john dryden
There is none. See John Wallis in the 17th century.
John Boynton Priestley was an English novelist, playwright and broadcaster. During WW I Priestley served with the Duke of Wellington's and Devon regiments, and survived the front lines in Flanders.
The English philosophers John Locke, Rousseau, and Montesquieu.
answer from ancestry.com -English: patronymic from the Middle English personal name Jan (see Jayne).Jayne - English: from the Middle English personal name Jan, a variant of John. (As a personal name, Janewas not specialized as a female form until the 17th century.)Possibly an Americanized form of French Lajeunesse.Lajeunesse - French: secondary surname, also used independently since 1706, from la jeunesse 'youth', hence a nickname for someone especially young, fresh, or naive. It is often translated as Young.
The Magna Carta led to the rule of constitutional law in England and elsewhere. It was the first document imposed on an English monarch by his subjects in order to limit the monarch's powers and protect the feudal barons' rights. It was signed and sealed by King John in 1215. Throughout history, it was both respected and ignored by various monarchs, but by the 17th century English Civil War, it became an important symbol to remind the monarch that they were bound by law and had limited powers. It inspired the English Bill of Rights as well as the United States Constitution.
sir john suckling
John Wallis
John Wallis
The English mathematician John Wallis (1616 - 1703).
John Donne was a poet who lived during the English Renaissance period, also known as the Early Modern period, which lasted from the late 15th century to the late 17th century. His work is often associated with the metaphysical poets of the early 17th century.
Crabtree and Evelyne
John Oldham, a poet from from the 17th century.
John Donne wrote primarily during the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods in English literature. He is known for his metaphysical poetry, which was popular during the 17th century.
John Locke, a 17th century English writer, is considered to be the originator of the concept of tabula rasa. In his work, An Essay Concerning the Human Mind, he proposed the idea that the mind of a child by birth is a blank slate on which the experiences and impressions received from the external world will be recorded. Locke argued that we are not born with inherent knowledge or instincts, but rather acquire them as we interact with our environment. This was an innovative view of the development of the human mind in his era and had a significant influence on philosophy and psychology. Locke believed that education and upbringing play an important role in the formation of personality and the development of intelligence. His ideas about tabula rasa became the basis for understanding the process of learning and the formation of individual experience. Locke's influence extends to modern concepts in the field of education and human development.
John Napier in early 17th century
John Milton, Poet from the 17th Century
John H. Raach has written: 'A Directory of English country physicians, 1603-1643' -- subject(s): Directory, Physicians, History of Medicine, History, 17th Century