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William Pikes (c. 1520-14 July 1558) (also William Pickesse, Wyl Pyckes) was an English tanner in Ipswich, Suffolk who was arrested in Islington during the Marian persecutions as a member of a group studying the Bible in English. He was burnt at the stake in Brentford and is commemorated as one of the Ipswich Martyrs.
Wreight), John Slade and WilliamPikes (or Pikas/Peckes), and suffered in a similar way at Brentford on 14 July 1558. Pikes prayed for 'grace to abide...
renamed "Pike's Peak" in honor of Pike. The name was simplified to "Pikes Peak" by the United States Board on Geographic Names in 1890. Pikes Peak is one...
that the Pikes were a Bristol family, and that William (who lived in the Village of Moors on the Hampshire border) was the brother of Martha Pike. Martha's...
William Thomas Pike (26 January 1838 – 22 April 1924) was an English publisher, printer, editor and journalist. He is known for his publication of Pike's...
and 40% pikes; this was adjusted in 1589 to 10% halberds, 30% pikes and 60% unspecified firearms. By 1600 France set a 1:1 ratio of pikes to firearms...
George (1); Harriet Murphy Pike (18), her husband William M. (32) and their daughters Naomi (3) and Catherine (1). William H. Eddy (28), a carriage maker...
Zebulon Montgomery Pike (January 5, 1779 – April 27, 1813) was an American brigadier general and explorer for whom Pikes Peak in Colorado is named. As...
Lieutenant General Sir Hew William Royston Pike KCB, DSO, MBE (born 24 April 1943) is a retired senior British Army officer known for his service in the...
What are now known as Scafell Pike, Ill Crag, and Broad Crag were collectively called either the Pikes (peaks) or the Pikes of Scawfell (see below regarding...
Arthur Miller's All My Sons, and several plays by William Shakespeare. While she was still at Oxford, Pike acted in and directed various plays, including...
William Thomas Pike (January 1838 – 22 April 1924) edited and wrote Pike's New Century Series, 1898–1912, and some books of local interest to his native...
Foxe's Book of Martyrs: 303. William Coker, William Hopper, Henry Laurence, Richard Colliar, Richard Wright, and William Stere. Exclassics.com. Retrieved...
William Llewellyn (1921). Bibliography of the Writings of Albert Pike: Prose, Poetry, Manuscript. Washington, D.C.: A.A.S.C. p. 18. Shea, William, and...
200 yards (180 m) away William Eddy and William Foster build a cabin against a boulder for the Eddys, Fosters, Murphys, and Pikes. The Graves and Reed families...
Tudson, 1556. (John Tudson of Ipswich was burnt at London.) WilliamPikes, 1558. (WilliamPikes of St Margaret's, Ipswich, was burned at Brentford.) Alexander...
doctorates while serving in a church: William Hendriksen obtained a Doctor of Sacred Theology degree from Pikes Peak (before getting a Doctor of Theology...
refer to: John Floyd (died 1588), English Protestant martyred with WilliamPikes John Floyd (American football) (born 1956), American football wide receiver...
newspaper and KISS TV. Quarcoo and his Radio Africa Group co-founder, WilliamPike also own two radio stations in Uganda, Capital Radio and Beat FM. He...
Pike may refer to: Albert Pike (1809–1891), Confederate States Army brigadier general Hew Pike (born 1943), British Army lieutenant general William Pike...
stars Harry Houdini, Marguerite Marsh, Ruth Stonehouse, Edna Britton, WilliamPike, and Charles Graham. Episode 1 was released on November 18, 1918, by...