Samuel Tuke may refer to: Sir Samuel Tuke, 1st Baronet (c.1615–1674), English Royalist officer, playwright and nobleman Samuel Tuke (reformer) (1784–1857)...
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Samuel Tuke (31 July 1784 – 14 October 1857) was a Quaker philanthropist and mental-health reformer. He was born in York, England. Samuel was part of...
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discovered. Tuke was born at Lawrence Street, York, into the prominent Quaker Tuke family.[citation needed] His brother William Samuel Tuke was born two...
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Samuel Tuke, father of W. F. Tuke Anthony Tuke (1920–2001), chairman of Barclays Bank and Rio Tinto Zinc, son of A. W. Tuke, grandson of W. F. Tuke Anthony...
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Tuke (13 September 1819 – 13 January 1896) was an English philanthropist. Born at York, England into a Quaker family, he was the son of Samuel Tuke and...
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William Tuke and his grandfather Henry Tuke co-founded the Retreat, which revolutionized the treatment of insane people. His father Samuel Tuke carried...
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William Tuke was born on 24 March 1732 in York into a prominent Quaker family. His father Samuel was a stuff-weaver and shopkeeper, who died when Tuke was...
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sense, the patient's moral autonomy was recognised. William Tuke's grandson, Samuel Tuke, published an influential work in the early 19th century on the...
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was taken on by other Quakers, including Tuke's son Henry Tuke who co-founded The Retreat, and Samuel Tuke who helped popularise the approach which convince...
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Samuel Tuke (1784-1857) James Hack Tuke (1819-1896) Others included: Ann (Tuke) Alexander (1767-1849), daughter of William Tuke III and Esther Tuke,...
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sense, the patient's moral autonomy was recognized. William Tuke's grandson, Samuel Tuke, published an influential work in the early 19th century on the...
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Sir Brian Tuke (died 26 October 1545) was the secretary of Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey. He served as the first Governor of the King's Posts (later the...
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playwright Samuel Tuke. The title became extinct on the death of the second Baronet in 1690. Sir Samuel Tuke, 1st Baronet (c. 1615–1674) Sir Charles Tuke, 2nd...
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William Murray Tuke (1822-1903), was a British tea merchant and banker. William Murray Tuke was born in 1822, the son of Samuel Tuke and Priscilla Hack...
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moral strength. The entire Tuke family became known as founders of moral treatment. William Tuke's grandson, Samuel Tuke, published an influential work...
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Sir Samuel Tuke, 1st Baronet (c.1615, in Essex – 26 January 1674, in Somerset House, London) was an English officer in the Royalist army during the English...
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Webster, exact authorship still uncertain, probably written c.1600/10 Samuel Tuke – The Adventures of Five Hours (published adaptation of Antonio Coello's...
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Flora's Vagaries Sir Robert Stapylton The Stepmother The Slighted Maid Sir Samuel Tuke – The Adventures of Five Hours (adapted from Antonio Coello's Los empeños...
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Samuel Tuke and Joseph Rowntree first mooted the ideal of a friendly society in 1829, to serve the needs of the Society of Friends (Quakers). Tuke, who...
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punishment. This model for decarceration may have roots in the work of Samuel Tuke and B. F. Skinner but departs by relying on individual volunteers' caring...
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reformers who inspired her. These reformers included Elizabeth Fry, Samuel Tuke and William Rathbone with whom she lived during the duration of her trip...
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reworking of an earlier Restoration-era play Adventures of Five Hours by Samuel Tuke, itself based on an original Spanish work. The original Covent Garden...
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facilitate the treatment of patients. The Quaker reformers, including Samuel Tuke, who promoted the moral treatment, as it was called, argued that patients...
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for Impressionist style James Hack Tuke (1819–1896), English businessman and philanthropist in Ireland Samuel Tuke (1784–1857), English philanthropist...
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Hack Tuke (1819–1896), social campaigner. Daniel Hack Tuke (1827–1895), social campaigner. Henry Tuke (1755–1814), social campaigner. Samuel Tuke (1784–1857)...
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adolescents Friends Provident, life insurance company, founded by Quakers Samuel Tuke and Joseph Rowntree Furness Withy, British Marine Transport company,...
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by Robert Stapylton (1663) Portia in The Adventures of Five Hours by Samuel Tuke (1663) Caesarina in The Stepmother by Robert Stapylton (1663) Graciana...
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dialogue." It has been wrongly ascribed to Calderón; it was adapted by Samuel Tuke, under the title of The Adventures of Five Hours, and was described by...
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(1906–2001), literary scholar Thomas Thomasson (1808–1876), cotton master Samuel Tuke (1784–1857), philanthropist and asylum reformer Benjamin Barron Wiffen...
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Henry VIII, and Macbeth, as well as non-Shakespeare plays such as Sir Samuel Tuke's The Tragedy of Five Hours and John Dryden's comedy Sir Martin Marall...
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