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  1. 23 de abr. de 2024 · After interrupted attendance at the grammar school in Grantham, Lincolnshire, England, Isaac Newton finally settled down to prepare for university, going on to Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1661, somewhat older than his classmates.

  2. Isaac Newton. Statue by Roubiliac located in the Ante-Chapel, presented to the College by Robert Smith, Master, in 1755; the cost is recorded to have been £3000. Roubiliac’s statue of Newton “is the finest work of art in the College, as well as the most moving and significant. The lips parted and the eyes turned up in thought give life to ...

  3. El Trinity College lo hizo el 7 de agosto y, entre los alumnos que tuvieron que abandonar la prestigiosa institución, se hallaba un muchacho "sobrio, silencioso y pensativo" llamado Isaac Newton. El joven estudiante abandonó Cambridge y se dirigió a su casa materna de Woolsthorpe, en el condado de Lincolnshire. donde había nacido 23 años ...

  4. March 20 – Isaac Newton dies at Kensington between 1.00 and 2.00am. March 28 – Newton’s body lays in state in Westminster Abbey. April 4 – Newton’s body is buried at Westminster Abbey. 1728 – Publication of Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended, Short Chronicle, The System of the World, De mundi systemate, etc.

  5. Trinity College Notebook. Author: Isaac Newton Metadata: Early-mid 1660s, in Latin and English, c. 3,243 words, 50pp. Source: R.4.48c, Trinity College Library ...

  6. Moreover, Newton’s association with the new master of Trinity, the abrasive Dr Richard Bentley, weakened his popularity in his own college. The Tories shrewdly put up against him another Trinity man, Hon. Dixie Windsor*, and Newton could not even carry the majority of Trinity’s voters.

  7. 5 de may. de 2015 · Newton traced the doctrine of the trinity back to Athanasius (298- 373); he became convinced that before Athanasius the Church had no trinitarian doctrine. In the early 4th century Athanasius was opposed by Arius (256-336), who affirmed that God the Father had primacy over Christ. In 325 the Council of Nicea condemned as heretical the views of ...