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・ John Turner (psychologist)
・ John Turner Hopwood
・ John Turner Sargent
・ John Turner Sargent, Sr.
・ John Turnley
・ John Turtle
・ John Turtle Wood
・ John Turton
・ John Turturro
・ John Turvey
・ John Turvill Adams
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・ John Tushek Building
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John Tutchin
・ John Tuthill Bagot
・ John Tuttle
・ John Tuttle (politician)
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・ John Tweddell
・ John Tweed
・ John Tweedale
・ John Tweedy
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・ John Twidell
・ John Twiggs
・ John Twiggs Myers
・ John Twiname Gardner


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John Tutchin : ウィキペディア英語版
John Tutchin

John Tutchin (c.1660/1664 – 23 September 1707) was a radical Whig controversialist and gadfly English journalist (born in Lymington, Hampshire), whose ''The Observator'' and earlier political activism earned him multiple trips before the bar. He was of a Puritan background and held strongly anti-Catholic views.
==The Bloody Assizes==

In 1685 he wrote ''Poems on several occasions. With a pastoral. To which is added, a discourse of life'' at the same time that he was beginning his agitation against the possible accession of James II of England. He joined in the Monmouth Rebellion that year and was tried by Judge Jeffreys during the Bloody Assizes. Jeffreys mocked Tutchin's verse from the bench and sentenced him to:
#seven years in prison,
#a fine of 100 marks,
#a surety for a lifetime of good behavior,
#to be whipped through all of the market towns of Devonshire once a year.
Tutchin, facing this sentence, appealed to be hanged, instead. His punishment became a ''cause célèbre'' among the Whig and Tory partisans, with the result that he was released after a year. He then married Elizabeth Hickes, the daughter of a Puritan minister who had been vocal and active in the anti-Jacobite causes.
The arrival of William III of Orange pleased Tutchin, and he wrote ''An heroick poem upon the late expedition of His Majesty to rescue England from popery, tyranny, and arbitrary government'' in 1689. William was not, however, republican enough, and Tutchin's political philosophy was moving toward overt republicanism. However, Tutchin was rewarded for his Williamite support, and possibly for his role in the Monmouth Rebellion and Bloody Assizes, by being appointed a minor post in the victualling office.
Tutchin was convinced, throughout his life, that corruption was rampant and that people were trying to defraud the government or serve an anti-English master, and in 1699 he was rewarded with £12 for his officious "saving so much of the bloody pickle which drained from the casks and binns which hold the flesh at the Victualling Office." This was indicative, in a sense, of Tutchin's terrier-like concern. At the same time, he grew disaffected by William's Dutch courtiers and wrote, in 1700 ''The Foreigners''. It was a very poor poem filled with xenophobia that outlined a Lockean position on the social contract and suggested that William was not a valid sovereign. Tutchin was arrested, but, because he had slightly disguised the proper names of the figures he lampooned, the poem could be pronounced a "seditious libel," but Tutchin could not be tried for sedition. Daniel Defoe answered Tutchin with ''The True-Born Englishman.''

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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