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・ Thomas Goode Jones School of Law
・ Thomas Gooding Water Tank House
・ Thomas Goodrich
・ Thomas Goodwin
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・ Thomas Goodwin (disambiguation)
・ Thomas Goold
・ Thomas Goolnik
・ Thomas Gordon
・ Thomas Gordon (Australian politician)
・ Thomas Gordon (bishop)
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・ Thomas Gordon (lawyer)
・ Thomas Gordon (psychologist)
・ Thomas Gordon (Royal Scots Navy officer)
Thomas Gordon (writer)
・ Thomas Gordon Gibbons Dangar
・ Thomas Gordon Hake
・ Thomas Gordon Hartley
・ Thomas Gordon McLeod
・ Thomas Gordon Thompson
・ Thomas Gordon Walker
・ Thomas Gordon William Ashbourne
・ Thomas Gore
・ Thomas Gore (writer)
・ Thomas Gore Browne
・ Thomas Goreau
・ Thomas Gorges
・ Thomas Gorges (Maine)
・ Thomas Gorman


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Thomas Gordon (writer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Thomas Gordon (writer)
Thomas Gordon (c. 1691 – 1750) was a Scottish writer and Commonwealthman. Along with John Trenchard, he published ''The Independent Whig'', which was a weekly periodical. From 1720 to 1723, Trenchard and Gordon wrote a series of 144 essays entitled ''Cato's Letters'', condemning corruption and lack of morality within the British political system and warning against tyranny. The essays were published as ''Essays on Liberty, Civil and Religious'', at first in the ''London Journal'' and then in the ''British Journal''. These essays became a cornerstone of the Commonwealth man tradition and were influential in shaping the ideas of the Country Party.〔Marie P. McMahon (1990). ''The radical Whigs, John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon: libertarian Loyalists to the new House of Hanover''.〕 His ideas played an important role in shaping republicanism in Britain and especially in the American colonies leading up to the American revolution. Zuckert argues, "The writers who, more than any others, put together the new synthesis that is the new republicanism were John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, writing in the early eighteenth century as ''Cato.''
==Life==
He was born in Kirkcudbright towards the end of the seventeenth century. He possibly attended the University of Aberdeen.
He went to London as a young man and taught languages. Two pamphlets on the Bangorian controversy commended him to John Trenchard, a Whig politician; one was probably ''A Letter to the Lord Archbishop'' (i.e. William Wake) in 1719, who had written a Latin letter reflecting upon Hoadly, addressed to the church of Zurich. Gordon became Trenchard's amanuensis.
Robert Walpole made Gordon first commissioner of the wine licenses, a post which he held till his death on 28 July 1750. Gordon was twice married, his second wife being Trenchard's widow.〔

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