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・ Dick Woodard
・ Dick Woodson
・ Dick Wray
・ Dick Wright
・ Dick Wright (baseball)
・ Dick Wright (footballer)
・ Dick Yates
・ Dick Yelvington
・ Dick Yin Wong
・ Dick Yoder
・ Dick York
・ Dick Tuck
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Dick Turpin
・ Dick Turpin (1925 film)
・ Dick Turpin (1933 film)
・ Dick Turpin (boxer)
・ Dick Turpin (disambiguation)
・ Dick Turpin (racehorse)
・ Dick Turpin (TV series)
・ Dick Turpin's Ride
・ Dick Turpin's Ride to York
・ Dick Twardzik
・ Dick Twinney
・ Dick Tydeman
・ Dick Tyldesley
・ Dick Tärnström
・ Dick Ukeiwé


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Dick Turpin : ウィキペディア英語版
Dick Turpin

Richard "Dick" Turpin (bapt. 1705 – 7 April 1739) was an English highwayman whose exploits were romanticised following his execution in York for horse theft. Turpin may have followed his father's trade as a butcher early in life, but, by the early 1730s, he had joined a gang of deer thieves and, later, became a poacher, burglar, horse thief and killer. He is also known for a fictional overnight ride from London to York on his horse Black Bess, a story that was made famous by the Victorian novelist William Harrison Ainsworth almost 100 years after Turpin's death.
Turpin's involvement in the crime for which he is most closely associated—highway robbery—followed the arrest of the other members of his gang in 1735. He then disappeared from public view towards the end of that year, only to resurface in 1737 with two new accomplices, one of whom he may have accidentally shot and killed. Turpin fled from the scene and shortly afterwards killed a man who attempted his capture. Later that year, he moved to Yorkshire and assumed the alias of John Palmer. While he was staying at an inn, local magistrates became suspicious of "Palmer" and made enquiries as to how he funded his lifestyle. Suspected of being a horse thief, "Palmer" was imprisoned in York Castle, to be tried at the next assizes. Turpin's true identity was revealed by a letter he wrote to his brother-in-law from his prison cell, which fell into the hands of the authorities. On 22 March 1739, Turpin was found guilty on two charges of horse theft and sentenced to death; he was executed on 7 April 1739.
Turpin became the subject of legend after his execution, romanticised as dashing and heroic in English ballads and popular theatre of the 18th and 19th centuries and in film and television of the 20th century.
== Early life ==

Richard "Dick" Turpin was born at the Blue Bell Inn (later the Rose and Crown) in Hempstead, Essex, the fifth of six children to John Turpin and Mary Elizabeth Parmenter. He was baptised on 21 September 1705, in the same parish where his parents had been married more than ten years earlier.
Turpin's father was a butcher and inn-keeper. Several stories suggest that Dick Turpin may have followed his father into these trades; one hints that as a teenager he was apprenticed to a butcher in the village of Whitechapel, while another proposes that he ran his own butcher's shop in Thaxted. Testimony from his trial in 1739 suggests that he had a rudimentary education and, although no records survive of the date of the union, that in about 1725 he married Elizabeth Millington. Following his apprenticeship they moved north to Buckhurst Hill, Essex (on the modern boundary of north east London), where Turpin opened a butcher's shop.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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