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  1. When Campion and Persons commenced their memorable mission, Fitzherbert put himself at their service, and helped Campion in the preparation of his "Decem Rationes" by verifying quotations and copying passages from the fathers in various libraries, to which it would have been impossible for the Jesuit to obtain admission.

  2. Thomas Fitzherbert (disambiguation) Thomas Fitzherbert was an English Jesuit. Thomas Fitzherbert may also refer to: Thomas Fitzherbert (MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme), represented Newcastle-under-Lyme in 1593. Thomas Fitzherbert (MP for Staffordshire), represented Staffordshire in 1545–7. Thomas Fitzherbert (Arundel MP) for Arundel 1780–1790.

  3. George Thomas Keppel, Earl of Albemarle, Fifty Years of my Life, London, 1876, p. 314. W. H. Wilkins, Mrs Fitzherbert and George IV, London, 1905, II, pp. 391-394, illustrated p. 395 (described as ‘Companion of the locket given by the Prince to Mrs. Fitzherbert soon after their marriage, containing her Miniature, which is buried with the King at Windsor.’).

  4. Thomas Fitzherbert: una apuesta inglesa por la pedagogía católica en la segunda mitad del siglo XVI. Lía Viguria Guerendiáin. La historia de la educación entre Europa y América: estudios en honor del profesor Claudio Lozano Seijas / coord. por Olegario Negrín Fajardo; Javier Vergara Ciordia (aut.), Conrad Vilanou Torrano (aut.

  5. Fitzherbert, Maria Anne (1756–1837) Illegal wife of King George IV of England. Name variations: Mary Ann; Mrs. Fitzherbert. Born Maria Anne Smythe in Hampshire, England, on July 26, 1756; died on March 27, 1837, in Brighton, Sussex; daughter of Walter Smythe and Mary (Errington) Smythe; married Edward Weld of Lulworth Castle, Dorset, in 1775 (died 1776); married Thomas Fitzherbert of ...

  6. This degradation affected Thomas Fitzherbert intellectual and personally. Resisting this anthropocentric reclusion, he wielded the pen as a weapon to write An sit utilitas in scelere. His ends were to claim the power of virtus as dignity, as a way and means for the ruler. Fitzherbert spoke aloud with ink, even bleeding ink.

  7. Her next husband was Thomas Fitzherbert, of Swynnerton, Staffordshire, whom she married in 1778 and who died in 1781. A young and beautiful widow with a jointure of £2000 a year, she took up her abode in 1782 at Richmond , Surrey, having at the same time a house in town.