For the supporter of nonconformism, see William Coward (merchant).
For the late 17th-century pirate, see William Coward (pirate).
William Coward (1657?–1725) was an English physician, controversial writer, and poet. He is now remembered for his sceptical writings on the soul, which Parliament condemned as blasphemous and ordered to be burned in his presence.
WilliamCoward (1657?–1725) was an English physician, controversial writer, and poet. He is now remembered for his sceptical writings on the soul, which...
"Coward of the County" is a song written by Roger Bowling and Billy Edd Wheeler and recorded by American country music singer Kenny Rogers. The song was...
The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford is a 2007 American epic revisionist Western film written and directed by Andrew Dominik. Based...
1622–1705: Henry Layton 1702: WilliamCoward 1632–1704: John Locke 1643–1727: Isaac Newton 1676–1748: Pietro Giannone 1751: William Kenrick 1755: Edmund Law...
he is killed during a fight with a French privateer. January 27 - WilliamCoward, after seizing the ketch Elenor anchored in Boston Harbor the previous...
amalgamation of three dissenting academies. The first was associated with WilliamCoward (died 1738), a London merchant who used his money to train ministers...
managed the college on behalf of a charitable trust established by WilliamCoward discussed moving the institution to London to take advantage of access...
Charles Joseph Coward (30 January 1905 – 21 December 1976), known as the "Count of Auschwitz", was a British soldier captured during the Second World War...
articles on Dr. Doddridge and WilliamCoward in Dictionary of National Biography. The date of the Agreement with Coward's Trustees under which New College...
London, on 27 December 1845, the second child and only son of John William Smith Coward (1815–1888), a surgeon, and his first wife, Anna Eliza, née Bemfield...
Noël Coward: A Biography. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-80937-3. Norton, Charles (22 August 2013). "Doctor Who: the rediscovered William Hartnell...
John Phillips. He also ministered to Thomas Hawkins, Thomas Pound, and WilliamCoward; having been convicted of piracy, they were jailed alongside "Mary Glover...
1673. He married as his first wife Penelope Haslewood, daughter of Sir William Haslewood of Maidwell, Northamptonshire. Seymour was returned unopposed...
Present Laughter is a comic play written by Noël Coward in 1939 but not produced until 1942 because the Second World War began while it was in rehearsal...
Succeeded by WilliamCowardWilliam Piers Preceded by WilliamCowardWilliam Piers Member of Parliament for Wells 1716– 1717 With: William Piers Succeeded by...
Boston alongside convicted pirates Thomas Hawkins, Thomas Pound, and WilliamCoward (whose trial shared some of the same judges as Ann Glover's, and who...
become the first European people to land at the Falkland Islands. WilliamCoward is hanged for acts of piracy, following his capture after seizing the...
establishments. They were also funded by philanthropic Dissenters such as WilliamCoward (1647–1738), whose "will set up a trust fund 'for the education and...