Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Thomas Tryon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English merchant, writer and activist (1634–1703)
For the American actor and novelist, seeTom Tryon. For the American architect, seeThomas Tryon (architect).
Thomas Tryon
Engraved portrait of Tryon byRobert White
Born(1634-09-06)6 September 1634
Died21 August 1703(1703-08-21) (aged 68)
Occupations
  • Merchant
  • writer
  • activist
Notable workThe Way to Health, Long Life and Happiness (1683)

Thomas Tryon (6 September 1634 – 21 August 1703) was an English merchant, writer and activist who wrote several popularself-help books and was an early advocate ofanimal rights,vegetarianism andabolitionism.

Life

[edit]

Born in 1634 inBibury nearCirencester,Gloucestershire,England, he had to work spinning wool as a child and received no education.[1][2] As a teenager, he worked as a shepherd till the age of eighteen and managed to learn reading and writing in his spare time.[3] In 1652 he moved to London without telling his parents andapprenticed with ahatter[3] at the Bridewell area.[4] He became anAnabaptist in 1654 under the influence of his master.[3] He liked theascetic lifestyle of that congregation, but soon he found his own independent spiritual way after reading the writings ofJakob Böhme. In 1657 he heard an inner voice, which he named the "Voice of Wisdom", encouraging him to become a vegetarian and to live on a frugal diet.[5] He married in 1661 but failed to convert his wife to his lifestyle.[6]

He traveled toBarbados hoping to succeed in his hat trade and to profit from greater religious tolerance there, but was shocked by the cruelty of slavery in the plantations.[7] In 1669 he returned to London and settled inHackney.[8] In 1682 his inner voice told him to engage in writing and to publish books in order to propagate temperance and nonviolence.[9] In the last two decades of his life, he published twenty-seven works on a wide range of subjects, including education, nutrition,abstinence from alcohol and tobacco and other health issues, and treatment of slaves.[10] At the same time he continued his hat trade and grew wealthy. Some of his self-help books sold very well.[11]

Influence

[edit]

His most widely read book wasThe Way to Health, published in 1691 as a second edition ofHealth's Grand Preservative; or, The Women's Best Doctor (1682). It inspiredBenjamin Franklin to adopt vegetarianism.[12][13][14] Tryon's writings also impressed playwrightAphra Behn (whose "On the Author of that Excellent Book Intitled The way to HEALTH, LONG LIFE, and HAPPINESS," appears in Tryon's 1697Way to Health"), and vegetarian poetPercy Bysshe Shelley.[15] Tryon died in Hackney in August 1703 and his memoirs,Some Memoirs of the Life of Mr. Thomas Tryon, Late of London, Merchant, were published posthumously in 1705.[16]

Ideas

[edit]

Tryon's ideas on historical and philosophical matters were heavily influenced by ancientPythagoreanism,Hinduism, and the teachings of German occultistHeinrich Cornelius Agrippa.[17] He considered himself a Christian and tried to reconcile Biblical, Pythagorean and Hindu teachings. His conviction was that there was one true original religion of mankind, followed byMoses, Pythagoras and the IndianBrahmins, but perverted by the majority of Christians.[18] According to him, the main tenets of that faith werepacifism andnonviolence to animals; benevolence to all species and vegetarianism were prerequisites for spiritual progress and a possible restoration of Paradise.[19] He explicitly advocatedanimal rights.[20]

Tryon was of the opinion that humans are a miniature image of the universe (microcosm).[21] He voiced environmental concerns about the pollution of rivers and the destruction of forests.[22] Tryon did not believe in reincarnation, but assumed that the souls of sinners take on the forms of vicious beasts in a nightmarish afterlife.[23]

Tryon has been associated with the history of animal rights. Historians have described Tryon as the first known author to use the word "rights" in regard to animals in his bookThe Way to Health, Long Life and Happiness, published in 1683.[24][25][26] He commented that man "would fain be an absoluteMonarch or arbitraryTyrant, making nothing at his pleasure to break the Laws of God, and invade and destroy all the Rights and Priviledges of the inferiour Creatures."[27][28]

Selected publications

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Stuart, Tristram (2006).The Bloodless Revolution: Radical Vegetarianism and the Discovery of India. London: Harper Collins. p. 60.ISBN 978-0-00-712892-1.
  2. ^Spencer, Colin (1993).The Heretic's Feast. A History of Vegetarianism. London: Fourth Estate. p. 206.ISBN 1857020782.
  3. ^abcStuart p. 60-61; Spencer p. 206.
  4. ^Cockayne, Emily (2021).Hubbub: Flith, Noise and Stench in England. Yale. p. 210.
  5. ^Stuart p. 61.
  6. ^Spencer p. 206.
  7. ^Stuart p. 60-62.
  8. ^Aithen, George Atherton (1889). "Marriage with Mary Scurlock".The Life of Richard Steele.Edinburgh andLondon: Ballantyne Press. pp. 204–05. Retrieved14 July 2007.
  9. ^Stuart p. 62.
  10. ^Stuart p. 62-63, 509–511 (with list of Tryon's publications).
  11. ^Stuart p. 62-64.
  12. ^Spencer p. 207, 232.
  13. ^Franklin, Benjamin (25 August 2022).His Autobiography.
  14. ^Kaiser, Larry."What Benjamin Franklin Really Said About Vegetarianism".The Vegetarian Resource Group (VRG). Retrieved15 November 2021.
  15. ^Stuart p. 63-64.
  16. ^Smith, Virginia (23 September 2004)."Tryon, Thomas (1634–1703), vegetarian and author".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/27783. Retrieved21 March 2021. (Subscription,Wikipedia Library access orUK public library membership required.)
  17. ^Stuart p. 64-77.
  18. ^Stuart p. 65-66, 77.
  19. ^Stuart p. 65-67.
  20. ^Stuart p. 71-72.
  21. ^Stuart p. 75.
  22. ^Stuart p. 72-73.
  23. ^Stuart p. 76-77.
  24. ^Sherry, Clifford J. (1994).Animal Rights: A Reference Handbook. ABC-CLIO. p. 62.ISBN 9780874367331
  25. ^Linzey, Andrew. (1995).Animal Theology. University of Illinois Press. p. 20.ISBN 978-0252064678
  26. ^Perkins, David. (2003).Romanticism and Animal Rights. Cambridge University Press. p. 41.ISBN 0-521-82941-0
  27. ^Tryon, Thomas (1683)The Way to Health, Long Life and Happiness. p. 515.
  28. ^Magel, Charles R. (1989).Keyguide to Information Sources in Animal Rights. McFarland. p. 9.ISBN 0-89950-405-1

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Wikiquote has quotations related toThomas Tryon.
Topics (overviews, concepts, issues, cases)
Overviews
Concepts
Issues
Animal
husbandry
Animal testing
Animal welfare
Fishing
Wild animals
Cases
Studies
Methodologies
Observances
Monuments and memorials
Advocates (academics, writers, activists)
Academics
and writers
Contemporary
Historical
Activists
Contemporary
Historical
Movement (groups, parties)
Groups
Contemporary
Historical
Parties
Activism
Media (books, films, periodicals, albums)
Books
Films
Periodicals
Journals
Magazines
Albums
Fairs and exhibitions
Academics,
activists,
authors,
physicians
Vegan
Vegetarian
Chefs,
cookbook
authors
Related
International
National
Academics
People
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Thomas_Tryon&oldid=1304708579"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp