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| George Trosse : ウィキペディア英語版 | George Trosse George Trosse (1631–1713) was an English nonconformist minister. He is now best known for his autobiographical accounts of periods of mental illness he experienced in his younger years. ==Early life== The younger son of Henry Trosse, counsellor-at-law, he was born at Exeter on 25 October 1631; his mother was Rebekah, daughter of Walter Burrow, a prosperous merchant, twice mayor of Exeter. His family had no Puritan leanings; his uncle Roger Trosse (1595–1674), rector (1618) of Rose Ash, Devon, was one of the sequestered clergy of the English Civil War. Trosse was intended for the law; his father, dying early, left him his law library; but on leaving Exeter grammar school Trosse went into business. In 1646 Trosse was sent to an English merchant at Morlaix in Brittany, who placed him for a year with Ramet, a Huguenot pastor at Pontivy, to learn French. Returning to Exeter in 1648, he was sent to a brother-in-law in London for introduction to a Portugal merchant. Having been made free of the Drapers' Company, he sailed for Oporto where he remained for two and a half years. He returned to Exeter early in 1651.〔
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