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Sir Thomas Wyatt the Younger
A portrait by Hans Holbein the Younger of Sir Thomas Wyatt the Younger (d. 1554 CE) who infamously led a failed rebellion against Mary I of England (r. 1553-1558 CE) in 1554 CE. (The Weiss Gallery, London)
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Thomas Hancock
Thomas Hancock (1703-1764), a wealthy Boston merchant and founder of the firm House of Hancock; best known as the uncle of US Founding Father John Hancock. Oil on canvas portrait by John Singleton Copley, 1764-66.
Harvard Art Museums.
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Thomas the Slav Attacks Constantinople
An illustration from a 12th century CE manuscript depicting Thomas the Slav besieging Constantinople 821-823 CE. (Madrid Skylitzes, National Library, Madrid)
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Thomas Roderick Dew, 13th President of William & Mary College
Thomas Roderick Dew (l. 1802-1846), 13th President of William & Mary College and pro-slavery advocate, oil on canvas by William Garl Browne Jr.
Muscarelle Museum of Art.
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Thomas Hutchinson
Portrait of Thomas Hutchinson, governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the leadup to the American Revolution. Painting by Edward Truman, 1741.
Massachusetts Historical Society.
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Thomas Conway
Brig. Gen. Thomas Conway, namesake of the Conway Cabal, an attempt to remove George Washington as commander of the Continental Army during the winter of 1777-78. Portrait by an unknown artist, circa 19th century. Historical Society of Pennsylvania...
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Lt. Thomas J. Jackson, 1846
Young Stonewall Jackson, photograph taken sometime after his graduation from West Point, circa 1846, published in The photographic history of the civil war by Francis Treveylan Miller and Robert S. Lanier, New York, 1911.
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Thomas Blood Stealing the Crown Jewels
A 1793 illustration by T. Simpson showing Colonel Blood and his gang stealing the British Crown Jewels from the Tower of London in 1671. Blood was soon captured and the regalia returned.
Video
What Makes Thomas Jefferson so Controversial? - Frank Cogliano
Thomas Jefferson was a founding father of the United States — but were his principles outweighed by his participation in slavery? Thomas Jefferson, founding father of the United States and primary author of the Declaration of Independence...
Definition
Pilgrimage of Grace
The Pilgrimage of Grace is the collective name for a series of rebellions in northern England, first in Lincolnshire and then in Yorkshire and elsewhere between October and December 1536 CE. Nobles, clergy, monks, and commoners united to...