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  1. Thoby Stephen. Julian Thoby Stephen (9 September 1880 – 20 November 1906), known as the Goth, was the brother of Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf, both prominent members of the Bloomsbury Group, and of Adrian Stephen . Thoby Stephen was the eldest son of Leslie Stephen and Julia Prinsep Stephen.

  2. 8 de jul. de 2020 · Thoby Stephen, Virginia’s eldest brother, had been infected with typhoid. The letter Virginia wrote the day he died was to Violet Dickinson, who had accompanied the Stephens on their trip. She,...

  3. 22 de mar. de 2011 · Death of father Leslie STEPHEN (aged 72) 20 Nov 1906. 26. Thoby Prinsep STEPHEN died. Note 2. Note 1: death was premature, devastated Leslie, had influenza less than 2 mo before death. Note 2: early death, died "quiet and courageous" after being operated on (Lee 226)

  4. Julian Thoby Stephen, the eldest son of Leslie Stephen and Julia Princep Duckworth, was born at Hyde Park Gate, Kensington, in September 1880. His mother had three children from a previous marriage: George Duckworth (1868–1934), Stella Duckworth (1869–1897), and Gerald Duckworth (1870–1937). Thoby had a a brother and two sisters: Vanessa ...

  5. 3 de ago. de 2011 · He was named for Virginia’s brother Julian Thoby Stephen, who died of typhoid at the age of twenty-six on a trip to Greece. Thoby, as he was called, inspired Woolf to write Jacobs Room , in which she rendered the protagonist chiefly through others’ memories; the pain of his loss was such that, even in fiction, she strained ...

  6. Thoby Stephen. 1880–1906. The second child of Leslie and Julia Stephen, Thoby was at the centre of the group of friends who first met at Cambridge, and afterwards at his ‘Thursday evenings’ in Bloomsbury. Strikingly handsome, cerebral and original, his friends and family were left wondering what he might have become after his tragically ...

  7. translated to the texts that her brother Thoby Stephen inscribed at Clifton College and Cambridge University. These volumes, now in Virginia and Leonard Woolf’s library at Washington State University, shaped the academic landscape that Jacob inhabited. Beginning with the genre of the textbook, the books in Woolf’s library