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Thomas and Randolph
The diplomat Thomas Randolph recorded the " merry tales " rumoured about his methods still current in Edinburgh nine years later.
Despite the excommunication of Bruce and his followers by Pope Clement V, his support slowly strengthened ; and by 1314 with the help of leading nobles such as Sir James Douglas and Thomas Randolph only the castles at Bothwell and Stirling remained under English control.
Jefferson's son-in-law, Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr. was a lineal descendant of Pocahontas.
Bruce's family also included his brothers, Edward, Alexander, Thomas, and Neil, his sisters Christina, Isabel ( Queen of Norway ), Margaret, Matilda, and Mary, and his nephews Donald II, Earl of Mar and Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray.
* 1772 – Martha Jefferson Randolph, American daughter of Thomas Jefferson ( d. 1836 )
Peter Jefferson died in 1757 and the Jefferson estate was divided between Peter's two sons ; Thomas and Randolph.
During the last hours of Jefferson's life he was accompanied by his grandson Thomas Jefferson Randolph and his doctor, Robley Dunglison and other family members and friends.
The existence of the Cabinet dates back to the first President of the United States, George Washington, who appointed a Cabinet of four men: Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson ; Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton ; Secretary of War Henry Knox ; and Attorney General Edmund Randolph to advise him and to assist him in carrying out his duties.
* November 19 – In Los Angeles, California, famous silent film director Thomas Ince (" The Father of the Western ") dies, reportedly of a heart attack, in his bed ( rumors soon surface that he was shot dead by publishing tycoon William Randolph Hearst ).
* June – Thomas Randolph, English poet and dramatist ( d. 1635 )
* March – Thomas Randolph, poet
* July 20 – Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray, regent of Scotland
* August 11 – Domhnall II, Earl of Mar, Sir Robert Keith, Thomas Randolph, 2nd Earl of Moray, Murdoch III, Earl of Menteith and Robert Bruce ( at the Battle of Dupplin Moor )
Jefferson's son-in-law, former Virginia Governor Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr., said in 1826 that Jefferson had a " strong repugnance " to Henry Clay.
Thomas Jefferson Randolph soon collected and published Jefferson's correspondence.
After Robert the Bruce's death, King David II was too young to rule, so the guardianship was assumed by Thomas Randolph, Earl of Moray.
* Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray — Guardian ( 1329 – 1332 )
Returning once again to a reworking of the past, this time the supposed murder of director Thomas Ince by Orson Welles's bête noire William Randolph Hearst, The Cat's Meow was a modest critical success but made little money at the box office.
" In disgust, Blackstone forced the university to confront its responsibilities by publishing a lengthy letter he had written to Huddesford's successor, Thomas Randolph in May 1757.
Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray, commanded the vanguard, which was stationed about a mile to the south of Stirling, near the church of St. Ninian, while the king commanded the rearguard at the entrance to the New Park.
In January 1565 Thomas Randolph, the English ambassador to Scotland, was told by the Scottish queen that she would accept the proposal.
In 1824, a ketchup recipe using tomatoes appeared in The Virginia Housewife ( an influential 19th-century cookbook written by Mary Randolph, Thomas Jefferson's cousin ).
According to the English diplomats Thomas Randolph and the Earl of Bedford, the murder of David Rizzio ( who was rumored to be the father of Mary's unborn child ) was Darnley ’ s own addition to the plot of winning over the Crown Matrimonial.
The English agent Thomas Randolph also hinted at this time of a scandal involving his sister Jean Hepburn.

Thomas and famously
Henry II's creation of a powerful and unified court system, which curbed somewhat the power of canonical ( church ) courts, brought him ( and England ) into conflict with the church, most famously with Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
In the essay What is it like to be a bat ?, Thomas Nagel famously argued that explaining subjective experience — the " what it is like " to be something — is currently beyond the reach of scientific inquiry, because scientific understanding by definition requires an objective perspective, which, according to Nagel, is diametrically opposed to the subjective first-person point of view.
Pope Zachary had brought significant challenges to rulers of his era a full 200 years earlier, in a move Thomas Hobbes would famously call " one of the greatest abuses of the papacy in the history of the Church ".
Shaftesbury was reacting to Thomas Hobbes's justification of royal absolutism in his Leviathan, Chapter XIII, in which he famously holds that the state of nature is a " war of all against all " in which men's lives are " solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short ".
At the end of his career, Thomas Heywood would famously claim to have had " an entire hand, or at least a main finger " in the authorship of some 220 plays.
Thomas Hobbes famously said that in a " state of nature " human life would be " solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short ".
In 1886 Thomas Eakins was famously dismissed from the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art for removing the loincloth from a male model in a mixed classroom.
There have been many re-builds and new organs in the intervening period, including work by Thomas Dallam, William Hill and most famously Robert Hope-Jones in 1896.
" Critics have seen a precedent for the book's plot presentation in Laurence Sterne's famously digressive The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman, with Thomas Keymer stating that " Tristram Shandy was a natural touchstone for James Joyce as he explained his attempt " to build many planes of narrative with a single esthetic purpose " in Finnegans Wake ".
It is famously where, at its gates, United Irishman, Thomas Russell was hanged in 1803.
American hawks assumed that Canadian colonists would rise up and support the invading U. S. armies as liberators and that, as Thomas Jefferson famously wrote, conquering Canada would be " a mere matter of marching ".
He famously debated Aquinas on at least two occasions during 1269 and 1270, during which Peckham defended the conservative theological position, and Thomas put forth his views on the soul.
Minstrel shows produced the first well-remembered popular songwriters in American music history: Thomas D. Rice, Dan Emmett, and, most famously, Stephen Foster.
Super Bowl XIII, the rematch, featured Cowboys Linebacker Thomas " Hollywood " Henderson saying famously " Terry Bradshaw couldn't spell c-a-t if you spotted him the C and the T ." Landry recalled in his autobiography how he cringed when he heard that, because he didn't feel that Bradshaw needed addition motivation in a big game like the Super Bowl.
Thomas Nashe refers to its supposed medical properties in his tract Nashe's Lenten Stuff, as well as to the exotic sound of the word at the time ( playing on the famously bizarre-sounding Latin word Honorificabilitudinitatibus, meaning " worthy of honour "): " Physicians deafen our ears with the Honorificabilitudinitatibus of their heavenly Panacaea, their sovereign Guiacum.
From the early nineteenth century it had a thriving shipbuilding industry, particularly associated with Thomas Inman the builder of the schooner Alarm, which famously raced the American yacht America in 1851.
Cato's Letters were essays by British writers John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, first published from 1720 to 1723 under the pseudonym of Cato ( 95 – 46 BC ), the implacable foe of Julius Caesar and a famously stubborn champion of republican principles.
The Gunners needed to win by a two goal margin to become champions, with a last-minute Michael Thomas goal famously giving them the title.
Thomas Edison once famously called him the " master hustler.
* Thomas Marshall ( lighthouse keeper ) ( died 1900 ), Flannan Isles lighthouse keeper who famously disappeared without trace
While discussing the appropriate attire for American Supreme Court justices, Thomas Jefferson was once famously quoted as saying, in reference to traditional court dress: " For heaven's sake, discard the monstrous wig which makes the English judges look like rats peeping through bunches of oakum.
Thomas famously says in the prologue to the Summa contra Gentiles that in debating Christian heretics one can make recourse to the entire Bible to show them their error.
Perhaps demonstrated most famously and effectively in Joseph Heller's Catch-22 and the work of Thomas Pynchon, the sense of paranoia, the belief that there's an ordering system behind the chaos of the world is another recurring postmodern theme.
At the aid station, he famously told the doctor, Thomas M. Brown, " Well, doc, the New York Giants lost a mighty good end today .".

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