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John Tweddell : ウィキペディア英語版 | John Tweddell
John Tweddell (1769–1799) was an English classical scholar and traveller. ==Early life== The son of Francis Tweddell, he was born on 1 June 1769 at Threepwood, near Hexham, Northumberland. He was educated at Hartforth school, near Richmond, Yorkshire, under Matthew Raine (father of Matthew Raine FRS) at Hatton, Warwickshire under Samuel Parr, and at Trinity College, Cambridge. He graduated B.A. and won the second chancellor's medal in 1790, proceeding M.A. in 1793. He gained all the Browne medals in 1788 and two of the three in 1789, and the members' prize in 1791. He was elected Fellow of Trinity in 1792. Tweddell had been a pupil of the reformer Thomas Jones, who had backed him for the fellowship. In a Latin prize essay read out in a crowded Cambridge Senate House in 1792, on the topic ''An imperium magnum cum æquâ omnium Libertate constare possit?'' (Can a great empire exist with equal freedom for all?), Tweddell supported liberty.
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