Bayfield (surname)
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Bayfield (surname)
Bayfield is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Henry Wolsey Bayfield (1795–1885), English Royal Navy admiral *M. A. Bayfield (1852–1922), English classical scholar, educator and Anglican priest *Martin Bayfield (born 1966), English rugby union player *Richard Bayfield (died 1531), English Protestant martyr * Robert Bayfield, 17th-century English physician *St. Clair Bayfield (1875–1967), American actor *Tony Bayfield __NOTOC__ Rabbi Professor Anthony Michael "Tony" Bayfield is a Reform rabbi and former President of the Movement for Reform Judaism, the second largest organisation of synagogues in Britain. Early life and education Bayfield was born in 1946 ... (born 1946), British Reform rabbi {{surname, Bayfield English-language surnames ...
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Henry Wolsey Bayfield
Admiral Henry Wolsey Bayfield (21 January 1795 – 10 February 1885) was a British naval officer and surveyor. Early life and career Bayfield was born in Kingston-upon-Hull, to John Wolsey Bayfield and Eliza Petit. His family was an ancient one, who at one time lived at Bayfield Hall in Norfolk. Henry was inspired by the naval victories of Admiral Lord Nelson, who died at the scene of his greatest victory, the Battle of Trafalgar, the year before Henry joined the Navy. While his education is unknown, he joined the Royal Navy on 6 January 1806 at the age of 10, as a volunteer on . That same year, he was on the ship when it defeated a French privateer. At Cádiz, he was transferred to , and shortly after to HMS ''Duchess of Bedford''. In this particular ship, he was wounded in a battle with two Spanish ships near Gibraltar; for his good work in this episode, he was transferred as a first class volunteer to , on 29 September 1806, on which over the next four years he was invo ...
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Martin Bayfield
Martin Christopher Bayfield (born 21 December 1966) is an English actor, broadcaster, and former rugby union player who played lock forward for Northampton Saints, Bedford Blues and England, gaining 31 England and 3 Lions caps. Early life and career Bayfield was born in Bedford and was educated at Bedford School. He served with the Metropolitan Police from 1985 to 1989, before transferring to Bedfordshire Police. The 208 cm (6 ft 10in) tall Bayfield made his England debut in 1991, and although he was omitted from the 1991 World Cup squad, he was a part of the 1992 Five Nations Grand Slam winning side. He went on the 1993 British Lions tour to New Zealand, and was part of the 1995 World Cup squad. He would play 18 times partnering Martin Johnson. His final appearance for England came in the 1996 Five Nations match against Wales. His last game was against Gloucester in February 1998; a neck injury sustained in training a few days later forced him to retire. Fil ...
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Richard Bayfield
Richard Bayfield (died 27 November 1531) was an English Protestant martyr. A graduate of the University of Cambridge, he became a Benedictine monk and Chamberlain of the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds. At some time in 1522, an Augustinian rector at Cambridge, Robert Barnes visited Edmund Rougham, an acquaintance from their days at Leuven. Barnes gave Bayfield a copy of a Latin translation of the New Testament. After two years of study, Bayfield's interpretations brought him into trouble with his superiors and he was imprisoned in the house. Barnes eventually secured his release and brought him back to Cambridge. Bayfield was later imprisoned and interrogated by Bishop Tunstall. He recanted, but escaped to the Low Countries where he joined the English exiles and proved to be of great help to William Tyndale. He then returned to England and was active in circulating the New Testament and other prohibited books, including the works of Luther, Zwingli and Melancthon. He was discovered, im ...
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Robert Bayfield
Robert Bayfield (fl. 1668), was an English physician. Bayfield, of Norwich, who wrote with much energy on both religious and medical subjects, was born in 1629. He was the author of ''Enchiridion Medicum'', containing the causes, signs, and cures of all those diseases that do chiefly affect the body of man. ... Whereunto is added a treatise, "De Facultatibus Medicamentorum compositorum et Dosibus", 1655. Exercitationes Anatomicæ, 2nd edit. 1668. Tῆς Ἰατρικῆς Kαρπός, or a Treatise de morborum capitis essentiis et prognosticis, adorned with above three hundred choice and rare observations, 1663. Ἡ Προβολὴ τῆς Ἀληθείας: or the Bulwarke of Truth, being a treatise ... against Atheists and Hereticks London, 1657 bearing Edmund Calamy's imprimatur (republished at Newcastle in 1804). Tractatus de Tumoribus præter naturam; or a treatise of preternatural Tumors; the second part of this book is dedicated to the famous Sir Thomas Browne, 1662. A por ...
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Tony Bayfield
__NOTOC__ Rabbi Professor Anthony Michael "Tony" Bayfield is a Reform rabbi and former President of the Movement for Reform Judaism, the second largest organisation of synagogues in Britain. Early life and education Bayfield was born in 1946 in Ilford, Essex (now in Greater London), the elder son of Sheila (née Mann) and Ron Bayfield, a head teacher. He was educated at the Royal Liberty Grammar School in Romford and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He studied law and had a doctoral place at the Cambridge Institute of Criminology and then moved to the Leo Baeck College to train as a rabbi. He received rabbinic ordination (''semichah'') in 1972 from rabbis John Rayner, Hugo Gryn and Louis Jacobs. Career After ten years as a congregational rabbi at North West Surrey Synagogue, Bayfield became director of the Sternberg Centre for Judaism in Finchley in 1985. He was head of the Movement for Reform Judaism from 1994 (when the organisation was known as Reform Synagogues of Grea ...
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