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Reverend Charles Pritchard (29 February 1808 – 28 May 1893) was a British astronomer, clergyman, and educational reformer. He founded the Clapham Grammar School in 1834 and included sciences in the curriculum.
Pritchard's archaeological reputation began to be established by his excavations at a site called el-Jib (1956–1962). He identified it as Gibeon by inscriptions on the Al Jib jar handles . He cataloged these in Hebrew Inscriptions and Stamps From Gibeon (1959), which included the first in-depth discussion of concentric-circle incisions on jar ...
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Charles Philamore Bailey (September 8, 1910 – August 18, 1993) was an American cardiac surgeon. [1] His methods were the focus of a 1957 Time magazine article. [ 2 ] Born in Wanamassa, a suburb of Asbury Park, New Jersey , he was a graduate of Rutgers University , Hahnemann Medical College and the University of Pennsylvania .
Sir Charles Bradley Pritchard, KCIE, CSI (5 May 1837 – 23 November 1903) was a British administrator in India. The son of the headmaster and astronomer Charles Pritchard by his first wife Emily, née Newton, he was educated by his father, then at Rugby School and Sherborne School .
Three British men, all medically qualified and publishing between 1813 and 1819, William Lawrence, William Charles Wells and Prichard, addressed issues relevant to human evolution. All tackled the question of variation and race in humans; all agreed that these differences were heritable, but only Wells approached the idea of natural selection ...