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Thomas Hughes QC (20 October 1822 – 22 March 1896) was an English lawyer, judge, politician and author. He is most famous for his novel Tom Brown's School Days (1857), a semi-autobiographical work set at Rugby School, which Hughes had attended.
- Children's literature
- Lawyer, writer, reformer
- English
- Oriel College, Oxford
Thomas Hughes (born Oct. 20, 1822, Uffington, Berkshire, Eng.—died March 22, 1896, Brighton, Sussex) was a British jurist, reformer, and novelist best known for Tom Brown’s School Days. Hughes attended Rugby School from 1834 to 1842.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
11 de jan. de 2023 · Thomas Hughes, who as a State Department official and member of the Kennedy-era brain trust stood out for his deep skepticism over the Vietnam War, and who later transformed the Carnegie...
Morte. 1623. Alma mater. Queens' College, Cambridge. Ocupação. advogado, dramaturga. [ edite no Wikidata] Thomas Hughes ( Cheshire, fl. 1571 – 1623) foi um dramaturgo inglês da época isabelina . Era natural de Cheshire e estudou no Queens' College de Cambridge, a partir de 1571.
- Queens' College, Cambridge
- advogado, dramaturgo
- 1623
6 min. Thomas L. Hughes, a prominent voice in U.S. foreign policy for decades, first as a high-ranking official at the State Department in the 1960s, where he forcefully if futilely argued...
- Emily Langer
28 de jun. de 2006 · Thomas Hughes (1822-96) was a Victorian author, politician, and social reformer. He wrote Tom Brown's Schooldays, a classic novel about Rugby School, and advocated for labor unions, Christian Socialism, and adult education.
Thomas Hughes: The Life of the Author of Tom Brown's Schooldays. By EDWARD C. MACK and W. H. G. ARMYTAGE. Pp. 302. London: Ernest Benn, 1952. 30s. net. A biography of Thomas Hughes has been long overdue. The modern genera-tion knows Hughes chiefly as the author of Tom Brown's Schooldays; some may