Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 28 de sept. de 2020 · Thomas Gage, a Catholic priest who became a zealous ally of Oliver Cromwell, played a crucial role in the creation of what was to become Britain’s Caribbean empire. It did not appear so at the time, though, and he was not to realise it, for his unlikely encounters with the Lord Protector led to his own death and would deal a mortal blow to the Protectorate regime.

  2. 5 de jul. de 2016 · Thomas Gage, fraile dominico, llega a Veracruz, México, hacia 1625. Vive 12 años en la Nueva España, la mayor parte del tiempo en Guatemala, entre los indígenas. En 1648 se publica la primera ...

  3. 29 de ene. de 2008 · Gage, Thomas. Thomas Gage, army officer (b in Eng 1719 or 1720; d at London, Eng 2 Apr 1787). He served during the SEVEN YEARS' WAR in North America from 1755 and was present during several of the operations preceding the CONQUEST in 1760. He was then installed as military governor of Montréal, where, like fellow governors James MURRAY and ...

  4. Volver a los detalles del artículo Thomas Gage, El inglés americano: sus trabajos por mar y tierra o un nuevo reconocimiento de las Indias Occidentales Descargar Descargar PDF PDF.js viewer Thumbnails Document Outline Attachments

  5. 11 de ago. de 2023 · Cheney Schopieray, curator of manuscripts at the Clements Library, points to Thomas Gage’s original draft of his order to seize military stores at the town of Concord, west of Boston, April 18, 1775. This expedition resulted in gunfire at Lexington and Concord—the hostilities that began the fighting war of the American Revolutionary War.

  6. Thomas Gage, inglés católico, estudió en el colegio jesuita de Valladolid. Abandonó sus hábitos de jesuita y se hizo dominico en Jerez de la Frontera, de donde partió como misionero en 1625 hacia las islas Filipinas, vía América; pero finalmente se quedó en el virreinato de Nueva España, residiendo doce años en México y Guatemala.

  7. Thomas Gage’s parents found it expedient to convert to the Church of England in 1715, but though they resumed the old faith before their deaths, their son was raised and remained an Anglican. He attended Westminster School in London and subsequently entered military service; by 1743 he was a captain in the 62nd Foot.