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  1. John Conduitt (/ ˈ k ɒ n d (j) u ɪ t /; c. 8 March 1688 – 23 May 1737), of Cranbury Park, Hampshire, was a British landowner and Whig politician. He sat in the House of Commons from 1721 to 1737. He was married to the half-niece of Sir Isaac Newton, whom Conduitt succeeded as Master of the Mint.

  2. John Conduitt (* 1688 [1] in London; † 23. Mai 1737) war ein englisches Parlamentsmitglied ( House of Commons, 1721 bis 1737) der Whig -Partei. Er war ein Vertrauter von Isaac Newton, dessen Nachfolger als Direktor der Münze er wurde. Er war mit der Nichte von Isaac Newton verheiratet, die dessen Haushalt führte.

  3. John Conduitt (8 mars 1688 - 23 mai 1737), de Cranbury Park, Hampshire, est un propriétaire terrien et homme politique britannique Whig qui siège à la Chambre des communes de 1721 à 1737. Il épouse la nièce d' Isaac Newton à qui il succède en tant que Maître de la Monnaie.

  4. 23 de may. de 2018 · John Conduitt. Politician, Writer and Soldier. At the west end of the nave of Westminster Abbey is a black and white marble monument to John Conduitt, politician and Master of the Mint. It includes a large gilt brass medallion portrait and a shield of arms, showing the coats of arms of Conduitt and Barton.

  5. John Conduitt (8 de março de 1688 - 23 de maio de 1737) foi um membro do Parlamento britânico e mestre da Casa da Moeda que se casou com a sobrinha do cientista Isaac Newton, Catherine Barton. [1] John também escreveu um esboço memorial de Newton e coletou materiais para uma biografia dele.

  6. The first and for long the most influential biographer of Isaac Newton was John Conduitt (1688-1737), Masterof the Mint from 1727to 1737. Conduitts narrative of Newton’s life, prepared for the Academie Royale des Sciences in Paris, but only published in 1806, dominated biographical accounts of Newton before the appearance of Sir David ...

  7. 12 de jun. de 2019 · Often attributed solely to Newton's executor, John Conduitt, the Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended (1728) was in fact co-edited with the antiquarian Martin Folkes, who would eventually follow in Newton's footsteps and become President of the Royal Society.