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  1. Thomas Harrison was an English Parliamentarian general and a leader in the Fifth Monarchy sect (men who believed in the imminent coming of Christ and were willing to rule until he came). He helped to bring about the execution of King Charles I. In the first phase of the English Civil Wars, Harrison

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Major-General Thomas Harrison, baptised 16 July 1616, executed 13 October 1660, was a prominent member of the radical religious sect known as the Fifth Monarchists, and a soldier who fought for Parliament and the Commonwealth in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.

    • Catherine Harrison (1646–his death)
    • 13 October 1660 (aged 44), Tyburn
  3. El general de división Thomas Harrison, bautizado el 16 de julio de 1616, ejecutado el 13 de octubre de 1660, fue un destacado miembro de la secta religiosa radical conocida como los Quintos Monárquicos, y un soldado que luchó por el Parlamento y el Commonwealth en las Guerras de los Tres Reinos.

  4. Thomas Harrison, the second of four children and the only son of Richard and Mary Harrison, was born in Newcastle-under-Lyme, in July, 1616. His father was a butcher and four times mayor of the town. He was educated at a local grammar school, and then became a clerk to solicitor Thomas Houlker of Clifford's Inn. (1)

  5. 29 de may. de 2018 · Thomas Harrison. Harrison, Jim. views 1,362,630 updated May 29 2018. HARRISON, Jim. Nationality: American. Born: James Thomas Harrison in Grayling, Michigan, 11 December 1937. Education: Michigan State University, East Lansing, B.A. in comparative literature 1960, M.A. in comparative literature 1964.

  6. 23 de sept. de 2017 · Martyn Bennett, Major General Thomas Harrison: Millenarianism, Fifth Monarchism and the English Revolution, 1616–1660, by David Farr, The English Historical Review, Volume 132, Issue 559, December 2017, Pages 1590–1592, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cex305

  7. Thomas Harrison is today perhaps best remembered for the manner of his death. As a leading member of the republican regime and signatory to Charles I’s death warrant, he was hanged, drawn and quartered by the Restoration government in 1660; a spectacle witnessed by Samuel Pepys who recorded him ’looking as cheerful as any man could do in ...