Matches 651 to 700 of 919
# | Notes | Linked to |
---|---|---|
651 | Lost overboard from the Blake sailing from Port Mahon. | Lennox, Lord Henry Adam (I1205)
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652 | Major in the 34th Regiment | Anderson, Major George (I2078)
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653 | Married by licence. | Family F914
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654 | Married in person | Family F114
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655 | Master of Arts (M.A.) | (Spencer), Albert Edward John 7th Earl Spencer (I16)
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656 | Master of Arts (M.A.) | (Roche), James Boothby Burke 3rd Baron Fermoy (I20)
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657 | Master of Arts (M.A.) | (Hamilton), James 2nd Duke of Abercorn (I28)
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658 | Master of Arts (M.A.) | (Spencer), Charles Robert 6th Earl Spencer (I38)
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659 | Master of Arts (M.A.) | (Spencer), John Poyntz 5th Earl Spencer (I49)
|
660 | Master of Arts (M.A.) | (Baring), Cecil 3rd Baron Revelstoke of Membland (I59)
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661 | Master of Arts (M.A.) | Dawnay, Hon. John (I1390)
|
662 | Master of Arts (M.A.) | (Greville), Fulke 1st Baron Brooke of Beauchamps Court (I2616)
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663 | Matriculated 1888. | (Gordon-Lennox), Colonel Charles Henry 8th Duke of Richmond (I969)
|
664 | Matriculated 23 Oct. 1753. | (Parker), John 1st Baron Boringdon (I2803)
|
665 | Mentioned in despatches | (Gordon-Lennox), Colonel Charles Henry 7th Duke of Richmond (I960)
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666 | Mistress of King James V. | Stewart, Lady Helen (I299)
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667 | Monumental Inscription at Masham, Yorkshire. | Wyvill, Sir Marmaduke 1st Baronet (I1428)
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668 | Mortimer set the Royal forces in action against them, and the Earl's town of Leicester was ravaged. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
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669 | Mr. O., to whom she is now married, is a Scotchman, and was placed as an Usher for £12 a year at a very small school in Ireland. After the death of the Duke, the Duchess requiring a Tutor for her young children, Ogilvie had the luck to be recommended; and being domesticated in the family the Duchess conceived a passion for him which ended in marriage. They have three children, daughters." | Ogilvie, William (I1267)
|
670 | Name spelled as "Humfrey" by Foster. | Wyvill, Humphrey (I1727)
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671 | Named in the will of his cousin and brother-in-law John Dyneley, 1721. | Dyneley, Robert (I1668)
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672 | Niece of the well known Lady Sundon. | Dyne, Penelope (I1258)
|
673 | Not 8 November, as in Carte's Cat. des Rolles François. | (de Mowbray), Thomas 1st Duke of Norfolk (I740)
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674 | Note that this date of death may be erroneous given that the Lacock register states that Sir Robert Baynard was buried 7 June 1636. He certainly died between 16 March (the date of his will) and 7 June, 1636. | Baynard, Sir Robert (I2295)
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675 | Of the Middle Temple, London, 3 October 1595. | Aykeroide, Henry (I1594)
|
676 | Office granted for life | (de Mowbray), Thomas 1st Duke of Norfolk (I740)
|
677 | On 1 February 1331/32 he had remission of £221 13s. 4d. relief on succeeding to his brother Thomas's lands, because the King had had them in his own hand for six years after the death of Thomas. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
|
678 | On 10 August 1386 he was granted, for life, the manor of Brockenhurst, Hampshire, as from the death of Edward III. | (Holand), Thomas 2nd Earl of Kent (I487)
|
679 | On 10 June 1458 he was granted the castle and manor of Wressell, co. York. | (Percy), Thomas 1st Baron Egremont (I914)
|
680 | On 10 November 1385 he was sent to Calais to see that the town was in a proper state of defence. | (Holand), Thomas 2nd Earl of Kent (I487)
|
681 | On 12 April 1378 he was granted £200 p.a. to support his rank and in lieu of any free as Keeper; on 13 March 1379/80 this was altered to rents worth £796 13s. 4d., to hold as from 21 February last until he had his inheritance. | (Holand), Thomas 2nd Earl of Kent (I487)
|
682 | On 12 Feb. 1557/58, by resolution of the House of Lords, he was restored to the precedency of his ancestors, Barons Stafford, and was placed after Lord Talbot. | (Stafford), Henry 1st Baron Stafford (I439)
|
683 | On 12 February 1327/28, the Exchequer was ordered to search the rolls of the accounts of the sheriffs of co. Lancaster and to allow Henry to receive ferms and issues of the county as had Edmund his father and Thomas his brother. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
|
684 | On 12 Jan. 1385/86, he received, by charter, the office of Marshal of England, with the name, title, and honour of Earl Marshal in tail male. | (de Mowbray), Thomas 1st Duke of Norfolk (I740)
|
685 | On 12 January 1476/77, he had livery of the lands of his parents, but he never had seizin of Abergavenny. | (Neville), George 4th Lord Bergavenny (I2324)
|
686 | On 12 September 1329 he had a protection on going beyond seas, and in that month set out for France with a large retinue. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
|
687 | On 13 February 1436/37 he and Elizabeth his wife had a Papal indult to have mass celebrated before daybreak. | (Neville), George 1st Lord Latimer (I897)
|
688 | On 13 May 1642 he signed a Petition respecting the King's Propositions. | Croft, Thomas (I1596)
|
689 | On 14 July 1341 the King granted him and the heirs of his body certain jura regalia—namely, the return of all King's writs and all pleas of withernaam (de vetito namio) in their lands and fees, &c. (These were afterwards cancelled with the consent of his son Henry.) | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
|
690 | On 14 November 1464 he and the Earl of Warwick were appointed to appear at York on 26 November and prorogue the Parliament sitting there until 21 January following at Westminster. | (de Greystoke), Ralph 5th Lord Greystoke (I1756)
|
691 | On 16 February 1618/19, at Market Cross, Edinburgh, he was declared a rebel and traitor. | (Campbell), Archibald 7th Earl of Argyll (I1354)
|
692 | On 17 March 1309/10, he was one of those who forced the King to agree to the appointment of the Lords Ordainers. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
|
693 | On 19 October 1364 he witnessed at Dover the marriage treaty of Edward, Earl of Cambridge, and Margaret, Duchess of Burgundy. | (Percy), Henry 3rd Lord Percy (I621)
|
694 | On 2 April 1330 he had licence to found a hospital for poor persons and pilgrims in his town of Leicester, to be served by 4 or 5 chaplains, and to appropriate to it Ircester church, of his patronage. This hospital was the Newark, Leicester. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
|
695 | On 2 April 1760 he had a grant of "the crest anciently used by the Earls of Warwick," for himself "and his lawful descendants, being Earls of Warwick"—viz. a bear erect Argent, muzzled Gules, supporting a ragged staff of the first. His motto (not inappropriate for one who by Royal grant and not by descent from the old Earls of Warwick enjoyed not only their lands but their cognizance) was "Vix ea nostra voco." J. Horace Round remarks that the grant is based on the precedent of a similar one to the Dudley Earls of Warwick, by whom the well known Bear and Ragged Staff was borne as a crest; and calls attention to the fact that the "Bear and Ragged Staff was not the Crest of the Beauchamp Earls of Warwick (which was entirely different) but their Badge and the Supporter of their coat of Arms." With respect, however, to Ambrose (Dudley), Earl of Warwick, the case seems very different, as he was not only a descendant, but the senior representative of Richard (Beauchamp), Earl of Warwick, and was actually in remainder to the Earldom of Warwick, granted, in 1450, to (Richard Nevill) the said Earl Richard's son-in-law. It is to be observed that the crest of Beauchamp (viz. the demi swan, issuing out of a crest coronet) was early adopted, in lieu of that of Greville, by the Lords Brooke. | (Greville), Francis 1st Earl of Warwick (I2674)
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696 | On 2 October 1383 he was granted the custody of the New Forest and the castle and town of Southampton, for life. | (Holand), Thomas 2nd Earl of Kent (I487)
|
697 | On 20 January 1355/56 he was among the witnesses to Edward Balliol's surrender to Edward III of the Kingdom and (golden) crown of Scotland. | (Percy), Henry 3rd Lord Percy (I621)
|
698 | On 20 November 1384 he was granted the custody of the castle and town of Cherbourg. | (Holand), Thomas 2nd Earl of Kent (I487)
|
699 | On 22 January 1307/08, he was commanded to meet Edward II and his Queen at Dover, after their marriage at Boulogne. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
|
700 | On 22 May 1447, he had a grant of special precedence given him "before all Dukes who might thenceforward be created, excepting descendants of the King's body." | (Stafford), Humphrey 1st Duke of Buckingham (I742)
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