Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
At Cambridge, Guy studied under the Tudor specialist Geoffrey Elton. He was awarded a Greene Cup by Clare College in 1970 and the Yorke Prize by the University of Cambridge in 1976. He was appointed a Research Fellow at Selwyn College in 1970, completing his PhD on Thomas Wolsey in 1973.
John James Guy OBE (born 1950 in Oxford) is a British educationalist. He gained his first degree in Chemistry before becoming a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in X-ray Crystallography at Cambridge University. He was a Chemistry teacher in various schools before securing his first headship at St Philip’s Sixth Form College in Birmingham in 1985.
John Guy (English cricketer) (1916–1997), English cricketer who played first-class cricket for Oxford University, Kent and Warwickshire; John Guy (colonial administrator) (1568–1629), coloniser of Newfoundland; John Guy (historian) (born 1949), British historian of Tudor England; John J. Guy (born 1950), British educationalist; John Hudson ...
Sir Harry Godwin, botanist and ecologist, founded the Godwin Institute for Quaternary Research in the University of Cambridge; Trisha Greenhalgh, professor of primary health care at the University of Oxford [1] John Guy, leading Tudor historian and Fellow of the college; Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond, classicist, historian and archaeologist
Blunt also was associated with other Cambridge persons subsequently involved in espionage (Michael Straight, Peter Ashby, Brian Simon) but they are generally considered as minor figures as compared to the "Cambridge Five". Guy Liddell was an MI5 officer and nearly rose to become director of the service but was passed over because of rumours he ...
Elton taught at the University of Glasgow and from 1949 onwards at Clare College, Cambridge and was the Regius Professor of Modern History there from 1983 to 1988. Pupils included John Guy, Diarmaid MacCulloch, Susan Brigden and David Starkey.
John Guy concludes the original letter may have been from Mary to Darnley. [56] The French sonnets, said to have been found in the casket, were printed in Anderson's Collections, Volume 2, with Scottish translations. [57] Walter Goodall reprinted the twelve poems in Examination, Volume 2. [58] The sonnets can be evaluated as French literature. [59]
The John Guy Flag Site in Cupids, created in 1910 to mark the settlement's 300th anniversary.The 26-metre (85 ft) flagstaff is used to fly a giant Union Jack. [1]John Guy (25 December 1568 – February 1629) was an English merchant adventurer, colonist and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1621 to 1624.