thomas carew การใช้
- In 1881 they designed Stoodleigh Court at Tiverton for Thomas Carew.
- He became a friend of Thomas Carew's, and wrote poetry for around five years.
- Thomas Carew was another son, and Carew managed to find him a place with Sir Dudley Carleton.
- In 1578, however, it belonged to Thomas Carew, who dying that year was succeeded by his son Henry.
- The manor of Cove was acquired in 1763 by Robert Row of Livingshayes, Silverton, from Thomas Carew of Crowcombe, Somerset.
- In poetry, however, the Caroline period saw the flourishing of the Cavalier poets ( including Thomas Carew, Richard Lovelace, and Robert Herrick.
- It was built, in English regional baroque style, by Thomas Parker, for Thomas Carew, Minor alterations were carried out by Edward Middleton Barry around 1870.
- This may have been because of an offer of support from his relative, Sir Thomas Carew of Bickerton, winning a lottery, or because of age and weariness.
- Davenant would eventually become an effective courtier himself; the 1636 edition contains Davenant's dedication of the play to Porter, and a commendatory poem by Thomas Carew.
- The year after performing in Thomas Carew's masque, " Coelum Britannicum ", he graduated Master of Arts from the University of Oxford in 1636.
- However, authors like Thomas Carew and Sir John Suckling died years before the war began, yet are still classified as Cavalier poets for the political nature of their poetry.
- By 1569, when Thomas Carew was serving as Hurst's captain, there were less than ten guns but the same size of garrison to that seven years before.
- He was appointed a justice of the peace for Devon in 1670, and in 1672, he succeeded his nephew Tiverton following the death of Sir Thomas Carew, 1st Baronet.
- He was intimate with Ben Jonson, Thomas Carew, Richard Lovelace, Thomas Nabbes and especially with John Hales and Sir William Davenant, who later furnished John Aubrey with information about his friend.
- Patrick Henry Curtis Carew ( b . 1931 ), great-grandson of Thomas Carew ( 1810 1876 ), third son of the seventh Baronet, is a Brigadier-General in the Royal Canadian Dragoons.
- Their tone was seldom dignified, often frankly sexual, and characterized by a persistent undertone of anti-Puritan feeling . " Similar examples can be found in the work of Ben Jonson, Thomas Carew and John Suckling.
- The term, or the alternative " Tribe of Ben, " was also employed as self-description by some of the Cavalier poets who admired and were influenced by Jonson's poetry, including John Suckling, and Thomas Carew.
- Even earlier instances of this idiomatic expression appear in the Cavalier poet, Thomas Carew's work, " The Spring " ( c . 1640 ), in which, Carew uses earth and its change of seasons as a metaphorical depiction of women and their sensuality ( The Norton Anthology of English Literature 1696 ).
- *Nicholas III Carew of Mohuns Ottery in Devon, who married Joane Courtenay ( born 1411 ), a daughter of Sir Bickleigh, inherited by Sir Thomas Carew, 1st Baronet ( d . 1673 / 4 ) following his first marriage to Elizabeth Carew, eldest daughter and co-heiress of Sir Henry Carew of Bickleigh and Tiverton Castle, the ancient seat of the Courtenay Earls of Devon, which latter was inherited by Sir Thomas Carew, 4th Baronet of Haccombe from his marriage to Dorothy West, a daughter and co-heiress of Peter West of Tiverton Castle.
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