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In April 1969, John D. Brooke founded Trinity College and Theological Seminary and in mid-1978, Trinity moved to metropolitan Evansville, Indiana, and changed its focus from offering traditional on-campus degree programs to its current emphasis on distance education, providing undergraduate, graduate and post-graduate courses for self-directed adult learners.
John Brooke (died 1582), was an English translator of religious works. He was the son of John Brooke, a native of Ashnext-Sandwich and owner of Brooke House in that village. Although appointed a scholar at Trinity College, Cambridge by the foundation charter of 1546, he did not become a B.A. until 1553–1554. [ 1 ]
John Redman (1499 – 4 November 1551, also written as Rydman) was a Tudor churchman and academic, the first Master of Trinity College, Cambridge (1546–1551). Redman studied at Corpus Christi College, Oxford ; [ 1 ] St John's College, Cambridge ; and the University of Paris .
Pages in category "Masters of Trinity College, Cambridge" ... Samuel Brooke; ... John Redman (Trinity College)
In addition, the master supports relations with students and alumni of the college, and serves as an ambassador for its global development activities. [2] In 1546, Trinity College was founded by Henry VIII, merging the colleges of Michaelhouse and King's Hall. [3] John Redman, then Warden of King's Hall, was thus
Brooke was subsequently made an Honorary Fellow (HonFISSR). Evaluations of John Hedley Brooke's contribution to the historiography of "science and religion" can be found in: Science and Religion: New Historical Perspectives (ed. T Dixon, G N Cantor and S Pumfrey) 2010 and Rethinking History, Science and Religion: An Exploration of Conflict and ...
Samuel Brooke was educated at Westminster School and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was admitted in 1596; he proceeded M.A. 1604, B.D. 1607, and D.D. 1615. [1] [2] He was imprisoned for a short period, by the action of Sir George More, for secretly celebrating the marriage of John Donne with More's daughter.
John Stott (1921–2011), Evangelical Church Leader; John Tiarks (1903–1974), Bishop of Chelmsford; Richard Chenevix Trench (1807–1888), poet, Archbishop of Dublin; theorist of English Language; Brooke Foss Westcott (1825–1901), Canon of Westminster, Bishop of Durham; Robin Woods (1914–1997), Dean of Windsor and Bishop of Worcester