, in the Cornish section of his Britannia, notes that
* Charles Thomas ( historian ) ( born 1928 ), professor of Cornish Studies at Exeter University
According to Cornish historian Robert Morton Nance, The Song of the Western Men was possibly inspired by the song Come, all ye jolly tinner boys which was written more than ten years earlier in about 1807, when Napoleon Bonaparte made threats that would affect trade in Cornwall at the time of the invasion of Poland.
German historian Michael Rissmann argues that Cornish overestimates Hitler's intellectual capacities and uses fraudulent talks Hermann Rauschning claims to have had with Hitler to prove Hitler's alleged occultist interest.

Cornish and Charles
* Henderson, Charles ( 1935 ) " Some Notes on Bodmin Priory ", in: Essays in Cornish History.
* Henderson, Charles ( 1938 ) " Padstow Church and Parish " in: Doble, G. H. Saint Petrock, a Cornish Saint ; 3rd ed.
The Lincoln Land Company purchased land from Charles Caldwell, J. C. Deweese, Albert Cornish, and C. Shepherd.
In 1935 he co-edited Charles Henderson's Essays in Cornish History for the Clarendon Press.
Such an idea has continued to be maintained by archaeologists and historians, with Charles Thomas, a specialist in Cornish history, noting in 1993 that " There simply is no independently attested connection in early Cornish folklore locating Arthur, at any age or in any capacity, at Tintagel.
* Henderson, Charles, In: Cornish Church Guide ( 1925 ) Truro: Blackford ; p. 203-205
During the reception following the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer in 1981, one course was strawberries and Cornish clotted cream.
* Henderson, Charles ( 1925 ) " Truro St Mary V ." In: Cornish Church Guide.
Famous members included Theodore Dwight Weld, Lewis Tappan, James G. Birney, Lydia Maria Child, Maria Weston Chapman, Abby Kelley Foster, Stephen Symonds Foster, Henry Highland Garnet, Samuel Cornish, James Forten, Charles Lenox Remond, Lucretia Mott, Lucy Stone, Robert Purvis, and Wendell Phillips.
Born in Calcutta, British India, Buller was the son of Charles Buller ( 1774 – 1848 ), a member of a well-known Cornish family, and Barbara Isabella Kirkpatrick, daughter of General William Kirkpatrick, considered an exceptionally talented woman.
In 1898, a mansion designed by Charles Platt was built for him in Cornish, New Hampshire.
Charles Stanley Causley, CBE, FRSL ( 24 August 1917 – 4 November 2003 ) was a Cornish poet, schoolmaster and writer.
In 1936 it was renamed Thomas Hall after Charles Vivian Thomas, a Cornish businessman who helped fund its transfer to the University.
* Farewell, Aggie Weston, a famous poem by Cornish poet Charles Causley, and also the name of a poetry collection published by him
Resisting the established church, many ordinary Cornish people were Roman Catholic or non-religious until the late 18th century, when Methodism was introduced to Cornwall during a series of visits by John and Charles Wesley.
In Spode's similar " Felspar porcelain ", introduced on the market in 1821, felspar was an ingredient, substituted for the Cornish stone in his standard bone china body, giving rise to his slightly misleading name " Felspar porcelain ," to what is in fact an extremely refined stoneware comparable to the rival " Mason's ironstone ", produced by Josiah II's nephew, Charles James Mason, and patented in 1813 Spode's " Felspar porcelain " continued into the Copeland & Garrett phase of the company ( 1833-1847 ).
* Charles Thomas ( mine agent ) ( 1794 – 1868 ), Cornish mining innovator
* BBC Devon-Holsworthy-My home town article by Charles Cornish
Charles Causley was born in Launceston and is perhaps the best known of Cornish poets.
The modern philosophy of Pan-Celticism, of co-operation between the six modern Celtic nations ( the Irish, Manx, Scots, Welsh, Cornish and Bretons ) had first been given published form by Charles de Gaulle ( 1837 – 1880 ), a Breton language poet who published his ideas in Les Celtes au XIXe siécle ( Celts in the 19th Century ) in 1864.
In Cornish he was part of the " Cornish Arts Colony " that included such artists as Dewing, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Maxfield Parrish, Louis St. Gaudens, Charles A. Platt, and Kenyon Cox.

Cornish and Thomas
* Thomas Flamank, lawyer, co-leader of the Cornish Rebellion, 1497
It also gave support to the Cornish language, and commemorated Thomas Flamank, a leader of the Cornish Rebellion in 1497, at an annual ceremony at Bodmin on 27 June each year.
* 1497 – Cornish rebels Michael An Gof and Thomas Flamank are executed at Tyburn, London, England.
Famous former and current residents of Stockwell include Gary Raymond, Lilian Bayliss, Edward Thomas, Vincent Van Gogh ( briefly ), Violette Szabo, Joanna Lumley, Jerry Dammers, Roger Moore, Roots Manuva, Adam Buxton, Joe Cornish, Dot Rotten and Will Self.
Thomas Cornish, suffragan bishop in the diocese of Bath and Wells, and provost of Oriel College, Oxford, from 1493 to 1507, appointed him chaplain of the college of Ottery St Mary, Devon.
Arms of Thomas Becket Argent three Cornish Choughs proper two and one
The three Cornish choughs, originally belonging to the arms of Thomas Becket, were taken from the arms of the City of Canterbury.
In " Jack and Arthur: An Introduction to Jack the Giant Killer ", Thomas Green writes that Jack has no place in Cornish folklore, but was created at the beginning of the eighteenth century simply as a framing device for a series of gory, giant-killing adventures.
Late 17th century composite engraving by John Savage ( engraver ) | John Savage, and comprising seven portraits of figures of the Plot all of whom were dead by 1685 ( Sir Thomas Armstrong, the Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll | Earl of Argyll, the Arthur Capel, 1st Earl of Essex | Earl of Essex, Henry Cornish, William Russell, Lord Russell, the James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth | Duke of Monmouth, and Algernon Sidney ), with one of Edmund Berry Godfrey, whose unexplained death triggered the Popish Plot allegations against Catholics.
He was described by Thomas Fuller as " the captain of Cornish saints ".
He bought shares in eight Cornish copper mines and met Thomas Williams, the ‘ Copper King ’ of the Parys Mountain mines in Anglesey.
Commemorative plaque in Cornish and English for Michael Joseph the Smith ( An Gof ) and Thomas Flamank mounted on the north side of Blackheath common, south east London, near the south entrance to Greenwich Park.
Michael Joseph ( better known as Michael An Gof, where An Gof is Cornish for " blacksmith "; died 27 June 1497 ) and Thomas Flamank ( a Bodmin landowner's son and London lawyer ) were the leaders of the Cornish Rebellion of 1497.
He was the youngest son of John Arthur, from a Cornish family, and his wife, Catherine, daughter of Thomas Cornish.
Commemorative plaque in Cornish and English for Michael Joseph the Smith ( An Gof ) and Thomas Flamank mounted on the north side of Blackheath Common, southeast London, near the south entrance to Greenwich Park
Thomas Flamank ( executed 27 June 1497 ) was a lawyer from Cornwall who together with Michael An Gof led the Cornish Rebellion against taxes imposed in England in 1497.
In early times the name appeared as Flandrensis, Flemang, Flammank, and in other forms Thomas Flamank was the chief instigator of the Cornish rebellion of 1497.
Williams together with Graham Thomas edited the Middle Cornish play Bewnans Ke, which had been donated to the National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth, in 2000.
The Cornish silver olympic medal was ' drawn for ' by the players and won by Thomas ' Chicky ' Wedge and it has been on display at the St Ives RFC clubhouse ever since.

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