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         Tunstall Cuthbert:     more books (26)
  1. A sermon of Cuthbert Tunstall, Bishop of Durham, preached on Palm Sunday, 1539, before King Henry VIII; by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-08-29
  2. Deans of Salisbury: Richard Poore, Thomas Pierce, Eustace, Cuthbert Tunstall, Adam Moleyns, John Piers, Thomas Ruthall, Dean of Salisbury
  3. Évêque de Londres: Mellitus, Cuthbert Tunstall, Robert Lowth, William Warham, Geoffrey Fisher, Dunstan de Cantorbéry (French Edition)
  4. The Last Years of Cuthbert Tunstall (1547-1559). [Subtitle]: (Durham Cathedral Lecture) by D.M. Loades, 1973-01-01
  5. People From Hambleton (District): Roger Ascham, Frank Wild, Jack Hatfield, Cuthbert Tunstall, Walter Braithwaite, Robin Turton, Baron Tranmire
  6. The Last Years of Cuthbert Tunstall (1547-1559). by D.M. Loades, 1973
  7. Évêque de Durham: Rainulf Flambard, Guillaume de Saint-Calais, Thomas Wolsey, Cuthbert Tunstall, Guillaume Walcher, David Edward Jenkins (French Edition)
  8. Diplomate Britannique: Richard Hakluyt, George Jellicoe, Nathaniel Parker-Forth, George Bogle, Cuthbert Tunstall, James Maitland (French Edition)
  9. A Sermon of Cuthbert Tonstall, Bishop of Durham, Preached on Palm Sunday ... by bishop of Durham Cuthbert Tunstall, Cuthbert Tunstall, 2008-08-21
  10. A Sermon Of Cuthbert Tonstall: Bishop Of Durham (1823) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2009-06-13
  11. A sermon of Cuthbert Bysshop of Duresme made vpon Palme sondaye laste past, before the maiestie of our souerayne lorde kynge Henry the. VIII. kynge of England [and] of France. (1539) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-07-13
  12. A Sermon Of Cuthbert Tonstall: Bishop Of Durham (1823) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-09-10
  13. A Sermon Of Cuthbert Tonstall: Bishop Of Durham (1823) by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-09-10
  14. A Sermon Preached on Palm Sunday, 1539, Before King Henry Viii. by Cuthbert Tunstall, 2010-07-24

41. History Of The English Bible - Lesson 4
Remember cuthbert tunstall, the Bishop of London? He lived in Antwerp because twoof England's most powerful men hated him cuthbert tunstall and Thomas More.
http://home.attbi.com/~welliott21/BibleHistory/BHLesson4.html
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History of the English Bible
Lesson 1 - So What's the "Bible" Anyway?
Lesson 2 - John Wycliffe (1328-1384) - Morningstar of the Reformation

Lesson 3 - William Tyndale's World (1495-1536)
Lesson 4 - Tyndale and His Wonderful Book
  • Tyndale's "Call to Service"
  • Tyndale the Traveler
  • Start the Presses
  • Program - Can't tell the 1530's without a program! ...
    Time Line of the English Bible
    His "Call to Service"
    In some religious circles the "wheels" expect church leaders to have a definite "call to the ministry." Usually they mean some sort of "crisis" experience in which the person realizes that God has a specialy "calling" for him. Although he didn't use that term, William Tyndale knew exactly what he wanted to do from an early age. He had a remarkable gift for languages. At Oxford he studied Greek, Hebrew, and Latin. One of his favorite books was the Greek New Testament published by Erasmus of Rotterdam in 1516. He found that the Church did not measure up to what he found. Even though he argued for reformation and was sympathetic to the Lollad teachings he found at Oxford, he was ordained a priest in 1521. In debates with local church leaders he usually bested them by citing Scripture, something they simply did not know.

42. History Of The English Bible - Lesson 6
Vengance was hers! First she restored her three most Catholic bishops Stephen Gardiner, Edmund Bonner and cuthbert tunstall (remember him?).
http://home.attbi.com/~welliott21/BibleHistory/BHLesson6.html
Home
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History of the English Bible
Lesson 1 - So What's the "Bible" Anyway?
Lesson 2 - John Wycliffe (1328-1384) - Morningstar of the Reformation

Lesson 3 - William Tyndale's World (1495-1536)

Lesson 4 - Tyndale and His Wonderful Book
...
Lesson 5 - Here Come the Bibles!
Lesson 6 - Still more Bibles - The Bishops and Geneva!
  • What happened after Henry?
    • Edward VI
    • Mary I
    • Elizabeth I ...
      Time Line of the English Bible
      What Happened After Henry (1509-1547)?
      Henry VIII and his descendants ruled England for almost a century. The story of Henry, Edward, Mary, and Elizabeth is fascinating, but we will follow only the thread of the English Bible. During Henry's last six or so years he tried to undo much of what he had done to establish the Reformation in England. Although the Catholic opposition, led by Stephen Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester, wanted to do more, Henry did allow Parliment to pass the Act to Abolish Diversity of Opinion, which made it far easier to punish dissenters. Henry did intervene by pardoning most of of the accused, but the law was still "on the books." Bishop Gardiner also tried to get the Convocation and King to replace the Great Bible with another. His proposed translation would leave 99 Latin terms untranslated. These terms, he argued, were so special that translation would only debase them.

43. Biography-center - Letter T
1992/tumbio.html; tunstall, cuthbert www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/tunstall.html;Tuovinen, Arto www.kirjasto
http://www.biography-center.com/t.html
Visit a
random biography ! Any language Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Turkish
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340 biographies

44. English-speaking Medical Students Attending European Universities In The 17th Ce
DNB. tunstall, cuthbert, Angl, York, 1707.13.10, 1708.03.04, MD, Magister; Licentiate1708.04.02; Laurendus 1708.26.03, 546/013; 551/145. DNB for cuthbert Constable.
http://www.rcpe.ac.uk/library/English_Students/Montpellier/Montpellier_PtoZ.html
Library Classics from the College Library The Manuscript Collection Exhibitions ... Library Projects
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Altdorf Angers Basel Bologna ... Home
Montpellier
A B C D ... Z Click on the University of your choice, then click on the A to Z to view an alphabetical list of students.
Or enter the name you are interested in below.
English Speaking Students SURNAME FIRST NAMES NATIONALITY PLACE OF ORIGIN INSCRIPTION DATE GRADUATION DATE TITLE OF DEGREE OTHER REF PHILLIPS Joseph Angl Worcester POWER Antony Hib Waterford POWER Robert Hib At Orange PURCELL John Angl Salop MD Licentiate 1699.02.05 Q - NO ENTRIES RADER Thomas Angl Stafford RODER REGIUS [KING] John Scot Aberdeen Studied at Montpellier; MD Orange 1637 RIORDAN William Hib Cork ROCHAEUS Maurice Hib Bac.

45. English-speaking Medical Students Attending European Universities In The 17th Ce
Migrated to Ox, . tunstall, (cuthbert), -, -, 1697.19.05, -, -, MD Montpellier April3.1798 Eboracensis . From Montpellier records - Magister Examinandus Oct 13.1707.
http://www.rcpe.ac.uk/library/English_Students/Padua/Padua_TtoV.html
Library Classics from the College Library The Manuscript Collection Exhibitions ... History
Library
Altdorf Angers Basel Bologna ... Home
Padua
A B C D ... Z Click on the University of your choice, then click on the A to Z to view an alphabetical list of students.
Or enter the name you are interested in below.
English Speaking Students SURNAME FIRST NAMES NATIONALITY PLACE OF ORIGIN INSCRIPTION DATE GRADUATION DATE TITLE OF DEGREE OTHER REF TANNER Ezekiel Angl MD
et Phil.
Padua S. of Exekiel. Consiliarius at Padua 1668-2671. At Pembroke College, Cambridge 1646. S. of Ezekiel. B. Hertfordshire. TASBURGH Jacobus MD
et Phil.
Padua s. of Richard. Consiliarius 105-6. Died Nov 13.1727. TAYLOR Johannes Esq.

46. William Tyndale’s Bible For The People
Article about the involvement of William Tyndale in the derivation of the English Bible.Category Society Religion and Spirituality Tyndale, William...... printed in English. Strangely, those Bibles were being burned at theorder of the Bishop of London, cuthbert tunstall. In fact, he
http://jehovah.to/exegesis/translation/nwt/tyndale.htm
Jehovah's Witnesses United
  • Home Legal Resources Biblical Exegesis General Materials ... Terms of Use
  • Jehovah's Witnesses United William Tyndale’s Bible for the People IT WAS a day in May in the year 1530. St. Paul’s churchyard in London was crowded with people. Instead of milling around the booksellers’ stalls and exchanging the latest news and gossip as usual, the crowd was visibly agitated. A fire was roaring at the center of the square. But it was no ordinary bonfire. Into the fire, some men were emptying basketfuls of books. It was a book burning! Those were not ordinary books either. They were Bibles—William Tyndale’s "New Testament" and Pentateuch—the first ever to be printed in English. Strangely, those Bibles were being burned at the order of the Bishop of London, Cuthbert Tunstall. In fact, he had spent a considerable sum buying all the copies he could find. What could possibly have been wrong with the Bibles? Why did Tyndale produce them? And why did the authorities go to such lengths to get rid of them? The Bible—A Closed Book In most parts of the world today, it is a relatively simple thing to purchase a Bible. But this has not always been the case. Even in 15th- and early 16th-century England, the Bible was viewed as the property of the church, a book to be read only at public services and explained solely by the priests. What was read, however, was usually from the Latin Bible, which the common people could neither understand nor afford. Thus, what they knew of the Bible was no more than the stories and moral lessons drawn by the clergy.

    47. WILLIAM TYNDALE Covenant Theologian, Christian Martyr Part 2: Later Biography
    Later biography, with references, covering the period from 1524 to the end of his life, by Jules Grisham.Category Society Religion and Spirituality Tyndale, William...... cuthbert tunstall, the bishop of London who had rebuffed Tyndale earlier and referredto Tyndale and Joye as “children of iniquitie mainteiners of Luthers
    http://www.thirdmill.org/files/english/html/ch/CH.h.Grisham.Tyndale.2.html
    IIIM Magazine Online , Volume 3, Number 9, February 26 to March 4, 2001
    WILLIAM TYNDALE
    Covenant Theologian, Christian Martyr
    Part 2: Later Biography
    by Jules Grisham
    THE 1526 NEW TESTAMENT
    Tyndale sailed for Hamburg in 1524, never to return to England. While there, he remained under the patronage of the Christian Brethren, who, with a powerful mixture of religious radicalism and risk-taking entrepreneurship, were profiting handsomely from their book-smuggling trade. Concealed in bales of cloth, sacks of grain, and barrels of wine, the books they smuggled through the English ports were soon being transmitted all along the cloth-trade networks where they were eagerly purchased. Interestingly, this term “Christian Brethren,” the self-designation of these London merchants engaged in importing books by English Protestants on the continent, was also applied to the Lollards and their book-exchanging networks. “So,” notes Dickens, “in men like Monmouth we see the linkage between the international world of Lutheranism and the older English networks of Lollards.” Tyndale and his amanuensis William Roye, an Augustinian friar of Jewish background from Calais, worked together on translating the New Testament using Erasmus’ Greek New Testament, the Vulgate, and Luther’s German Bible as sources. In the spring of 1525, they moved on to Cologne, a center of printing, and by autumn of that year they handed a finished copy to a Cologne printer who managed to print out 3,000 copies of the first eighty

    48. Ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/pa/philadelphia/bios/cfofphil/t-2.txt
    ZACHARIAH 1807 1561 MD TERESA HAMMER TUNNELE, HANNAH R M1887 1342 TO EDWARD H BONSALLTUNNIS, ABRAHAM 1557 SAME AS ABRAHAM TUNES tunstall, cuthbert 420 tunstall
    http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/pa/philadelphia/bios/cfofphil/t-2.txt

    49. WHITCHURCH
    WEM, Sal m 10 Jul 1841 WHITCHURCH - died 28 Feb 1853 tunstall Staffs (Typhus m 21Nov 1842 WHITCHURCH Witnesses Hannah TURNER William CALTRUTH - (cuthbert).
    http://www.phc.igs.net/~gordpace/uk/whit.htm
    PACES of WHITCHURCH
    Shropshire - migration to Staffordshire
    includes surnames
    BROOKES BROWN CARTLEDGE CHIDLOW CUFLER GILBERT HAMLET HANDLEY HASSALL HOLDCROFT JAMES JONES LEE LLOYD MILLINGTON MILLWARD PEARCE PERRY PHILLIPS RIGBY SHAW SHELLEY SUMNER TURNER WEBB WHEAT WILLIAMS WHITAKER WORTHINGTON with thanks to contributors
    Jenny McGrail in Australia - Shawn Clutton of Whitchurch
    Marriages
    Chapelry of Tilstock
    Whitchurch
    1841 July 10
    Richard - Christain name
    PACE - Surname
    of full age
    Batchelor - Status Labourer - Occupation Tilstock - Residence at time of Marriage Richard Pace - Father Labourer - Father's Occ William Sumner - Witnesses Mary - Christain name HAMLET - Surname of full age spinster - Status Servant - Occupation Tilstock Richard Hamlet - Father Farmer - Father's Occ Mary Pace - Witnesses No 219 1842 Nov 21 William - Christain name SUMNER - Surname of full age Batchelor - Status Labouer - Occupation Steel Heath - Residence at time of Marriage Samuel Sumner - Father Joiner - Father's Occ William Caltruth (Lalbruth) - Witnesses

    50. Norfolk Post No. 36, American Legion, 1924
    signed the charter application Callis W. Pollard, Charles B. Borland, Whit P.tunstall, Robert B. tunstall, cuthbert tunstall, Harold E. Masengill, George
    http://www.ls.net/~newriver/va/al36.htm
    Sponsored by
    NORFOLK POST NO. 36
    NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
    American Legion, 1924 Norfolk's first American Legion Post was organized September 15, 1919. Fifteen Norfolk veterans signed the application for a charter and elected R. Balwin Myers chairman. The following signed the charter application: Callis W. Pollard, Charles B. Borland, Whit P. Tunstall, Robert B. Tunstall, Cuthbert Tunstall, Harold E. Masengill, George Farant Todd, Thos. H. Willcox, Jr., Chas. G. Hunter, J. Carl Peck, Robert P. Beaman, R. Baldwin Myers, E. R. Willcox and Richard C. Henderson. Announcement of the organization caused much interest among the returned service men and almost overnight the roster increased and within a week a thousand applications for membership had been received. Assisted by the War Camp Community Service and quartered in their building, the temporary organization struggled through the first month and started to arrange for permanent organization plans. The first meeting was a large one-about fifteen hundred men attending-and Dr. Thomas V. Williamson, formerly Commanding Officer of Ambulance Company 115th of the Twenty-ninth Division, was elected to command the Post. Thomas H. Gilliam, Jr., former captain of Field Artillery, was elected to the position of adjutant. Officers were opened in the Armory Building and by January 1st the organization had been completed and new offices opened in the Dickson Building. Adjutant Gilliam appointed Fairfield H. Hodges as assistant adjutant and placed him in charge of the Dickson Building office.

    51. The William Tyndale Home Page: William Tyndale: Fire For The Ploughman
    cuthbert tunstall The bishop of London to whom Tyndale went in 1524, seekingpatronage for his work of translating the New Testament into English.
    http://www.williamtyndale.com/0characterswilliamtyndale.htm
    A Gallery of Characters and Places ...
    A Gallery of Characters in Tyndale’s Life
    Sir Thomas More
    One of William Tyndale’s bitterest opponents, and one of the best-known men in 16th-century England for his power, his intellect and his religious convictions. His was the central character in the prize-winning play and movie, A Man for All Seasons Thomas More was born in London, 6 February 1478, the son of a judge. He was sent to Oxford for two years, then studied law and was called to the Bar in 1501. He spent four years at the London Charterhouse (monastery of the Carthusian monks), hoping to become a priest or monk or friar. Leaving the Charterhouse, he entered Parliament. His friends included Desiderius Erasmus and John Colet, and other scholars who desired moderate reforms in the Church but were set against any break with the Papacy. Henry VIII, who became king in 1509, recognized More's learning and integrity, enjoyed his intelligent and cheerful conversation and ready wit, became his friend, and appointed him to numerous public offices, including finally that of Lord Chancellor of England. More was commissioned by the king and the church to refute William Tyndale’s arguments and to discredit his character. He wrote nine books against Tyndale, filling more than 1,000 pages with arguments and invective against the reformer, and always defending the ultimate authority of the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church. More undertook to show that Tyndale's translation of the Scriptures was so full of errors that it deserved to be suppressed. More and Tyndale exchanged several broadsides. Tyndale's denunciations of the doctrines taught by Rome would have fallen on deaf ears if they had not in fact described doctrines that many men believed they had heard from the pulpit, and had found utterly unacceptable.

    52. Thomas Bilney: An Early English Reformer
    Since Wolsey was too engrossed with the tasks of the kingdom, he leftthe trial in the hands of cuthbert tunstall, bishop of London.
    http://www.williamtyndale.com/0bilney1.htm
    F r i e n d s o f W i l l i a m T y n d a l e
    H i s t o r y o f t h e E n g l i s h B i b l e
    A n E a r l y E n g l i s h R e f o r m e r
    T h o m a s B i l n e y
    Though not usually listed amongst the great of the Reformation era, Thomas Bilney was, nonetheless, an important link in the progress of the Gospel in England during that period. “Little Bilney,” as he was affectionately named because of his diminutive stature, is known to have converted more great men among the English Reformers than did anyone else. He was born at or near Norwich in 1495 and lived in Cambridge from childhood. He attended Trinity College and attained the degree of doctor of laws. He was ordained a priest in 1519. Of a serious turn of mind and abstemious, he attempted early in life to fulfill the commandments of God; and he strove by fasting, long vigils, masses, and the purchase of indulgences to win peace of mind. Like Luther, Bilney discovered that good works alone were not enough to secure him the relief he sought. Many of Bilney’s acquaintances were talking about a new book, the Greek New Testament. But the priests had forbidden Bilney to read it, and, being a good Catholic who desired to fulfill all obligations, and especially ecclesiastical commands, he desisted. Finally, unable to resist his curiosity, he determined to read it in secret. With considerable fear he purchased a copy and locking himself in his room, he allowed the book to fall open, and he read, “This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief.” 1 Timothy 1:15.

    53. A Short History Of The Church In Gateshead
    power was severely weakened. cuthbert tunstall, Bishop of Durham from1530 was no friend of the reformers. As Bishop of London he
    http://www.vision.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/churches/history.html
    A S H O R T H I S T O R Y
    O F T H E C H U R C H I N
    G A T E S H E A D
    Beginnings
    The first undisputed evidence of the church in Gateshead comes in the writings of Bede, the Northumbrian monk based along the river in Jarrow. Gateshead gets mentioned in passing as he is referring to a priest called Adda: That is all that is said, but it indicates that at the time of which Bede was writing (he was referring to the events of 653 A.D.), there was an abbey or monastery in Gateshead. We do not know for certain where this was, and for how long it lasted. It is quite likely that it was destroyed along with others in the region, in the Viking raids of either 794 or 867 A.D.
    After Bede there follows a number of centuries where we know nothing of what was taking place in Gateshead. Towards the end of the 9th century, during the reign of Guthred the last Northumbrian king, Chester-le-Street was the main ecclesiastical centre, housing the remains of Saint Cuthbert for more than a hundred years.
    Norman Conquest
    The next historical mention of Gateshead comes after the period of the Norman Conquest. By this time Durham had become the main centre for the church in the region, and also the final resting place for the remains of Cuthbert. Egelwin, the last Saxon Bishop of Durham had been kept in his position for a number of years, but was dismissed in 1071 after being caught fleeing to the continent with most of the church treasures.

    54. History The Website Of The IHR Home Page
    55. Tunbridge (Tunebrigg), William, iv. 40. Tunstable, Thomas de, xi. 29. Tunstal(tunstall), cuthbert, i. 112; iii. 5, 47; v. 4;. vi. 38, 109; x. 14; xii. 39.
    http://www.ihrinfo.ac.uk/fasti/fasti1300t.html
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    Research Centres CMH (Metropolitan History) ICBH (Contemporary British History) VCH (County History) Help Sitemap Contact Research Tools/Higher Clergy/Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae Index 1300-1541/T Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae, 1300 - 1541: T Online index A B C D ... S T U V W (no entries) Y Z Tacham, see Thacham Talami, Balsamus, of Florence, v. 59 Talbot, Baldwin, ii. 4 Talbot, John ( c . 1327), ii. 50 Talbot, John (d. 1550), i. 6, 26, 53, 54, 96; xii. 14, Talbot, Richard, ii. 9, 46; vi. 51; vii. 5; xii. 45, 50 Talbot, Robert, viii. 71 Talbot, Thomas, ii. 44 Talbot, William ( c . 1407-15), i. 33, 60 Talbot, William (d. 1498), i. 62; iii. 45; v. 54; vi. 53; vi. 53; vii. 21; xii. 26, 74 Talley, John, xi. 58 Talleyrand, Elias (Elie), de Périgord, i. 116; iv. 32; v. 8, 45; vi. 6, 25, 64, 71, 80; xii. 40 Talour (Barnby), Thomas, i. 121 Talour, see also Taylor Taminis, William de, i. 111 Tamworth, Christopher, i. 21, 91; xii. 17, 33 Taneto

    55. Lifestyle 8.4 William Tyndale
    his life's work. So he left for London in 1523 and sought the necessarysupport of the Bishop, cuthbert tunstall. tunstall was a
    http://www.apostolicab.freeserve.co.uk/lifestyle/804/WilliamTyndale.htm
    The Father of the English Bible
    by David Cooke With our various translations and easy access to Bibles, it's hard for us to imagine what it was like in the early 1490s when William Tyndale was born. There was no English translation of any part of the Bible; even many priests were woefully ignorant of what the Bible taught, allowing all kinds of sinful malpractices to flourish in the Church. As Tyndale grew he rose above this because of his rapid learning in classical languages. He entered Oxford at an early age, gaining his M.A. In 1515. He came to a real, personal faith through reading the Greek New Testament and the writings of Erasmus. John Fox described him as being "addicted" to the Scriptures. By 1516 he was already coming under persecution from clergy angered by his public denouncements and jealous of the private influence he was gaining by his purity, learning and charming conversation. So he moved to Cambridge where he met two like-minded colleagues, John Frith, who later assisted Tyndale, and Thomas Bilney. Together they held meetings, preaching against absolution and the rites of the Church, and proclaiming the need for repentance and faith. William Tyndale Men of the Millennium Tyndale now saw clearly that "Christians must read the Testament in their mother tongue" and that this was to be his life's work. So he left for London in 1523 and sought the necessary support of the Bishop, Cuthbert Tunstall. Tunstall was a skilled linguist, like Tyndale, and had also supported the radical views of Erasmus, so Tyndale must have been hopeful. However, the bishop answered that his house was full and sent him away, though he was later to be very useful to Tyndale, in a strange way.

    56. Index / Formatting The Word Of God
    12.5 Thompson, Charles, 12.3 Tornesius, Johann, 6.8 Torresani, Andrea, 5.3 Torresani,Gian Francesco, 5.3 tunstall, cuthbert (Bishop of Durham), 7.2 Tyndale
    http://www.smu.edu/bridwell/publications/ryrie_catalog/topic.htm
    INDEX
    Adelkind, Israel Cornelius,
    Aitken, Jane,
    Aitken, Robert,
    Alexander, Caleb,
    Allen, William,
    Amerbach, Johann,
    Ammonius of Alexandria,
    Anselm of Laon, Introduction
    Anshelm, Thomas,
    Apiarius, Samuel,
    Aprell, Peter, Aristotle, Augustine, Badius, Conrad, Barker, Christopher, Barker, Robert, Barthlet, Thomas, Baskett, Mark, Becke, Edmund, Introduction Bedel, William, Boleyn, Anne, Boyle, Robert, Bomberg, Daniel, Bristow, Richard, Brucioli, Antonio, Busa, Robert, Bydell, John, Calvin, John, Capito, Fabricius, Carey, Matthew, Cartwright, Thomas, Cecil, William (Baron Burghley), Cephalaeus, Wolfius, Cervicornus, Eucherius, Charles V, Emperor, Charles II, King of England, Chayim, Jacob ben, Christian II, King of Denmark, Christian III, King of Denmark, Clarke, Adam, Cockerell, Sydney, Columbus, Christopher, Preface Coronel, Pablo, Coverdale, Miles, Cranach, Lucas (the Elder), Cranmer, Thomas, Crespin, Jean, Cromwell, Thomas, Cyril of Alexandria, Dalaber, Anthony

    57. Enciclopedia Católica
    Translate this page María Tumba de San Pedro Tumi, Christian Wiyghan, Cardenal Túnica Tunis TunjaTunkeros tunstall, cuthbert Obispo inglés (1474-1559) tunstall, Thomas
    http://www.enciclopediacatolica.com/t.htm
    T
    Tabae

    Tabasco

    Tabb, John Bannister
    Poeta y educador (1845-1909) ...
    Tabora

    Precursor del templo en el Antiguo Testamento
    Filadelfia, Pennsylvania
    Tabor, Monte

    Tabraca
    Tacana, Tribu

    Tacapae
    Tadama Taenarum ... Tallagaht, Monasterio de
    Príncipe de Benevento, Obispo de Autun, ministro francés y embajador (1754-1838) Tallis, Thomas Talmud Talon, Jean (Juan) Talon, Pierre (Pedro) Tamanac, Tribu Tamassus, Sede titular de Tamaulipas Tametsi Tamisier, Marie-Marthe-Baptistine Tanagra Tancred Taney, Roger Brooke Tanguay, Cipriano Tanis Tanner, Adam Tanner, Conrad Tanner, Edmund Tanner, Matthias ... Pio Taos Pueblo Taparelli, Aloysius Tapestry Tapis, Esteban Tarabotti, Helena Tarachus, Probus, y Andronicus, Santos Taranto Tarasius, Santo Tarazona Tarbes Tarentaise Targum Tarisel, Pierre (Pedro)

    58. Enciclopedia Católica
    Translate this page También se conserva una casulla que la tradición relaciona con la Abadía deWestminster y otra que perteneció a cuthbert tunstall, el último Obispo
    http://www.enciclopediacatolica.com/u/univusha.htm
    U niversidad de Ushaw
    (Universidad de St. Cuthbert) Historia Alumnos prominentes LAING, Ushaw College, A Centenary Memorial (Newcastle, 1894); BUTLER, Records and Recollections of Ushaw (Durham, 1885); J. Gillow, Haydock Papers (London, 1888); OAKLEY, Introduction to Wiseman, Hidden Gem (London, 1859); WILBERFORCE, Ushaw College in Dublin Review, XLV (1858); BONNEY, Life and Letters of Lingard (London, 1911); WARD, Life and Times of Card. Wiseman (London, 1899); GILLOW, Bibl. Dict. Engl. Cath. (London, 1885); Ushaw Magazine, I-XXI (1891), sq. Catholic Who's Who (1911); Catholic Magazine, I, II (1831-2); Cath. Miscellany, III (1824); Catholic University Bulletin (1908). E. BONNEY
    Transcrito por Thomas M. Barrett
    Dedicado a los alumnos, facultad y estudiantes de la Universidad de Ushaw
    Traducido por Beatriz N. Prestamo
    The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume I
    Nihil Obstat, March 1, 1907. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor Imprimatur +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York

    59. Speaking Volumes: 600 Years Of Cambridge University Library
    cuthbert tunstall, De arte supputandi libri quattuor (London, 1522). Thispresentation copy on vellum bears tunstall's gift inscription.
    http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/exhibitions/volumes/medieval.html
    The Medieval Library
    Exhibition home
    Library beginnings Medieval Library Filling the Library ... Opening times

    A view of the Library in 1574.
    The Schools Quadrangle, showing Rotherham's eastern front, with library above. From Matthew Parker's presentation copy to the University Chancellor, Lord Burleigh, of his Catalogus cancellariorum, 1574.
    The Reformation saw the University Library, in common with all other English libraries, despoiled and ignored at turns. Part of its premises was reclaimed for lectures, 'since in its present condition it is useless', as books were borrowed and not returned, vandalised for their illuminations, or allowed to rot as representative of obsolete disciplines. By 1557, only 175 volumes remained of the approximately 600 it had boasted after the Tunstal benefaction.
    Cuthbert Tunstall, De arte supputandi libri quattuor (London, 1522). This presentation copy on vellum bears Tunstall's gift inscription. The title-page border shown here is based on a design by Holbein.

    60. Index For Ralph McCoy's Freedom Of Press
    Tunbridge, William, trial, C91, S744, T202. tunstall, cuthbert (Bishop), R56, °F19.Turkey freedom of the press, C228. Turner, Josie, L76. Tussman, Joseph, C231.
    http://www.lib.siu.edu/cni/index-t.html
    T
    • Taft-Hartley Act and the press,
    • Tait, William,
    • Tait's Edinburgh Magazine,
    • Talese, Gay,
    • Talley v. California
    • Talmadge, Eugene (Gov.),
    • Tariff Act of 1922,
    • Tax on immoral books,
    • "Taxes on knowledge." See Newspaper tax (Great Britain);
      • Newspaper tax (United States)
    • Taylor, Edgar,
    • Taylor, Henry J.,
    • Taylor, Jeremy,
    • Taylor, John E., trial,
    • Taylor, Robert (Rev.),
    • Taylor, Stephen (Dr.),
    • Taylor, Zada,
    • Taylor v. Delavan
    • Television broadcasting. See Radio and television broadcasting (Great Britain);
      • Radio and television broadcasting (United States)
    • Television program (form): censorship,
      • "Defenders, The,"
      • First Amendment,
    • Temple, William,
    • Temple City, Calif.,
    • Tennessee: antievolution act,
      • newspaper contempt case,
      • newspaper gag bill,
      • obscenity laws,
    • Tenney Committee investigations (California),
    • Teukesbury, John, martyrdom,
    • Texans for America,
    • Texas: censorship,
      • labeling bill,
      • newspaper law,
      • textbook investigation,
    • Textbooks:
      • abolitionist sentiment in,
      • advertising industry attacks,
      • American Federation of Teachers,
      • American Legion,
      • American Textbook Publishers Institute,
      • America's Future, Inc.

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