Thomas Tooke - Wikipedia Thomas Tooke ( tʊk ; 28 February 1774 – 26 February 1858) was an English economist known for writing on money and economic statistics After Tooke's death the Statistical Society endowed the Tooke Chair of economics at King's College London, and a Tooke Prize
Tooke - Wikipedia Tooke is an Old English name originally found predominantly in the East Anglia region of the United Kingdom Tooke is said to be derived "from the Old Swedish (pre 7th century Old Scandinavian origin) personal name "Toki" Toki remained a personal name from the Old Scandinavian, through the Anglo-Norman, and Middle English periods
John Horne Tooke - Wikipedia John Horne Tooke (25 June 1736 – 18 March 1812), known as John Horne until 1782 when he added the surname of his friend William Tooke to his own, was an English clergyman, politician and philologist Associated with radical proponents of parliamentary reform, he stood trial for treason in 1794
Thomas Tooke, 1774-1858. - HET Website In the 1820s, Tooke emerged as the leading figure of the English "Banking School" during the Bullionist Controversy He rejected the Quantity Theory without actually developed a clear monetary theory of his own
Tooke Revival - Western Horseman Some of the grittiest bucking broncs can be traced to Feek Tooke’s legendary bucking horse bloodline that began in the 1930s Eight decades later, another Tooke is reviving the great family of rodeo horses In the Powder River breaks west of Ekalaka, Montana, the footfalls from a herd of ground-shaking giants echo through Whiskey Gulch
Tooke - Name Meaning and Origin The surname Tooke is of English origin and is derived from the Old English word "tōc," meaning "to take" or "to seize " It is an occupational surname that likely originated as a nickname for someone who was a taker or a collector of tolls or taxes
John Horne Tooke | Political Reformer, Linguist, Philologist . . . John Horne Tooke was a radical politician, one of the most effective English agitators for parliamentary reform and freedom of dissent in the late 18th century He attacked the powerful Whig magnates but stopped short of advocating democracy