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  1. William Frend FRAS (22 November 1757 – 21 February 1841) was an English clergyman (later Unitarian), social reformer and writer. After a high-profile university trial in Cambridge, which deprived him of his residency rights as fellow of his college, he became a leading figure in London radical circles.

  2. William Frend (1757–1841) was a British clergyman, an active social reformer, and a sometime mathematician. Frend contributed to some of the algebra tracts published by Francis Maseres and shared his mathematical discomfort on the concept of negative numbers. In his The Principles of Algebra (1796

  3. 14 de oct. de 2022 · Spectacular recent discoveries and a stream of material artifacts have heightened interest in what archaeology can tell us about early Christianity. The first of its kind, William Frend's important and engaging work tells the full story of the archaeological search for early Christianity.

  4. William Frend (1757–1841) was a British clergyman, an active social reformer, and a sometime mathematician. Frend contributed to some of the algebra tracts published by Francis Maseres and shared his mathematical discomfort on the concept of negative numbers. In his (1796), Frend denied the existence of these numbers.

  5. William Frend may refer to: William Frend (reformer) (1757–1841), English clergyman (later Unitarian), social reformer and writer. W. H. C. Frend (William Hugh Clifford Frend, 1916–2005), English ecclesiastical historian, archaeologist and Anglican priest.

  6. 22 de ago. de 2016 · Algunos de sus maestros fueron William Frend, un reformista social, William King, el médico de cabecera y Mary Somerville, una astrónoma y matemática escocesa. Somerville fue una de las primeras mujeres admitidas en la Real Sociedad de Astronomía.

  7. The first of its kind, William Frend's important and engaging work tells the full story of the archaeological search for early Christianity. He shows how, despite nationalisms, religious...