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searching for William Godwin (biography) 241 found (246 total)

alternate case: william Godwin (biography)

Edward William Godwin (1,128 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article

Edward William Godwin (26 May 1833 – 6 October 1886) was a progressive English architect-designer, who began his career working in the strongly polychromatic
Memoirs of the Author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1,042 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
"Introduction". St Clair, 183–84. William Godwin, in a letter to Thomas Holcroft, after his wife's death, as quoted in William Godwin : His Friends and Contemporaries(1876)
Mary Wollstonecraft (11,485 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
had a daughter, Fanny Imlay), Wollstonecraft married the philosopher William Godwin, one of the forefathers of the anarchist movement. Wollstonecraft died
Fanny Imlay (6,352 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Fanny grew up in the household of anarchist political philosopher William Godwin, the widower of her mother, with his second wife Mary Jane Clairmont
Mary Shelley (14,898 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
philosopher Percy Bysshe Shelley. Her father was the political philosopher William Godwin and her mother was the philosopher and women's rights advocate Mary
Enquiry Concerning Political Justice (1,838 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Influence on Morals and Happiness is a 1793 book by the philosopher William Godwin, in which the author outlines his political philosophy. It is the first
William Godwin (sport shooter) (50 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
William Godwin (8 August 1912 – 3 February 2000) was a British sports shooter. He competed in the 50 metre rifle, prone event at the 1960 Summer Olympics
Anglo-Japanese style (9,466 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
closed to the Western markets. The style was popularised by Edward William Godwin in the 1870s in England, with many artisans working in the style drawing
Mary Jane Godwin (1,198 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
English author, publisher, and bookseller. She was the second wife of William Godwin and stepmother to Mary Shelley. Mary Jane de Vial was born in Exeter
Things as They Are; or, The Adventures of Caleb Williams (2,611 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Things as They Are in 1831, and often abbreviated to Caleb Williams) by William Godwin is a three-volume novel written as a call to end the abuse of power
Ellen Terry (4,419 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
returned to the stage but began a relationship with the architect Edward William Godwin and retired from the stage for six years. She resumed acting in 1874
Mary Hays (2,280 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
thinkers of her time including Robert Robinson, Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin and William Frend. She was born in 1759, into a family of Protestant
Lives of the Necromancers (742 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
book written by English journalist, political philosopher and novelist William Godwin. The book concerns paranormal legends from western and Middle Eastern
Pamela Clemit (1,058 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Society (2019). The Letters of William Godwin, Volume II: 1798-1805 (2014), ed. Pamela Clemit, in The Letters of William Godwin, gen. ed. Pamela Clemit, 6
New Annual Register (283 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Register was published by George Robinson from 1781. From 1784 to 1791 William Godwin was writing the British historical section. Jack W. Marken, William
Maria Gisborne (748 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
was a friend and correspondent of Mary and Percy Bysshe Shelley, and William Godwin. Maria James, the daughter of an English merchant at Constantinople
William Godwin the Younger (351 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
William Godwin (1803 – 8 September 1832) was an English reporter and author. He was influenced by his father's (William Godwin's) work. Godwin was the
Timeline of Mary Wollstonecraft (942 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
illegitimate daughter, Fanny Imlay), Wollstonecraft married the philosopher William Godwin, one of the forefathers of the anarchist movement. Together, they had
Claire Clairmont (4,528 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
years old, her mother married a neighbour, the writer and philosopher William Godwin. This brought her two stepsisters: Godwin's daughter, later Mary Shelley
Edith Craig (2,231 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
actress Ellen Terry and the progressive English architect-designer Edward William Godwin, and the sister of theatre practitioner Edward Gordon Craig. As a lesbian
François Fénelon (3,449 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
lending it out, and considered it an unparalleled aid to spiritual life. William Godwin referenced Fenelon in book II, chapter II of his Enquiry Concerning
Richard Holmes (biographer) (1,394 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
Wollstonecraft and William Godwin. He is editor of the Harper Perennial series Classic Biographies, launched in 2004. His 2005 monograph on biography and portraiture
Beatrice Whistler (1,103 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Frances Black. She studied art in her father's studio and with Edward William Godwin who was an architect-designer. On 4 January 1876 she became the second
Individualist anarchism in Europe (13,166 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Individualist anarchism in Europe proceeded from the roots laid by William Godwin and soon expanded and diversified through Europe, incorporating influences
Mounseer Nongtongpaw (1,298 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
by Peter and Iona Opie. Don Locke supported this view in his biography of William Godwin, Mary's father, that same year. The attribution rested on a 1960
Mark Philp (302 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Philp completed a three-year digitisation project of the diaries of William Godwin, funded by a Leverhulme Research Project Grant. [2]. Reforming Ideas
Charles Kegan Paul (1,782 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
on William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft, he was of material assistance in helping Elizabeth Robins Pennell write the first full-length biography of
Maurice (Shelley) (2,361 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
William Tighe, Mary Shelley tried to have it published by her father, William Godwin, but he refused. The text was lost until 1997, when a manuscript copy
1795 in poetry (747 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
year; these three were published this year: To William Godwin, Author of Political Justice (William Godwin); published January 10 To Robert Southey, of
William Stopford Kenny (255 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
many educational works, such as The History of England (1850, with William Godwin), Kenny's School Geography (1856), and Tales About the Sun, Moon, Stars
Harriet Lee (writer) (924 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
Charles (1876). William Godwin: His Friends and Contemporaries, Volume 1. London: Henry S. King & Co. Philp, Mark (20 May 2006). "William Godwin". In Zalta
Percy Bysshe Shelley (10,321 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
great things for him as a poet. Southey also informed Shelley that William Godwin, author of Political Justice, which had greatly influenced him in his
Willey Reveley (641 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
name is unknown. Reveley was a strong liberal and became a friend of William Godwin and Thomas Holcroft. About 1791 he received his first professional fee
Letters of Charles Lamb (2,247 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
addressed to, among others, William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Godwin, and Thomas Hood, all of whom were close friends. They are valued for
Francis Place (3,206 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Population, in 1822, engaging with the views of both Thomas Malthus and William Godwin. In 1823, with Benthamite volunteers and anonymous backers, he launched
Amelia Curran (painter) (628 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
early part of her life. In 1810, through her father, she met novelist William Godwin and Aaron Burr, the American politician. Soon after, she met her lifelong
George Woodcock (1,939 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
the anthology The Anarchist Reader (1977), and biographies of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, William Godwin, Oscar Wilde and Peter Kropotkin. It was during
Ethel Whibley (707 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
McNeill Whistler in 1888, following the death of her first husband Edward William Godwin. In 1896 Ethel married the writer Charles Whibley. Her sister Rosalind
James Henry Lawrence (566 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
was influenced by the political writing of Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin. He was the son of Richard James Lawrence, a slave-owner of Fairfield
Joseph Johnson (publisher) (9,777 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
publishing the works of radical thinkers such as Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin, Thomas Malthus, Erasmus Darwin and Joel Barlow, feminist economist
Thomas Abthorpe Cooper (305 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
and, on the death of his father, was adopted by Thomas Holcroft and William Godwin. His first appearance on the stage was with Stephen Kemble's company
Elizabeth Inchbald (2,145 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
(1791) and Nature and Art (1796). A political radical and friend of William Godwin and Thomas Holcroft, her beliefs are clearer in her novels than in her
The Man Who Wrote Frankenstein (1,218 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
form, it may primarily have been revised by the political philosopher William Godwin. Lauritsen argues that handwriting alone cannot be used to determine
Joseph Fawcett (467 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
are very affecting". Fawcett associated with other reformers, such as William Godwin and William Hazlitt. Godwin and Fawcett met in 1778 at Ware and remained
John Hazlitt (900 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
studied painting under Sir Joshua Reynolds and became reacquainted with William Godwin, a radical philosopher and novelist. In 1788, he exhibited four miniature
John Westbrooke Chandler (417 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
The artist also came to befriend the radical thinker and philosopher William Godwin. Records show that Chandler had lent money to Godwin, alongside painting
1756 in Great Britain (599 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Unknown date – Peter William Baker, politician (died 1815) 3 March – William Godwin, writer (died 1836) 4 March – Henry Raeburn, Scottish painter (died
John Fenwick (radical) (207 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
political radical and Irish nationalist writer. He was a close friend of William Godwin, a loyal associate of James Coigly, and the husband of Eliza Fenwick
Mary Shelley bibliography (2,059 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Gazul". Westminster Review 13 (1830): 495–502. —. "Memoirs of William Godwin". William Godwin. Caleb Williams. London: Colburn and Bentley, 1831. —. "Review
1783 in literature (649 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Ferguson – History of the Progress and Termination of the Roman Republic William Godwin – Life of Lord Chatham Immanuel Kant – Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics
John Hobart Caunter (5,804 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Norton, with whom he edited The Court Magazine and Belle Assemblée, William Godwin, Frances Sargent Osgood, Basil Hall, John Galt and others. According
Mary Glynne (237 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
ISBN 978-1-4766-2599-7. Hallam Fordham (1952). John Gielgud: An Actor's Biography in Pictures. J. Lehmann. p. 124. "Mary Glyne". Theiapolis.com. Retrieved
Margaret King (3,515 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
This was a collection by The Juvenile Library, the London team of William Godwin, widower of her governess-mentor Mary Wollstonecraft, and his second
George Robinson (bookseller) (1,309 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
Eliza Hamilton, Translation of the letters of a Hindoo rajah (1796) William Godwin, The Enquirer: reflections on education, manners, and literature (1797)
Rachel Prescott (431 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
can experience neither alloy nor decay. She exchanged letters with William Godwin about the nature of marriage. Godwin's first wife, the early feminist
George Walker (novelist) (363 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
entered. His writings were anti-reform, reacting to writers such as William Godwin and Thomas Holcroft. He died on the 8th February 1847 and was buried
Amelia Opie (2,687 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Tooke. She was close to activists John Philip Kemble, Sarah Siddons, William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft. Along with Wollstonecraft, she was connected
Sir Bysshe Shelley, 1st Baronet (594 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
great-grandparents of Percy. James Bieri (2004). Percy Bysshe Shelley: A Biography: Youth's Unextinguished Fire, 1792-1816. University of Delaware Press
History of a Six Weeks' Tour (5,202 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
he was interested in meeting his philosophical hero, Mary's father, William Godwin. However, Mary and Percy soon began having secret rendezvous, despite
Stephen Dillane (1,914 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Darkest Hour, starring Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill, and writer William Godwin, the father of Frankenstein author Mary Shelley, in the film Mary Shelley
List of books about anarchism (3,445 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
ISBN 1-58243-011-X. Retrieved 8 September 2019. Philp, Mark (2000). "William Godwin". Stanford.edu. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 8 August
John Martin (painter) (4,392 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
radical, but this is not borne out by known facts, although he knew William Godwin, the ageing reformed revolutionist, husband of Mary Wollstonecraft and
Basil Montagu (2,045 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
In the autumn of 1797 he made a tour in the Midlands counties with William Godwin. He spent a week in Godwin's house in 1797, assisting the distraught
Geoffrey Keen (1,274 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Saint – episode – The Debt Collectors (1978) – Sir Charles "Geoffrey Keen Biography – Yahoo! Movies". Shorter, Eric (10 November 2005). "The Guardian obituary"
Harriet de Boinville (4,040 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
influenced important writers of her day, including Frances Burney, William Godwin, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mary Shelley, and Giovanni Ruffini. She welcomed
Henry William Pickersgill (851 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Astley, 1826 Michael Faraday, 1826 John Poole, 1827 Jeremy Bentham, 1829 William Godwin, 1830 Alexander von Humboldt, 1831 Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 1831 Viscount
1836 in the United Kingdom (1,415 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
3 April – Jeremy Lister, British Army officer (born 1752) 7 April – William Godwin, journalist, political philosopher and novelist (born 1756) 20 April
Kate Terry (1,262 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
11 Gielgud, p. 222 The Times, Obituary notice, 7 January 1924, p. 14 Biography of Ellen Terry at the Stage Beauty website Hartnoll, pp. 815–17. Heilpern
Marion Terry (1,332 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press (2004), accessed 7 January 2010 Gielgud, p. 222 Biography of Ellen Terry at the Stage Beauty
Mary: A Fiction (4,358 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
who meant "all the world" to her and, as Wollstonecraft's husband William Godwin later put it, "for whom she contracted a friendship so fervent, as for
1801 in literature (1,190 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
von Collin – Regulus George Colman the Younger – The Poor Gentleman William Godwin – Abbas, King of Persia (written) Matthew Lewis Adelmorn, the Outlaw
William Blake (12,329 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
English-American revolutionary Thomas Paine. Along with William Wordsworth and William Godwin, Blake had great hopes for the French and American revolutions and wore
Maria Edgeworth (5,562 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Blackcastle. Margaret supplied her with the novels of Ann Radcliffe and William Godwin and encouraged her in her writing. In 1798 Richard married Frances Beaufort
1800 in literature (1,230 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Cumberland – Joanna of Montfaucon Thomas Dibdin – The School for Prejudice William Godwin – Antonio Prince Hoare – Indiscretion Henry James Pye – Adelaide Frederick
Somers Town, London (4,395 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Wollstonecraft, writer, philosopher and feminist, lived there with her husband William Godwin, and died there in 1797 after giving birth to the future Mary Shelley
Robert William Elliston (519 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Lothair in Adelgitha by Matthew Lewis (1807) Faulkener in Faulkener by William Godwin (1807) Fitzharding in The Curfew John Tobin (1807) Count Egmont in The
Samuel Fuller (3,461 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Registry". Library of Congress. December 17, 2014. Retrieved January 3, 2017. Biography Archived September 7, 2008, at the Wayback Machine at Litweb.net "Archived
William Coward (merchant) (970 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
former pupil of Jennings) as tutors. Among its well-known pupils was William Godwin, refused entry to the nearby Homerton Academy on suspicion of Sandemanian
1807 in literature (789 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
in his Element Mother Goose Giovanni Giraud – Gelosie per equivoco William Godwin – Faulkener Sophia Lee – The Assignation Matthew Lewis – Adelgitha Thomas
Thomas Jefferson Hogg (4,235 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
summer of 1814, Hogg first met Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin while visiting William Godwin with Percy Shelley. Soon Hogg heard that Shelley had abandoned Harriet
Richard Brinsley Peake (582 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
the Fate of Frankenstein, was seen by Mary Shelley and her father William Godwin on 29 August 1823 at the English Opera House, shortly after her return
Valperga (novel) (1,210 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
original title is now the subtitle; Valperga was selected by her father, William Godwin, who edited the work for publication between 1821 and February 1823
Charles Kemble (1,105 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
of Montval by Thomas Sedgwick Whalley (1799) Don Henry in Antonio by William Godwin (1800) King Henry in Adelaide by Henry James Pye (1800) Aldermorn in
Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men (5,389 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
novel, Falkner (1837), experienced the death of her father, William Godwin, started a biography of him, and moved to London after her son, Percy, entered
Effingham Wilson (1,726 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Bentham, co-published with W. Pickering. Thoughts on Man, 1831, by William Godwin. This work, not much regarded at the time, had been rejected by nine
Frankenstein (8,872 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
eleven days after giving birth to her. Shelley grew close to her father, William Godwin, having never known her mother. Godwin hired a nurse, who briefly cared
1794 in literature (968 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Peter Teuthold – The Necromancer; or, The Tale of the Black Forest William Godwin – Caleb Williams Ann Radcliffe – The Mysteries of Udolpho Mary Robinson
Felix Vaughan (1,664 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
on the handling of the treason trials by Sir James Eyre LCJ, as has William Godwin. He was junior counsel also that month in the trial of Thomas Hardy
Phyllis Neilson-Terry (1,172 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Somerset Maugham's The Land of Promise. In the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography J C Trewin wrote that it was "unfortunate" that Fred Terry seldom extended
Fred Terry (1,302 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
buried in Hampstead Cemetery. Biography portal Terry family Neilson-Terry Guild of Dramatic Art Gielgud, p. 222 Biography of Ellen Terry at the Stage Beauty
Samuel Jones (academy tutor) (1,176 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
were to become grandparents of the radical philosopher and theologian William Godwin, husband and biographer of the philosopher Mary Wollstonecraft. They
1833 (2,179 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Hermann von Spaun, Austro-Hungarian admiral (d. 1919) May 26 – Edward William Godwin, English architect (d. 1886) June 1 – John Marshall Harlan, Associate
Minos (2,476 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1998, p. 346. William Godwin (1876). "Lives of the Necromancers". p. 40. Diodorus Siculus, Library
Thomas Robert Malthus (6,752 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
He also constructed his case as a specific response to writings of William Godwin (1756–1836) and of the Marquis de Condorcet (1743–1794). His assertions
Tite Street (1,111 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Hope-Nicholson lived here his whole life. No 35: Whistler instructed Edward William Godwin to build the White House here, but due to his bankruptcy after his legal
Tite Street (1,111 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Hope-Nicholson lived here his whole life. No 35: Whistler instructed Edward William Godwin to build the White House here, but due to his bankruptcy after his legal
Victor Robinson (300 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
is held at the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland. William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft (1907) Comrade Kropotkin (1908) A Symposium
Adeline Mowbray (389 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
She therefore refuses marriage to Frederic Glenmurray (modelled on William Godwin), and instead chooses to live with him as his sexual equal. Although
Henry Irving (4,050 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
conceived two out-of-wedlock children with architect-designer Edward William Godwin, but regardless of how much and how often her behavior defied the strict
Charles Cowden Clarke (647 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Coleridge, Hazlitt, William Macready, Charles Dickens, Douglas Jerrold, and William Godwin. Clarke became a music publisher in partnership with Alfred Novello
Henry Fuseli (2,026 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
write essays and reviews for the Analytical Review. With Thomas Paine, William Godwin, Joseph Priestley, Erasmus Darwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, and others interested
Edward Carrick (515 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
everyday life. Art and Design in British Films followed in 1948. He wrote a biography of his father in 1968, Gordon Craig: the story of his life, which includes
Rosalind Birnie Philip (771 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
McNeill Whistler in 1888, following the death of her first husband Edward William Godwin. Her sister Ethel Whibley had been the secretary to Whistler from 1890
The Unsex'd Females (3,136 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
her troubled and unconventional life as described in the frank biography by William Godwin as much as on her writing. The Unsex'd Female is complicated
Mrs Powell (669 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
in Five Miles Off by Thomas Dibdin (1806) Arabella in Faulkener by William Godwin (1807) Betty Barnes in Errors Excepted by Thomas Dibdin (1807) Matilda
Fanny Margaretta Holcroft (622 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
with leading figures of the intelligentsia such as Thomas Paine and William Godwin, and Holcroft shared her father's Jacobin ideals and supported his work
Fanny Blood (409 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
introductions by common friends, the Clares. As Wollstonecraft's husband William Godwin wrote, Wollstonecraft "contracted a friendship so fervent, as for years
The Mortal Immortal (1,383 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
story has been linked to St. Leon, a 1799 novel by Shelley's father, William Godwin. Godwin's novel had established the idea of a tragic immortal protagonist
Terry family (4,731 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
product of a long-term unmarried relationship with the architect Edward William Godwin. George (1852 – 22 March 1928) was a theatre business manager and treasurer
Henry Sidgwick (3,276 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
While at Cambridge Sidgwick taught a young Bertrand Russell. A 2004 biography of Sidgwick by Bart Schultz sought to establish that Sidgwick was a lifelong
Thomas Jeckyll (670 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Maurier, Swinburne, Rossetti, Burne-Jones, William Eden Nesfield, Edward William Godwin and Whistler, causing a change of direction in his artistic vision.
Archibald Stuart-Wortley (painter) (334 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
painter, in 1878 he commissioned the Arts and Crafts architect Edward William Godwin to design a house and studio for him in Tite Street, Chelsea, a fashionable
Tales from Shakespeare (905 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
best-selling titles. It was first published by the Juvenile Library of William Godwin (under the alias Thomas Hodgkins) and his second wife, Mary Jane Clairmont
Anthony Hawtrey (753 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 7 January 2010 "Edward William Godwin". The Elmbridge Hundred. Retrieved
Atlas (mythology) (3,202 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
Metamorphoses 4.617 ff. (on-line English translation at Theoi Project). William Godwin (1876). Lives of the Necromancers. London, F. J. Mason. p. 39. Ogden
Eliza Fenwick (586 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
corresponded with friends who included Mary Hays, Thomas Holcroft, William Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, Charlotte Turner Smith, and Charles and Mary Lamb
Hazel Terry (541 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 7 January 2010 "Edward William Godwin". The Elmbridge Hundred. Retrieved
A Vindication of the Rights of Men (5,802 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
aristocracy, monarchy, and the Established Church, liberals such as William Godwin, Paine, and Wollstonecraft, argued for republicanism, agrarian socialism
Charles Hawtrey (actor, born 1858) (1,687 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
"Hawtrey, Sir Charles Henry", Dictionary of National Biography, 1937, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography archive, retrieved 27 September 2013 (subscription
Geoffrey Mander (943 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Shelley (1938), Claire Clairmont (1939), Edward John Trelawny (1950), William Godwin (1953), Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1964), Ivy Compton-Burnett (1971) and
Daedalus (3,185 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
The Archaic Period". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2021-06-07. William Godwin (1876). "Lives of the Necromancers". p. 40. "Andrew Stewart, One Hundred
English Review (18th century) (195 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
to the magazine were: Thomas Beddoes Edmund Cartwright James Currie William Godwin Alexander Hamilton John Hellins Thomas Holcroft, dramatic criticism
Wilson Barrett (1,698 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Albert Museum Theatre and Performance Archives holds designs by Edward William Godwin for Barrett's productions of Juana, Claudian, Hamlet, Junius, and Clito
Richard Price (5,192 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
attributed to this discrimination. Price appears 14 times in the diary of William Godwin, Wollstonecraft's later husband. The support Price gave to the colonies
William Thompson (philosopher) (2,034 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
James Mill, and was influenced, both positively and negatively, by William Godwin and Thomas Malthus. His desire to overcome the limitations of Godwin's
Washington Irving (7,767 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
House of Murray. (University of Tennessee Press, 1969). See comments of William Godwin, cited in PMI, 1:422; Lady Littleton, cited in PMI 2:20. Aderman, Ralph
Deal with the Devil (2,620 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Archived from the original on 11 May 2019. Retrieved 10 March 2023. William Godwin (1876). "Lives of the Necromancers". p. 16. Matthew 4:1-11; Mark 1:12-13;
Benjamin Heath Malkin (1,109 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
acquainted via the publisher Joseph Johnson for whom Blake had worked. William Godwin reports meeting Malkin at dinner at Horne Tooke's in 1796 and 1797 and
William Emerton Heitland (717 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
married Joseph Godwin, one of the brothers of philosopher and novelist, William Godwin at Fulmodeston on 11 December 1776. Senior Classic at Cambridge is of
Lewis Gielgud (718 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
"Gielgud, Sir (Arthur) John (1904–2000)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, online edition, January 2011, Retrieved 2 February
Cultural depictions of Lady Jane Grey (2,455 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
mind, disposition, or person." The radical thinker and philosopher William Godwin called her "the most perfect young creature of the female sex to be
Liberty (department store) (1,441 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
In 1884, he introduced the costume department, directed by Edward William Godwin (1833–1886), a distinguished architect and a founding member of The
Pythia (8,153 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
state, like shamans, and her utterings unintelligible. According to William Godwin, the tripod was perforated with holes, and as she inhaled the vapors
Original Stories from Real Life (4,808 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
time she had become a reviled figure in Britain because her husband, William Godwin, had revealed her unorthodox lifestyle in his Memoirs of the Author
Edmund Gwenn (2,104 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
ISBN 978-1-7200-3837-5. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edmund Gwenn. Biography portal Edmund Gwenn at IMDb Edmund Gwenn at the Internet Broadway Database
Edmund J. Davis (1,864 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
budget shortfalls. Davis was born in St. Augustine, Florida, a son of William Godwin Davis and the former Mary Ann Channer. His father was a lawyer and land
William the Conqueror (13,439 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
England. It was during this exile that Edward offered the throne to William. Godwin returned from exile in 1052 with armed forces, and a settlement was
William Hazlitt (20,122 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
to read with fascination at Hackney. In September 1794, he had met William Godwin, the reformist thinker whose recently published Political Justice had
List of atheist philosophers (10,304 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
institutions such as Discipline and Punish and The History of Sexuality. William Godwin (1756–1836): English journalist, political philosopher and novelist
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (6,549 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Wollstonecraft never wrote the second part to the Rights of Woman, although William Godwin published her "Hints", which were "chiefly designed to have been incorporated
Sir George Mackenzie, 7th Baronet (988 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
the geyser mechanism. Geology 41, 387 – 390] Australian Dictionary of Biography, Mackenzie, Sir Robert Ramsay (1811–1873). Place names, NE Greenland Attribution
Robert Owen (9,124 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
views resembled those of Plato, Denis Diderot, Claude Adrien Helvétius, William Godwin, John Locke, James Mill, and Jeremy Bentham, among others. Owen did
Thomas Goffe (1,477 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
and Queen Anne of Denmark as well as to the dean of Christ Church, William Godwin. He lived alone the majority of his life because of his dislike for
March 3 (5,149 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
1678 – Madeleine de Verchères, Canadian rebel leader (d. 1747) 1756 – William Godwin, English journalist and author (d. 1836) 1778 – Frederica of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
John Tweddell (1,336 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
radical lawyer Felix Vaughan. From 1793 to 1795 he associated with William Godwin, and a radical circle that included William Frend and James Losh. When
Frances Jacson (819 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
this by Mme Collet in 1823, Isabelle Hastings, was wrongly ascribed to William Godwin. Even her diaries, kept from 1829 until her death, were thought for
Classics Illustrated Junior (675 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Classic Comic Store's website. The final page of the issue contains a brief biography of the author(s) of the main story written by William B. Jones, Jr, author
Romantic literature in English (5,276 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
thinkers of the day, including his future father-in-law, philosopher William Godwin. Works like Queen Mab (1813) reveal Shelley "as the direct heir to the
Gary Kemp (3,323 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
mountain walker, and a collector of the furniture produced by Edward William Godwin. In 2017, he nominated Godwin for BBC Radio 4's Great Lives show hosted
Giovanni Battista Locatelli (sculptor) (1,192 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
day. William Godwin went with James Barry to see the sculpture on 1 July 1788 at the height of the public furor. John Thomas Smith, in his biography of
Richard Phillips (publisher) (1,081 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
John Aikin, and among its early contributors were fellow radicals William Godwin and Thomas Holcroft. Phillips built up a prominent fortune based on
Charles Thomas Hudson (777 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
wife Emily. His father in youth was an advanced radical and friend of William Godwin, of the Shelleys, Charles Lamb and William Hazlitt. He was educated
William Mulready (1,185 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Catherine Ann Dorset. Some of these were for the Juvenile Library of William Godwin and Mary Jane Clairmont; Godwin in turn wrote, under a pseudonym, an
Alexander Crombie (1,516 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
possibilities of education in "correct" English. William Hazlitt sent William Godwin a copy of the work in 1809. Gymnasium sive, symbola critica, 2 vols
List of people from the London Borough of Hackney (2,432 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Elisabeth. "Hennell, Sara Sophia (1812–1899)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 22 October 2013. Fordham, John (4
John Stuart Mill (12,580 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Comte: an intellectual biography. Cambridge University Press. pp. 509, 512, 535, 537. Capaldi, Nicholas. John Stuart Mill: A Biography. p. 33, Cambridge,
Mabel Terry-Lewis (1,504 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 7 January 2010 "Edward William Godwin". The Elmbridge Hundred. Retrieved
Helen Craig (377 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 7 January 2010 "Edward William Godwin". The Elmbridge Hundred. Retrieved
Dennis Neilson-Terry (853 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 7 January 2010 "Edward William Godwin". The Elmbridge Hundred. Retrieved
Charles Brockden Brown (3,004 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
British radical-democratic writers, most notably Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin, Thomas Holcroft, and Robert Bage. Brown was influenced by these writers
Julia Neilson (1,811 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Donald. "Neilson, Julia Emilie (1868–1957)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 7 January 2010 Beerbohm Tree's
Val Gielgud (1,265 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 7 January 2010 "Edward William Godwin". The Elmbridge Hundred. Retrieved
Lord Byron (14,849 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
with Claire Clairmont, stepsister of Mary Shelley and stepdaughter of William Godwin, writer of Political Justice and Caleb Williams. Allegra is not entitled
Maina Gielgud (1,191 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 7 January 2010 "Edward William Godwin". The Elmbridge Hundred. Retrieved
Elizabeth Rawdon, Countess of Moira (1,690 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
antiquarian, Joseph Cooper Walker, and the English philosopher and novelist William Godwin. A bluestocking set was her salon’s most distinctive feature. It included
Walking Stewart (765 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
of Stewart for a series of portraits which included such sitters as William Godwin, Joseph Priestley, and Humphry Davy, suggesting the intellectual esteem
Bournemouth (13,273 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
The family plot in St Peter's churchyard also contains her parents William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft, and the heart of her husband, Percy Bysshe
Jeremy Bentham (10,673 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
December 2010. "The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10
Thomas Paine (14,177 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
to Paris, on William Blake's advice. He charged three good friends, William Godwin, Thomas Brand Hollis, and Thomas Holcroft, with handling publication
Samuel Nicholson (merchant) (1,253 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
introduction into the London group of radical dissenters, including William Godwin. They played a significant part in his thinking, until the middle of
Richard Wroughton (1,885 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
in Knave or Not? by Thomas Holcroft (1798) Don Pedro in Antonio by William Godwin (1800) Provost in Julian and Agnes by William Sotheby (1801) Stewart
Rachel Hewitt (676 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
the 1790s through the biographies of five people: poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, philosophers Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin, medic Thomas Beddoes
Mary Lamb (2,938 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
when he was drunk, just as he had always watched over her. In 1806, William Godwin (Mary Wollstonecraft's widower) and his second wife Mary Jane Godwin
Humphry Davy (9,372 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
time and extended his circle of friends. Davy features in the diary of William Godwin, with their first meeting recorded for 4 December 1799. In 1800, Davy
Maidenhead (4,191 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Vale of the White Horse. London: Batsford. Godwin, William (1826). William Godwin History of the Commonwealth of England: To the death of Charles I H
Mary Ann McCracken (7,474 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
children. McCracken had found the Essays of Wollstonecraft's husband, William Godwin, on education and manners "less eccentric and more consistent with common
Congleton (5,290 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
units. Congleton Town Hall was designed in the Gothic style by Edward William Godwin. It was completed in 1866. The current hospital in Congleton was opened
Elizabeth Mary Aslin (667 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
researched the 19th-century contential ceramics and the designs of Edward William Godwin, and she published E.W. Godwin: Furniture and Interior Decoration in
Edward Gordon Craig (2,543 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
"Craig, (Edward Henry) Gordon (1872–1966)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, May 2008, retrieved 19
Harriet Siddons (977 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
The Vindictive Man by Thomas Holcroft (1806) Lauretta in Faulkener by William Godwin (1807) Adriana in The Siege of St Quintin by Theodore Hook (1808) Ellen
Henry Joy McCracken (2,543 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
radicalism of Tom Paine (of whom their mother was an ardent admirer), William Godwin, and Mary Wollstonecraft. Brother and sister may also have shared a
Glasite (3,371 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Sandemanians and scientists. Notable members of the Sandemanian Church include William Godwin, Michael Faraday, Charles Wilson Vincent and James Baynes. The Sandemanian
William Frend (reformer) (2,781 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
fellowship stipend. It was at Frend's house that William Wordsworth met William Godwin, on 27 February 1795. The company there that evening included George
St Pancras Old Church (3,869 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
memorial tomb for philosophers and writers Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin, though their remains are now in Bournemouth. In 2009, commemorations
Herbert Read (3,209 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
and particularly in art education. Read's anarchism was influenced by William Godwin, Peter Kropotkin and Max Stirner. Read "became deeply interested in
George Benson (actor) (644 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
The Times, 21 June 1983 Mander & Mitchison Library, Bristol University Biography portal George Benson at IMDb George Benson at the Internet Broadway Database
William Hamilton Reid (3,698 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
irreligion and subversion expressed in debating clubs to the thought of William Godwin, Tom Paine, Joseph Priestley, Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Voltaire. It
April 7 (6,604 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Antoni Radziwiłł, Lithuanian composer and politician (b. 1775) 1836 – William Godwin, English journalist and author (b. 1756) 1849 – Pedro Ignacio de Castro
The Nightmare (2,848 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
been familiar with the painting; her parents, Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin, knew Fuseli. The iconic imagery associated with the Creature's murder
Physiognomy (5,073 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Pythagoras: His Life, Teaching, and InfluenceCornell University Press. 2011 William Godwin (1876). "Lives of the Necromancers". p. 8. Stimson, Frederic Jesup (1910)
James McNeill Whistler (11,904 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
a former pupil and the widow of his late friend, architect Edward William Godwin. Through his friendship with Godwin, Whistler had become close to Beatrice
Free love (5,735 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
love survived. She later developed a relationship with the anarchist William Godwin, who shared her free love ideals, and published on the subject throughout
Elizabeth Robins Pennell (2,642 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman by her widower William Godwin. Pennell's biography drew on three main sources: Godwin's Memoirs; a London publisher
Cajetan Tschink (1,069 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Schiller, Kahlert, and Grosse through their novels) was influential to William Godwin, who read Will's English translation, and wrote Lives of the Necromancers
Gilbert Wakefield (4,376 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
3 January 1795 by Thomas Northmore, others there being John Disney, William Godwin, Thomas Brand Hollis and "Bard" Iolo Morganwg. Of the 1798 quickly-written
Cajetan Tschink (1,069 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Schiller, Kahlert, and Grosse through their novels) was influential to William Godwin, who read Will's English translation, and wrote Lives of the Necromancers
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (19,075 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
repudiating "civilization", was appreciated by, among others, Thomas Paine, William Godwin, Shelley, Tolstoy, and Edward Carpenter. Rousseau's contemporary Voltaire
Royal Belfast Academical Institution (6,462 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
department included works by the English radicals John Horne Tooke, William Godwin, Joseph Priestley and Thomas Belsham. But, perhaps convinced that in
John Philpot Curran (4,688 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
reformers), John Horne Took, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, the Prince Regent, William Godwin and Thomas Moore (Ireland's national bard). But his latter days were
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (9,183 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
some of the descriptions in the novel echo it indirectly. Although William Godwin, her father, disagreed with Coleridge on some important issues, he respected
David Hume (20,230 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Show 34, hosted by G. Bartley. Jessop, T. E. (1955). "David Hume Biography". Biography Online. 175 (4460): 697–698. Bibcode:1955Natur.175..697J. doi:10
Sarah Stoddart Hazlitt (880 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
writers such as William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Southey and William Godwin. Stoddart was a good friend of Mary Lamb, sister of Charles Lamb. Prior
List of mayors of Exeter (831 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
John, (1643–1723) The Worthies of Devon, 1810 edition, London, pp.564–5, biography of Lethbridge, Christopher "The Death of Mr Robert Pople - Loss of a good
Young adult literature (6,548 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
like Amelia by Henry Fielding (1751), and Caleb Williams (1794) by William Godwin. They are typically a type of realistic fiction that characteristically
Rudolf Rocker (6,388 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
a publishing house which would release works by Alexander Berkman, William Godwin, Erich Mühsam, and John Henry Mackay. In the same year he went on a
List of British architects (3,527 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
(1848–1906) Stephen Geary (1787-1854) John Gibson (1814–1892) Edward William Godwin (1833–1886) Edward Habershon (1828–1900) Joseph Hansom (1803–1882) Philip
Franz Xaver von Baader (2,656 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
became acquainted with the empiricism of David Hume, David Hartley, and William Godwin, which was extremely distasteful to him. But he also came into contact
Alexander Jardine (British Army officer) (1,228 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
Both works reflect the views of Jardine as a reformer, and friend of William Godwin, particularly on the equality of the sexes. Jardine relied on stadial
Sarah Trimmer (7,813 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Donelle. "Guarding the British Bible from Rousseau: Sarah Trimmer, William Godwin, and the Pedagogical Periodical." Children's Literature 29 (2001): 1–17
Thomas Muir of Huntershill (6,544 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
a university education, Joseph Gerrald, friend and correspondent of William Godwin and an orator of flawless eloquence, and Matthew Campbell Browne, an
William Burges (16,366 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Theodore Blake Wirgman; a pencil drawing in profile of 1875 by Edward William Godwin; three posed photographs from 1881 by Henry Van der Weyde and a posthumous
Republicanism in the United Kingdom (11,654 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Prominent figures of the republican camp were Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin and Paine. Paine would also play an important role inside the revolution
Satanism (17,127 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
readers like the publisher Joseph Johnson, and the anarchist philosopher William Godwin, who reflected it in his 1793 book Enquiry Concerning Political Justice
British literature (16,605 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Byron and Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, daughter of radical thinkers William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft, was the third major romantic poet of the second
List of architects (5,658 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
(1825–1898), French Friedrich von Gärtner (1791–1847), German Edward William Godwin (1833–1886), English George Enoch Grayson (1833–1912), English Samuel
List of English people (9,123 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
(1907–1992), legal philosopher Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679), philosopher William Godwin (1756–1836), political philosopher John Stuart Mill (1806–1873), economist
Peter Singer (9,889 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
the Adlerian Society for Individual Psychology. Singer later wrote a biography of Oppenheim. Singer is an atheist and was raised in a prosperous, non-religious
Gerard Goggin (2,065 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Preceptors: Mentoring, Maternity and Masculinity in Wollstonecraft, William Godwin and Percy Bysshe Shelley. In the early 1990s, Goggin was policy advisor
First-wave feminism (17,207 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
women's sexual desires. She died young, and her widower, the philosopher William Godwin, quickly wrote a memoir of her that, contrary to his intentions, destroyed
Sir John Lethbridge, 1st Baronet (2,188 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
illegitimacy. A few years later, she married the writer and philosopher William Godwin, so Lethbridge's daughter grew up in a literary household with a blended
Conscience (20,647 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
erroneous and not necessarily indicating absolute knowledge or truth. William Godwin expressed the view that conscience was a memorable consequence of the
A. S. Neill (4,437 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
cured better than this therapy. Richard Bailey placed Neill alongside William Godwin, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Voltaire, and Robert Owen in Thomas Sowell's
Gina Luria Walker (2,722 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
letters to and from Hays in correspondence with Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin, Mary Shelley, Robert Southey, Eliza Fenwick and others. Walker felt
Wandering Jew (10,482 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
unclear. The Wandering Jew also plays a role in St. Leon (1799) by William Godwin. The Wandering Jew also appears in two English broadside ballads of
Alfred Waterhouse (26,746 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
or Maw & Co for ceramic tiles. Later he preferred Craven Dunnill or William Godwin. For furniture Maple & Co. and Liberty's were favoured, though for Holborn
The Spirit of the Age (37,619 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
radical thinking, and soon he entered the circle of reformist philosopher William Godwin. His brother John was also responsible for helping him connect with
History of Hertfordshire (10,031 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Forster (1879-?) lived at Rook's Nest House between Stevenage and Weston. William Godwin (1756–1836), an anarchist philosopher, was a Chapel Minister in Ware;
William Drennan (6,603 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
brother, most of the radical writers of her time, including Paine, William Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, and Laetitia Barbauld. It may be a testament to
Meister Eckhart (10,742 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
he became acquainted with the ideas of David Hume, David Hartley and William Godwin, which were all distasteful to him. But he also came into contact with
Martha McTier (2,903 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
brother, most of the radical writers of her time, including Thomas Paine, William Godwin, and Mary Wollstonecraft (who had replied, before Paine, to Edmund Burke's
Great Lives (175 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
Great Lives is a BBC Radio 4 biography series, produced in Bristol. It has been presented by Joan Bakewell, Humphrey Carpenter, Francine Stock and currently
James Losh (3,751 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
to the United Kingdom. Losh belonged to the London radical circle of William Godwin: they are thought to have met on 3 February 1794 at a dinner given by
James Lind (naturalist) (6,325 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
Plato, Voltaire, Franklin, Condorcet, Albertus Magnus, Paracelsus, William Godwin, and others. Source: 1770 - elected fellow of Royal College of Physicians
Li Shizeng (5,818 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
assistant in the years to come. Li eagerly read and translated essays by William Godwin, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Élisée Reclus, and the anarchist classics of
Types of socialism (25,798 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
conflict. Among the early influences on individualist anarchism were William Godwin, Josiah Warren (sovereignty of the individual), Max Stirner (egoism)
Anarchism and capitalism (18,729 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
counteract any potential tyranny in a market society. In following William Godwin, anarchists insist that "inequality corrupts freedom. Their anarchism
Rallou Karatza (5,201 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
condolences on Percy's death (while also reporting that she was reading from William Godwin). Shelley named a character in The Last Man "Argyropolo", possibly as
Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism (29,000 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
disclose to them his principles, and assist them in their enquiries." – William Godwin (1785). The first of the two Royal Commissions, usually referred to
List of Old Carthusians (13,968 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article find links to article
presenter Jonathan Dimbleby (born 1944), television and radio presenter William Godwin the Younger (1803–1832), English journalist and author Sir Max Hastings
List of last words (18th century) (8,765 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
writer and feminist philosopher (10 September 1797), to her husband, William Godwin, while dying from the effects of giving birth to Mary Shelley "What
List of English writers (D–J) (9,240 words) [view diff] no match in snippet view article
Godley (1856–1925), comic poet Sidney Godolphin (1610–1643), poet William Godwin (1756–1836), novelist and philosopher Louis Golding (1895–1958), novelist