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Cotton Mather | A Wisdom Archive on Cotton Mather |  | Cotton Mather A selection of articles related to Cotton Mather |  |
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Cotton Mather
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Cotton Mather | |
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 |  |  | Cotton Mather: Encyclopedia II - Mysterious Dave Mather - Early LifeDave was the son of Ulysses and Lydia Mather (nee Wright) of Connecticut. His father was a sea captain who was descended from the famous Mathers of New England who had included Richard Mather, Increase Mather, and Cotton Mather. Dave seems to have fancied himself a direct descendant of Cotton Mather, but this was in error. All of the 19th century Mathers were descended from Cotton’s uncle, Timothy “Farmer” Mather.
Dave was the first of three sons born to the Mathers. His brother, Josiah “Sy” Mather was born October 11, 1854. Another brother, Geo ...
See also:Mysterious Dave Mather, Mysterious Dave Mather - Early Life, Mysterious Dave Mather - Life on the Prairie, Mysterious Dave Mather - Las Vegas, Mysterious Dave Mather - Dodge City, Mysterious Dave Mather - The Mystery of Mysterious Dave, Mysterious Dave Mather - Legends, Mysterious Dave Mather - Mysterious Dave's Legacy, Mysterious Dave Mather - Sources Read more here: » Mysterious Dave Mather: Encyclopedia II - Mysterious Dave Mather - Early Life |
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 |  |  | Cotton Mather: Encyclopedia II - Harvard College - HistoryThe name Harvard College dates to 1638. In that year, the two-year-old school, which had yet to graduate its first students, was named in honor of the recently deceased John Harvard, a minister from nearby Charlestown, who in his will had bequeathed to it his library and a sum of money. In the understanding of its members at the time, the name "Harvard College" probably referred to the first (as they foresaw it) of a number of colleges which would someday make up a university along the lines of Oxford or Cambridge. The American usage ...
See also:Harvard College, Harvard College - History, Harvard College - House system, Harvard College - Concentrations, Harvard College - Organizations Read more here: » Harvard College: Encyclopedia II - Harvard College - History |
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 |  |  | Cotton Mather: Encyclopedia II - Andre Norton - BiographyThe parents of Alice Mary Norton were Adalbert Freely Norton, owner of a rug company, and Bertha Stemm. She began writing at the Collinwood High School in Cleveland, under the tutelage of Miss Sylvia Cochrane. She was the editor of a literary page in the school's paper for which she wrote short stories. During this time she wrote her first book—Ralestone Luck, which would eventually find its way to publication as her second novel in 1938, the first ...
See also:Andre Norton, Andre Norton - Biography, Andre Norton - Books, Andre Norton - Witch World series, Andre Norton - Book of the Oak, Andre Norton - Free Traders, Andre Norton - Murdoc Jern, Andre Norton - Crosstime, Andre Norton - Time Traders, Andre Norton - Janus, Andre Norton - Lorens Van Norreys, Andre Norton - The Magic Sequence, Andre Norton - Star Ka'at, Andre Norton - Forerunner, Andre Norton - Solar Queen, Andre Norton - The Halfblood Chronicles, Andre Norton - Hosteen Storm, Andre Norton - Astra, Andre Norton - Westerns Read more here: » Andre Norton: Encyclopedia II - Andre Norton - Biography |
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 |  |  | Cotton Mather: : American
History Sitemap I - C This is a sitemap for American History - C . Click on a link and you will find multiple definitions and articles related to the word. The sitemap(s) covers over 1,574 different American History terms. Cabinet, Caesar's Column, californio, Calvin Coolidge, Cambodian incursion, Camp David Agreement, carpetbaggers, Cattle Kingdom, cause celebre, CCC, Centennial Exposition, Central Intelligence Agency, Central Powers, Cesar Chavez, chain migration, Challenger, Chancellorsville, Charles Cornwallis, Charles Coughlin, Charles de Gaulle, Charles Evans Hughes, Charles Forbes, Charles Fourier, Charles Grandeson Finney, Charles Guiteau, Charles Lindbergh, Charles River Bridge case, Charles Sumner, Charles Townshend, Charles W. Eliot, Charles William Peale, Charlie Chaplin, Chattanooga, Chautauqua movement, checks and balances, Cherokee War, Cherry Valley, Chesapeake incident, Chester A. Arthur, Chiang Kai-shek, Chicago Defender, Chief Joseph, Children's Bureau, Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association, Chinese Exclusion Act, Chisholm Trail, Christopher Columbus, Church of England, Church of God, Cincinnati Red Stockings, CIO, Circular Letter, Citizen Genet, city commission, city manager, Civil Disobedience, Civil Rights Act, Civil Rights Act of 1875, Civil Rights Act of 1957, Civil Rights Actof 1964, civil service reform, Civil Works Admninistration, claims club, Clarence Darrow, Clark Memorandum, Clayton Antitrust Act, Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, clear and present danger, Clearn Air Act, Clement Attlee, Clement Vallandigham, Clermont, clipper ships, closed shop, Coercive Acts, Cold Harbor, Cold War, collaborationist, collective bargaining, Colonial Wars, colonization, Colored Farmers' Alliance, Columbian exchange, Comecon, Committee of Safety, Committee on Public Information, Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies, committees of correspondence, common man, common school, Common Sense, Commonwealth v. Hunt, Communism, communitarianism, community action agencies, companionate family, competency, Compromise of 1850, Compromise of 1877, concentration, concentration camp, Conciliatory Proposition, Confederate States of America CSA , Confiscation Act of 1862, Congress on Racial Equality, Congressional Reconstruction, conquistadores, Conscience Whigs, conscription, conservation, conservative coalition, Constitution of the United States, Constitutional Convention, Constitutional Union party, Continental Army, Continental Association, Continental dollars, Continental System, contrabands, contract theory of government, Contract with America, Contras, convention, Convention of 1800, Convention of 1818, cooling-off period, cooperative, Copperheads, cordon sanitaire, corporation, corrupt bargain, cotton gin, Cotton Mather, Cotton Whigs, Council of Economic Advsiers, Council of National Defense, counterculture, Country, coureur de bois, court-packing scheme, covenant, crack, creation theory, CREEP, creeping socialism, creole, Crime of '73, criollo, Crittenden Compromise, crop lien system, Crusades, cryptanalyst, Cuban missile crisis, cult of true womanhood, culture area, Currency Act, Currier and Ives, Cyrus McCormick, Cyrus Vance, More sitemaps here: American History Dictionary, American History Dictionary - A-Z, American History Dictionary - A, American History Dictionary - B, American History Dictionary - C, American History Dictionary - D, American History Dictionary - E, American History Dictionary - F, American History Dictionary - G, American History Dictionary - H, American History Dictionary - I, American History Dictionary - J, American History Dictionary - K, American History Dictionary - L, American History Dictionary - M, American History Dictionary - N, American History Dictionary - O, American History Dictionary - P, American History Dictionary - Q, American History Dictionary - R, American History Dictionary - S, American History Dictionary - T, American History Dictionary - U, American History Dictionary - V, American History Dictionary - W, American History Dictionary - X, American History Dictionary - Y, American History Dictionary - Z, American History, History, Politics, Philosophy, Environment
Read more here: » American
History Sitemap I - C |
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 |  |  | Cotton Mather: Encyclopedia - BeelzebubBeelzebub (also known as Belzebud, Belzaboul, Beelzeboul, Baalsebul, Baalzebubg, Beelzebuth, Beelzebus; more accurately Ba‘al Zebûb or Ba‘al Zəbûb, Hebrew בעל זבוב), appears as the name of a deity worshipped in the Philistine city of Ekron. The name also later appears as the name of a demon or devil, often interchanged with Beelzebul.
In ancient contexts, there appears to have been little, if any, meaningful distinction between Beelze ...
Including:
Read more here: » Beelzebub: Encyclopedia - Beelzebub |
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 |  |  | Cotton Mather: Encyclopedia - PlutarchMestrius Plutarchus (ca. 46- 127) was a Greek historian, biographer, and essayist.
Born in the small town of Chaeronea, in the Greek region known as Boeotia, probably during the reign of the Roman Emperor Claudius, Plutarch travelled widely in the Mediterranean world, including twice to Rome. Due to his parents' wealth, after 67, Plutarchus was able to study philosophy, rhetoric, and mathematics at the Academy of Athens.
He had a number of influential friends, including Soscius Senecio and Fundanus, both important Senato ...
Including:
Read more here: » Plutarch: Encyclopedia - Plutarch |
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 |  |  | Cotton Mather: Encyclopedia II - List of people from Massachusetts - Entertainment
List of people from Massachusetts - Comedians.
Denis Leary comedian and actor
Jay Leno comedian and talk show host
Conan O'Brien comedian and talk show host
Louis C.K. comedian, director
Mario Cantone comedian
Steve Carell comedian, actor, The Daily Show
Dane Cook comedian, stand up, and actor
Rob Corddry comedian, The Daily Show
Lenny Clarke comedian, stand up, and actor
Bill Burr comedian
Nick DiPaolo comedian
< ...
See also:List of people from Massachusetts, List of people from Massachusetts - Artists, List of people from Massachusetts - Athletes, List of people from Massachusetts - Business, List of people from Massachusetts - Crime, List of people from Massachusetts - Entertainment, List of people from Massachusetts - Comedians, List of people from Massachusetts - Film, List of people from Massachusetts - Musicians, List of people from Massachusetts - Radio, List of people from Massachusetts - Founders, List of people from Massachusetts - Literature, List of people from Massachusetts - Native people, List of people from Massachusetts - People involved in the American Revolutionary War, List of people from Massachusetts - Public office, List of people from Massachusetts - Religion, List of people from Massachusetts - Science, List of people from Massachusetts - Others Read more here: » List of people from Massachusetts: Encyclopedia II - List of people from Massachusetts - Entertainment |
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 |  |  | Cotton Mather: Encyclopedia II - John Steinbeck - Biography
John Steinbeck - Early life and work.
Steinbeck was born, of German and Irish descent, to John and Olive Steinbeck in Salinas, California. He had three sisters: two older and one younger. Steinbeck's father worked in county government, and Steinbeck's mother was a teacher.
Steinbeck enrolled in Stanford University in 1919 and attended until 1925, but dropped out and moved to New York City, where he labored at various jobs, including as a construction worker while developing his skills as a freelance writer. He was unable to f ...
See also:John Steinbeck, John Steinbeck - Biography, John Steinbeck - Early life and work, John Steinbeck - Marriages and children, John Steinbeck - Critical success, John Steinbeck - 1940s–1960s, John Steinbeck - Legacy, John Steinbeck - Political views, John Steinbeck - Works, John Steinbeck - East of Eden, John Steinbeck - The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck - Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck - The Pearl, John Steinbeck - Full bibliography, John Steinbeck - Film credits, John Steinbeck - Trivia Read more here: » John Steinbeck: Encyclopedia II - John Steinbeck - Biography |
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 |  |  | Cotton Mather: Encyclopedia II - Music history of the United States during the colonial era - New England colonial musicMain article: New England colonial music
The religious singing traditions of New England played an important role in the early evolution of American music. Beginning with the Pilgrim colonists, who brought the Ainsworth Psalter with them to the New World, church hymns were popular across the region. Common New Englanders soon developed their own traditions, which were viewed by some as degenerate and wanton.
See also:Music history of the United States during the colonial era, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Native American music, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Appalachian folk music, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Fiddling, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Lined-out hymnody, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - New England colonial music, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - New England choral traditions, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Secular folk music, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - John Wesley's legacy and the spread south, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Shakers, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - European professionals, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Gentleman amateur composers, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Lowell Mason, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Rural Pennsylvanian music, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Mennonites, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Ephrata Cloister, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Moravian Church, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Pietists, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - African Americans, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Drums, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Banjo, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Notes, Music history of the United States during the colonial era - Additional sources Read more here: » Music history of the United States during the colonial era: Encyclopedia II - Music history of the United States during the colonial era - New England colonial music |
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