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Tuke and with
This details his links with Henry Scott Tuke and Thomas Cooper Gotch and many others who settled in the artists ' colony in the 1880s and 1890s.
Similarly in the mid-20th century, Foucault's influential book, Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason, also known as History of Madness, focused on Pinel, along with Tuke, as the driving force behind a shift from physical to mental oppression.
His grandson, Samuel Tuke ( 1784 – 1857 ) published the very influential work in 1815, Practical hints on the Economy of Pauper Lunatic Asylums and Daniel Tuke ( 1827 – 1895 ), with J. C. Bucknill, published A Manual of Psychological Medicine which, for a long period, was the standard work in the area.
Some artists displayed a clear predeliction for scenes with boys, in certain cases ( especially if frequently depicting revealing poses ) believed to have to do with a homo-erotic taste, as is believed of the highly respected Old Master Caravaggio, or Henry Scott Tuke who kept producing such works even though the market circa 1900 was rather unappreciative.
Brian Tuke mentioned in his letter to Cardinal Bainbridge that the coat was lacerated and chequered with blood.
Other writings are also ascribed to him, including the authorship with Sir Samuel Tuke of The Adventures of Five Hours ( 1663 ).
Tuke painted oil studies of young male nudes during a tour of Italy in his early twenties in 1881, but the theme did not become central to his work until after 1885, when he had moved to Falmouth, then still a secluded part of Cornwall and a part of the country with a very mild climate that was more agreeable for nude bathing.
Tuke was often fascinated with the beauty of a fully rigged ship, and since his childhood could draw them from memory.
* Cooper, Emmanuel ( 2003 ) The Life and Work of Henry Scott Tuke ( with 35 colour and 25 monochrome plates ), Heretic Books ISBN 0-85449-068-X
Henry Tuke ( 1755 – 1814 ) co-operated with his father in the reforms at the Retreat asylum in York, England.
Quakers were among the first to pioneer humane treatment for the mentally ill, with The Retreat, in York, England, an asylum set up by William Tuke ( 1732 – 1822 ) as a reaction to the harsh nature of 18th century asylum care.
Brian Tuke, Henry's secretary at the time of Carey's death wrote this to Lord Legat the day after his death: " Now is word common that M. Cary, which before I came lay in the chamber where I lie, and with whom at my first coming I met here in this place, saying that he had been with his wife at Plashey, and would not be seen within, because he would ride again and hunt, is dead of the sweat.
Notable doctors associated with the York school included John Hughlings Jackson, Daniel Hack Tuke, Thomas Laycock ( physiologist ), James Atkinson ( surgeon ), and Sir Jonathan Hutchinson.

Tuke and Higgins
* Rupert Whitaker, founder and chairman of the Tuke Institute and co-founder of the Terence Higgins Trust ( 1981 )

Tuke and set
Tuke set about formalising the Royal Posts and established regular posting stations between London and Dover.

Tuke and appalling
Following the death of Hannah Mills in appalling conditions in York Lunatic Asylum in 1790, Tuke was asked to take the lead in Quaker efforts to develop a more humane alternative.

Tuke and within
Samuel Tuke can be found buried in the Quaker cemetery within the hospital grounds.

Tuke and York
* Daniel Hack Tuke: Distinguished mental doctor and related to the line of Tuke's which founded the York Retreat.
It was William Tuke who had in 1792 proposed the establishment of the Retreat at York under the management of Friends.
Tuke was born at Lawrence Street York, into a prominent Quaker family.
His great-great-grandfather William Tuke had founded the Retreat at York, one of the first modern insane asylums, in 1796.
Category: Tuke family of York
James Hack Tuke ( 13 September 1819 – 13 January 1896 ) was born at York, England, the son of Samuel Tuke.
Category: Tuke family of York
( This Tuke is not related to the Tukes of the York Retreat.
Tuke was born in York to a leading Quaker family.
* York Quaker memorial statement of 1823 concerning William Tuke from Google Book search.
Category: Tuke family of York
Samuel Tuke ( 31 July 1784, York, England – 14 October 1857 ) was a Quaker philanthropist and mental-health reformer.
He was the son of Henry Tuke and the grandson of William Tuke, who founded the York Retreat.
Category: Tuke family of York
Category: Tuke family of York
William Tuke ( 1732 – 1822 ) first raised the idea in 1818 of establishing a boys ' school in York for the sons of Friends ( Quakers ) who were not eligible for Ackworth School, near Pontefract.

Tuke and Lunatic
Tuke ran a private Lunatic Asylum at Manor House in Chiswick, Middlesex.
Samuel Tuke also published Practical Hints on the Construction and Economy of Pauper Lunatic Asylums ( 1815 ).

Tuke and asylum
He argued that Tuke and Pinel's asylum was a symbolic recreation of the condition of a child under a bourgeois family.
The concept of a safe asylum, proposed by Phillipe Pinel and William Tuke, offered protection and care at institutions for patients who had been previously abused or enslaved.

Tuke and after
Rutt and Tuke, having fallen out, reform their brotherhood in front of Koda, prompting him to go after Kenai.
His sister, Maria Sainsbury Tuke ( 1861 – 1947 )— who wrote a biography of her brother after his death — was born there.
Tuke kept a detailed diary all his life but only two volumes survived after his death and have since been published.
The student halls of residence at University College Falmouth are named after Tuke, a tribute to him as both an artist, and a famous resident of the town.

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