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Thomas

A Wisdom Archive on Thomas

Thomas

A selection of articles related to Thomas

We recommend this article: Thomas - 1, and also this: Thomas - 2.
thomas, Thomas, Thomas - Variants

ARTICLES RELATED TO Thomas

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Oklahoma - Geography

Thomas is located at 35°44'47" North, 98°44'54" West (35.746419, -98.748264)GR1. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 3.1 km² (1.2 mi²). 3.1 km² (1.2 mi²) of it is land and none of the area is covered with water. ...

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Thomas Oklahoma, Thomas Oklahoma - Geography, Thomas Oklahoma - Demographics

Read more here: » Thomas Oklahoma: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Oklahoma - Geography

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Hughes - Biography

Hughes was the second son of John Hughes, editor of the Boscobel Tracts (1830). Thomas Hughes was born in Uffington, Berkshire. In February 1834 he went to Rugby School, which was then under Dr Thomas Arnold, a contemporary of his father at Oriel College, Oxford. In the sixth form, he came into contact with the headmaster, whom he afterwards idealized; but he excelled at sports rather than in scholarship, and his school career culminated in a cricket match at Lord's Cricket Ground. In 1842 he went on to Oriel, and graduated B.A. in 18 ...

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Thomas Hughes, Thomas Hughes - Biography, Thomas Hughes - Reference

Read more here: » Thomas Hughes: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Hughes - Biography

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Dybdahl - Biography

Thomas Dybdahl went out to become something what they call a shooting-star in Norway. As a solo artist, the former guitarist of the band Quadraphonics released his first single EP "Bird" in 1996. His first release did not have much success, and his second EP from 1997, "John Wayne", was also unsuccessful. Beginning with the release of his first album "... That great October sound", the first part of his gold and platinum selling October series, in 1998, Thomas Dybdahl received national and even international appreciation ...

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Thomas Dybdahl, Thomas Dybdahl - Biography, Thomas Dybdahl - Discography

Read more here: » Thomas Dybdahl: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Dybdahl - Biography

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Mann - Life

Mann was born in Lübeck, second son of Thomas Johann Heinrich Mann (a senator and grain merchant) and his wife Júlia da Silva Bruhns (who came from a German-Portuguese-Creole family). Mann's father died in 1891 and his trading firm was liquidated. The family subsequently moved to Munich, where Mann lived from 1891 until 1933, with the exception of a year-long stay in Palestrina, Italy, with his older brother Heinrich, also a novelist. Mann attended the science division of a Lübeck gymnasium, then spent some time at the University of Munic ...

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Thomas Mann, Thomas Mann - Life, Thomas Mann - Quotes, Thomas Mann - Politics, Thomas Mann - Influences, Thomas Mann - Works

Read more here: » Thomas Mann: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Mann - Life

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Tomkins - Life

He was born in St Davids in Pembrokeshire. His father was also a musician, "vicar choral" of the cathedral of St Davids and organist there; his three half-brothers were musicians as well, but none attained the fame of Thomas. In 1596 he was appointed as a choral instructor at Worcester Cathedral. Most likely he studied with William Byrd for a time in London, for he dedicated a madrigal to him as his teacher. While in London he probably met Thomas Morley, for Morley included one of Tomkins' madrigals in his important collection ...

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Thomas Tomkins, Thomas Tomkins - Life, Thomas Tomkins - Works, Thomas Tomkins - Sources

Read more here: » Thomas Tomkins: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Tomkins - Life

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Apostle - Later history

Just as Saints Peter and Paul are said to have brought the fledgling Christianity to Greece and Rome, Thomas is often said to have taken it eastwards. Thomas Apostle - Thomas and Syria. Thomas has a role in the legend of king Abgar of Edessa (Urfa), for having sent Thaddaeus to preach in Edessa after the Ascension (Eusebius, Historia ecclesiae 1.13; III.1; Ephrem the Syrian also recounts this legend.) In the 4th century the martyrium erected over his burial place brought pilgrims to Edessa. In the 3 ...

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Thomas Apostle, Thomas Apostle - Thomas in the Gospel of John, Thomas Apostle - Name and identity, Thomas Apostle - Twin and its renditions, Thomas Apostle - Other names, Thomas Apostle - Split identity, Thomas Apostle - Later history, Thomas Apostle - Thomas and Syria, Thomas Apostle - Thomas and India, Thomas Apostle - Writings attributed to Thomas, Thomas Apostle - Thomas and John

Read more here: » Thomas Apostle: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Apostle - Later history

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Ireland

The meeting with O'Neill led to an extended interest in Irish affairs on Stukley's part. He was recommended by the queen to the lord lieutenant of Ireland, Sir Thomas Radclyffe, Earl of Sussex, on the 30th of June 1563, and in 1566 was employed as a captain by the lord deputy, Sir Sir Henry Sidney, in a vain effort to induce O'Neill to enter into negotiations with the government. The Ulster lord sought to use him as intermediary with Sidney and in the same year requested his presence in fighting the Scots, an arrangement favoured by the lord ...

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Thomas Stukley, Thomas Stukley - Early Life, Thomas Stukley - Career, Thomas Stukley - Ireland, Thomas Stukley - Spain, Thomas Stukley - Rome, Thomas Stukley - Invasion Expedition, Thomas Stukley - Legacy, Thomas Stukley - Footnotes

Read more here: » Thomas Stukley: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Ireland

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Edwards - Details

He was 20 years old, and a Private in the 1st Bn., The Black Watch (Royal Highlanders), British Army during the Sudan Campaign when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC. On 13 March 1884 at the Battle of Tamai, Sudan, when both members of the crew of one of the guns had been killed, Private Edwards, after bayoneting two Arabs and himself receiving a wound from a spear, remained with th ...

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Thomas Edwards, Thomas Edwards - Details, Thomas Edwards - The medal

Read more here: » Thomas Edwards: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Edwards - Details

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Sankara - Quotes

"In any case, I wish and we I'm convinced that the best way of limiting the usurpation of the capacity by a group of individuals, soldier or not, is initially in responsabilishing the people. Between fractions, between clans, one can perpetrate plots and coups d'état. Against the people, one cannot perpetrate a durable coup d'état. Consequently, the best way of avoiding than the army does not confiscate for it and only for it only the power, is to it right now share the power with the voltaic people. It is it towards that what we tend." August, 21 1983 Press conference. Source : http://www.tho ...

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Thomas Sankara, Thomas Sankara - Writings by Thomas Sankara, Thomas Sankara - Quotes, Thomas Sankara - Writings about Thomas Sankara

Read more here: » Thomas Sankara: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Sankara - Quotes

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Mann - Quotes

"A man lives not only his personal life, as an individual, but also, consciously or unconsciously, the life of his epoch and his contemporaries." (from The Magic Mountain, 1924) "Regarded as a whole, Mann's career is a striking example of the "repeated puberty" which Goethe thought characteristic of the genius, In technique as well as in thought, he experienced far more daringly than is generally realized. In Buddenbrooks he wrote one of the last of the great "old-fashioned" novels, a patient, thorough tracing of the fortunes of a family." (fro ...

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Thomas Mann, Thomas Mann - Life, Thomas Mann - Quotes, Thomas Mann - Politics, Thomas Mann - Influences, Thomas Mann - Works

Read more here: » Thomas Mann: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Mann - Quotes

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Mann - Politics

During World War I Mann supported the Kaiser's conservatism and attacked liberalism. In Von Deutscher Republik (1923), as a semi-official spokesman for parliamentary democracy, he called the German intellectual to support the new Weimar Republic. Afterwards, his political views gradually shifted toward liberal and democratic principles. In 1930 Mann gave a public address in Berlin titled "An Appeal to Reason," in which he strongly denounced Nazism and encouraged resistance by the working class. This was followed by numerous ess ...

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Thomas Mann, Thomas Mann - Life, Thomas Mann - Quotes, Thomas Mann - Politics, Thomas Mann - Influences, Thomas Mann - Works

Read more here: » Thomas Mann: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Mann - Politics

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Cajetan - Views

Though as a theologian Cajetan was a scholastic of the older Thomist type, his general position was that of the moderate reformers of the school to which Reginald Pole, archbishop of Canterbury, also belonged; i.e., he desired to retain the best elements of the humanist revival in harmony with Catholic orthodoxy illumined by a revived appreciation of the Augustinian doctrine of justification. In the field of Thomistic philosophy he showed striking independence of judgment, expressing liberal views on marriage and divorce, denying the ex ...

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Thomas Cajetan, Thomas Cajetan - Life, Thomas Cajetan - Views, Thomas Cajetan - Reference

Read more here: » Thomas Cajetan: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Cajetan - Views

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Hodgkin - Works

Hodgkin described the disease that bears his name (Hodgkin's lymphoma) in 1832, in a paper titled On Some Morbid Appearances of the Absorbent Glands and Spleen. He received 33 years later the eponym through the recognition of British physician Samuel Wilks (1824–1911), who rediscovered the disease. It is a malignancy which produces enlarge ment of lymphoid tissue, spleen, and liver, with invasion of other tissues. A more benign form is called Hodgkin’s paragranuloma, while a more in ...

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Thomas Hodgkin, Thomas Hodgkin - Life, Thomas Hodgkin - Works, Thomas Hodgkin - External link

Read more here: » Thomas Hodgkin: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Hodgkin - Works

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Aquinas - Biography

Thomas Aquinas - Early years. The life of Thomas Aquinas offers many interesting insights into the world of the High Middle Ages. He was born into a family of the south Italian nobility and was through his mother, Countess Theadora of Theate, related to the Hohenstaufen dynasty of Holy Roman emperors. He was probably born early in 1225 at his father Count Landulf's castle of Roccasecca in the kingdom of Naples. Landulf's brother, Sinibald, was abbot of the original Benedictine monastery at Monte Cassino, and the family intended Thomas to follow his uncle into that position; this would have been a normal ca ...

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Thomas Aquinas, Thomas Aquinas - Biography, Thomas Aquinas - Early years, Thomas Aquinas - Career, Thomas Aquinas - Death and canonization, Thomas Aquinas - Writings, Thomas Aquinas - Exegetical homiletical and liturgical writings, Thomas Aquinas - Dogmatic apologetic and ethical writings, Thomas Aquinas - Philosophical writings, Thomas Aquinas - Notable works, Thomas Aquinas - Modern criticism, Thomas Aquinas - Editions

Read more here: » Thomas Aquinas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Aquinas - Biography

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Career

Stukley's early mentors were Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, and then the Bishop of Exeter, in whose household he held a post. He was present at the siege of Boulogne in 1544-1545, and again in 1550 on the surrender of the city to the English. From 1547 to 1550, he was a standard-bearer at Boulogne, and then entered the service of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset. After his master's arrest in 1551 a warrant was issued against him, but he succeeded in escaping to Fr ...

See also:

Thomas Stukley, Thomas Stukley - Early Life, Thomas Stukley - Career, Thomas Stukley - Ireland, Thomas Stukley - Spain, Thomas Stukley - Rome, Thomas Stukley - Invasion Expedition, Thomas Stukley - Legacy, Thomas Stukley - Footnotes

Read more here: » Thomas Stukley: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Career

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Rome

Stukley allied with Fitzmaurice and moved to Rome in 1575, where he walked about the streets and churches barefoot and bare legged (which caused the lord deputy of Ireland, Sir William Fitzwilliam, to write sarcastically of his holiness, remarking that it caused the people of Waterford where he had put on a similar performance while awaiting favourable winds for five weeks prior to his departure to believe in his piety). In June, he had an interview at Naples with Don John, when he gave details of the plans hatched with the pope for an Octob ...

See also:

Thomas Stukley, Thomas Stukley - Early Life, Thomas Stukley - Career, Thomas Stukley - Ireland, Thomas Stukley - Spain, Thomas Stukley - Rome, Thomas Stukley - Invasion Expedition, Thomas Stukley - Legacy, Thomas Stukley - Footnotes

Read more here: » Thomas Stukley: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Rome

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Legacy

Stukley's first wife died in 1564; in 1566 he married Elizabeth Peppard, a wealthy Irish widow. He is known to have had one son, William. Stukley was part of a group of highly talented and forceful Devonshire adventurers, privateers and soldiers who made their mark during Elizabeth's reign. Included in this group were Peter Carew, Humphrey Gilbert, and Walter Raleigh; but of them all, Stukley was perhaps the most wayward. His bizarre career made a considerable impression on his contemporaries, and in death he attracted as much specula ...

See also:

Thomas Stukley, Thomas Stukley - Early Life, Thomas Stukley - Career, Thomas Stukley - Ireland, Thomas Stukley - Spain, Thomas Stukley - Rome, Thomas Stukley - Invasion Expedition, Thomas Stukley - Legacy, Thomas Stukley - Footnotes

Read more here: » Thomas Stukley: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Stukley - Legacy

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Edison - Trivia

"To Steinway & Sons — Gents, I have decided to keep your grand piano. For some reason unknown to me it gives better results than any so far tried. Please send bill with lowest price." — Thomas Edison June 2, 1890 ...

See also:

Thomas Edison, Thomas Edison - Family background, Thomas Edison - Birth and early years, Thomas Edison - Marriages and later life, Thomas Edison - Inventor, Thomas Edison - Menlo Park, Thomas Edison - Incandescent era, Thomas Edison - War of Currents era, Thomas Edison - Work relations, Thomas Edison - Media inventions, Thomas Edison - Homes, Thomas Edison - Trivia, Thomas Edison - List of contributions, Thomas Edison - Improvements of Edison's work, Thomas Edison - Tributes

Read more here: » Thomas Edison: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Edison - Trivia

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Cook - Company Ownership

Ownership of his company, Thomas Cook and Son, remained with his family until 1928. In 1999 the Carlson Leisure Group merged with Thomas Cook. In mid-2000 Preussag acquired Thomas Cook's rival Thomson Travel and was forced to sell its 50% stake in Thomas Cook by regulatory authorities. In 2002 Thomas Cook was acquired by the German company C&N Touristic AG, which later changed its name to Thomas Cook AG. The ...

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Thomas Cook, Thomas Cook - The Beginnings, Thomas Cook - Company Ownership, Thomas Cook - Controversy

Read more here: » Thomas Cook: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Cook - Company Ownership

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Clarence Thomas - Appointment

On July 8, 1991 President George H. W. Bush nominated Thomas to replace Thurgood Marshall who had recently announced his retirement.[1] Marshall had been the only black justice on the court. While the selection of Thomas preserved the existing racial balance of the court, it was seen as likely to move the ideological balance to the right. While most recent Supreme Court nominees have been deemed "well-qualified" by the American Bar Association, the rating for Justice Thomas was ...

See also:

Clarence Thomas, Clarence Thomas - Personal history, Clarence Thomas - Early career, Clarence Thomas - Appointment, Clarence Thomas - Judicial philosophy, Clarence Thomas - Liberal rulings by a conservative Justice, Clarence Thomas - Heritage, Clarence Thomas - Sources

Read more here: » Clarence Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Clarence Thomas - Appointment

Thomas: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Bowdler - Biography

Bowdler was born near Bath, the son of a gentleman of independent means, studied medicine at St. Andrews and at Edinburgh, where he took his degree in 1776, but did not practice, devoting himself instead to the cause of prison reform. He was a strong chess player for his day, and played a game against the best chess player of the time, François-André Danican Philidor [2], who was confident enough of his superiority to Bowdler that he gave odds. The first recorded game to feature a double Rook sacrifice was played between Bowdler ...

See also:

Thomas Bowdler, Thomas Bowdler - Biography, Thomas Bowdler - Notes

Read more here: » Thomas Bowdler: Encyclopedia II - Thomas Bowdler - Biography




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