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John Thomas (Christadelphian) : ウィキペディア英語版 | John Thomas (Christadelphian)
Dr. John Thomas (April 12, 1805 – March 5, 1871) was the founder of the Christadelphian movement, a Restorationist, with doctrines similar in part to some 16th-century Antitrinitarian Socinians and the 16th-century Swiss-German pacifist Anabaptists. ==Early life== John Thomas M.D., born in Hoxton Square, Hackney, London, on April 12, 1805,〔(Biographical Notes ) from Thomas' ''Elpis Israel''〕 was the son of a Dissenting minister, also named John Thomas. His family is reputed to be descended from French Huguenot refugees.〔Blore, Charles B. - ''Dr John Thomas: his family and the background of his times'' The distinctive family name "Bloy" comes from Blois in Normandy, and the Blois family settled in Norfolk in 1769.〕 His family moved frequently, as his father took up various pastorships including a congregation in London, a brief but eventful stay in northern Scotland, back to London, and then up to Chorley, Lancashire. John Thomas was a very disciplined student having taught himself Hebrew as a teenager. At the age of 16, in Chorley, he began studying medicine. His family moved back to London, but John Thomas stayed in Chorley. After two years, he returned to London to continue his studies at the Guy's and St. Thomas's hospitals for a further three years. He trained as a surgeon and had a keen interest in chemistry and biology, publishing several learned medical articles for ''The Lancet'', one of which argued in favour of the importance of the use of corpses for the study of medicine (it was illegal in England to dissect them at this time).
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