John Bradshaw
Encyclopedia
John Bradshaw may refer to:
  • John Bradshaw (judge)
    John Bradshaw (judge)
    John Bradshaw was an English judge. He is most notable for his role as President of the High Court of Justice for the trial of King Charles I and as the first Lord President of the Council of State of the English Commonwealth....

     (1602–1659), English judge
  • John Bradshaw (writer)
    John Bradshaw (writer)
    -Life:He was the son of Alban Bradshaw, an attorney, of Maidstone, Kent, where he was born. He was admitted a scholar of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, in 1674; but was expelled in 1677 for robbing and attempting to murder one of the senior fellows...

    , English political writer
  • John Bradshaw (author)
    John Bradshaw (author)
    John Elliot Bradshaw is an American educator, counselor, motivational speaker and author who has hosted a number of PBS television programs on topics such as addiction, recovery, codependency and spirituality. Bradshaw is active in the self-help movement, and is credited with popularizing such...

     (born 1933), American educator
  • John Bradshaw, presenter of It Is Written
    It Is Written
    It Is Written is an internationally broadcast Christian television program founded in 1956 by George Vandeman. Its title comes from the Gospel of Matthew: "It is written, 'Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of God.'" The programs are produced by the...


See also

  • Augustine Bradshaw
    Augustine Bradshaw
    Dom Augustine Bradshaw was a Benedictine monk. Born John Bradshaw near Worcester in 1575 to recusant Roman Catholic parents, he was sent to Royal Grammar School Worcester . He was sent to St...

     (1575–1618), British Catholic, born John Bradshaw
  • John Bradshaw Gass
    John Bradshaw Gass
    John Bradshaw Gass British Architect and Artist. Gass was a nephew of J. J. Bradshaw, the founder of Bradshaw Gass & Hope. He received the Ashbury Prize for Civil Engineering at Owens College . He assisted Sir Ernest George in London before, in 1880, becoming a pupil of his uncle in Bolton...

    (1855–1939), British architect and artist
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