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・ Samuel Gbaydee Doe
・ Samuel Gebo
・ Samuel Finer
・ Samuel Finkelstein
・ Samuel Finley
・ Samuel Finley Breese Morse (sculpture)
・ Samuel Finley Breese Morse Medal
・ Samuel Finley Brown Morse
・ Samuel Finley Vinton
・ Samuel Finney
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・ Samuel Finzi
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・ Samuel Fisher (clergyman)
Samuel Fisher (died 1681)
・ Samuel Fisher (Quaker)
・ Samuel Fisher Lafone
・ Samuel Fisk Green
・ Samuel Fitch
・ Samuel Flagg Bemis
・ Samuel Flake
・ Samuel Flaxington
・ Samuel Fleming Barr
・ Samuel Fleming House
・ Samuel Fletcher
・ Samuel Flores Borrego
・ Samuel Fludyer
・ Samuel Flynn Scott
・ Samuel Foart Simmons


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Samuel Fisher (died 1681) : ウィキペディア英語版
Samuel Fisher (died 1681)

Samuel Fisher (c.1605–1681) was an English Puritan clergyman and writer, who was committed to a Presbyterian polity. After serving as a rural rector in Shropshire during the period of Charles I's absolute monarchy, in he worked in London and Shrewsbury during the English Civil War and under the Commonwealth and in Cheshire during the Protectorate. After the Great Ejection of 1662 he settle in Birmingham, where he worked as a nonconformist preacher. The precise course of his career is a matter of some controversy.
==Identity==

This article concerns a Presbyterian minister who served at Shrewsbury approximately between 1645 and 1650 and afterwards at Thornton-le-Moors in Cheshire, retiring to Birmingham after his ejection. There were several Puritan clergy named Samuel Fisher and their lives seem to have become confused in some of the sources. The namesake with whom he is most often confused was a contemporary Puritan minister of Lydd who became a Quaker. An article of considerable length is devoted to this man's life in ''Athenae Oxonienses'',〔(''Athenae Oxonienses'', p. 701-3 )〕 a generally reliable early source. The important Victorian archivist and genealogist Joseph Foster incorporated the same birth and academic details in his ''Alumni Oxonienses'',〔Joseph Foster, (''Alumni Oxonienses'', p. 501 ), also (Bennell-Bloye )〕 while also featuring other men called called Samuel Fisher of the same period. From these, the Dictionary of National Biography article selected details, beginning with birth at Stratford-upon-Avon in 1617, as the basis for the subject of this article. In his much more recent article in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography,〔 Stephen Wright has proposed that the early life and academic records of the two ministers in have been transposed, making Northampton the Presbyterian minister's birthplace. Barbara Coulton's recent ''Regime and Religion'', a study of Shrewsbury through the Reformation and English Civil War, states that the Shrewsbury Samuel Fisher was not the one born at Stratford,〔 suggesting that a new consensus has now emerged that allows a biographical thread to be traced. However, it is not universal: the ODNB article on the Quaker minister still gives him the same parentage and academic record as Wright proposes for the Presbyterian minister who forms the subject of this article.

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