Matches 501 to 550 of 919
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501 | He was taught by Dr. Whewell. | Huntington, Rev. William (I2228)
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502 | He was the 6th Duke of the 1675 creation who received the Garter. See the Complete Peerage, volume ii, Appendix B, and especially page 586, where, under Stuart and Lennox, the number "seven" includes his son, the 7th Duke. | (Gordon-Lennox), Charles Henry 6th Duke of Richmond (I955)
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503 | He was the author of Maxims and Characters. | Greville, Fulke (I2752)
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504 | He was the historian of St. Louis. | de Joinville, John Seneschal of Champagne (I1955)
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505 | He was the last member of the Croft family to be Lord of the Manor of Stillington. | Croft, Harry (I2175)
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506 | He was the last Roman Catholic Archbishop of Canterbury. | (Pole), His Eminence Reginald Cardinal Pole (I428)
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507 | He was travelling tutor to the late Lord Dundas. | Huntington, Rev. William (I2228)
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508 | He was under age at this time. | (FitzGerald), James 1st Duke of Leinster (I1266)
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509 | He was, on 1 May 1414, created in Parliament Earl of Cambridge. On this creation Courthope remarked: "For this creation there is neither Charter nor Patent, but only investiture in Parliament; it was the opinion of Lords Lyndhurst and St. Leonards, as expressed in their argument on the Wensleydale Peerage, that such investiture 'vested in him a transmissible inheritance to his legal heirs.'" The title was formerly held by his elder brother, Edward, 2nd Duke of York, who had earlier ceased to be Earl of Cambridge either by resignation or deprivation of title. | (Plantagenet), Richard of Conisburgh, 3rd Earl of Cambridge (I433)
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510 | He went on the Garter mission to Denmark. | (Hamilton), James 2nd Duke of Abercorn (I28)
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511 | He with Lord Wake and others refused to attend the Parliament summoned to meet at Salisbury on 16 October 1328, where Mortimer had assembled a large armed force. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
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512 | Helped to suppress Perkin Warbeck's followers in 1496. | (Neville), Richard 2nd Lord Latimer (I1307)
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513 | Her connection with the title "Holland, co. Lincoln," was that its former owner had given the name of Holland to Holland House, in Kensington, which house was rented by her husband from William Edwardes in 1746, and bought by him in 1767. | (Lennox), Georgiana Carolina 1st Baroness Holland (I1256)
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514 | Her elder brother Edward having died in infancy, she became the heiress of Lackham. | Baynard, Mary (I2535)
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515 | Her father by his will gave to her an annuity arising out of his lands and tithes in Brighton, Yorkshire. | Akeroyd, Ann (I2277)
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516 | Her father lived at Sleningford, Yorkshire, England. | Parkinson, Mary (I1803)
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517 | Her father lived near Carlisle. | Lowther, unknown (I1775)
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518 | Her inquisitions give her death variously as 7, 8, 21 August, and one gives 8 July—a month before she made her will. Froissart, who lived in her house at Berkhampstead during the Queen's visit in 1361 (Froissart (ed. Kervyn de Lettenhove), volume vi, page 367); volume xvi, page 142), describes Joan as "la plus belle dame de tout roiaulme d'Engleterre, et la plus amoureuse" (Idem, volume ii, page 243). | (Plantagenet), Lady Joan "The Fair Maid of Kent" (I448)
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519 | Her portrait was at Thame Park. | Wenman, Hon. Elizabeth (I2642)
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520 | Her will, dated 18 August, proved 27 November 1448 (Register Stafford, Lambeth, folio 67), presumably directs burial near her 1st husband in St. Martin's Orgar, London. | Squery, Margaret (I788)
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521 | Her will, dated 20 July, proven 23 August 1455 (P.C.C., Stokton 3—Abstract in Test. Vetusta, page 277), directs burial with her first husband at Arundel. See Sussex Arch. Coll., volume lxxvi, page 64; Gough, Sepulchral Monuments, volume ii, plates 22, 45. | Berkeley, Eleanor (I781)
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522 | His body was later moved to Thetford, Norfolk, England. | (Howard), John 1st Duke of Norfolk (I698)
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523 | His descendants, if not barred by alienage, being American subjects, should enjoy the baronetcy. | Wyvill, Marmaduke (I1890)
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524 | His father having died in 1871, he inherited the Manor and estates upon attaining his majority in 1878. In the intervening years, the estates had been administered by his mother and trustees, who let Stillington Hall to Mr. Jasper Macaulay. | Croft, Harry (I2175)
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525 | His father, by his will, desired that he should be brought up "at the University or Inns of Court," and appointed Richard Sunderland, Esq., of Coley Hall, near Halifax, to be his tutor and guardian. | Akeroyd, Richard (I2273)
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526 | His father, in his will, desired that he should "be brought up at the University or the Inns of Court." | Akeroyd, Henry (I2274)
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527 | His heart was buried at Mereworth, Kent. | (Neville), George 5th Lord Bergavenny (I2312)
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528 | His letter-book, 1545–53, with other MS. collections on his family history, is penes Lord Bagot. In 1548 he published The true dyfferes between ye regall power and the ecclesiasticall power (a translation of Fox's work of 1534), with a handsome dedication to Protector Somerset. His translation of two epistles of Erasmus was published in 1553, though no copy can now be traced (Strype, Eccles. Mem., volume iii, pt. 1, page 180). He also translated from the French by Treherne a work on forests, which is extant in Stowe MS. 414, folios 203–26. An epitaph by him on his sister, the Duchess of Norfolk, in Lambeth church, is printed in Horace Walpole's Royal and Noble Authors, ed. Park, volume ii, pages 10–11. | (Stafford), Henry 1st Baron Stafford (I439)
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529 | His partisans and those of Hamo de Chigwell, formerly Lord Mayor of London, were tried at the Guildhall. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
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530 | His portrait, a full-length by Lely, seated, in wig and Roman dress, fondling a hound, was engraved by Tompson. | Verney, William de jure 10th Lord Willoughby de Broke (I2646)
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531 | His title became extinct on his death. | Robinson, Sir Metcalfe 1st and last Baronet (I2773)
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532 | His will is dated "in the day of the resurreccion of our lord J'hu Crist" [presumably therefore Easter Sunday], 1397. | (Holand), Thomas 2nd Earl of Kent (I487)
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533 | His will, dated 20 July 1428, proven 31 October 1430 (P.C.C., Luffenam 14), directs burial before the west door in Poynings churchyard, and mentions three (unnamed) children, evidently two sons and a daughter. See also a will drawn up 13 July, printed in Coll. Top. et Gen., volume iii, page 259. | de Poynings, Hon. Sir Richard (I777)
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534 | Imprisoned in the Tower of London from an early age. | Pole, Hon. Henry (I417)
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535 | In (1435) 14 Hen. VI, she was found heiress to her grandmother (who had held the lands of Abergavenny and others in dower), when she and her husband had livery of the lands of her inheritance, but not of the castle and lands of Abergavenny, to which her right did not accrue till 11 June 1446, even on the most favourable interpretation to the Nevill family of the entail of 1395/96, unless, indeed, that entail is, from some unknown cause, to be considered as invalid, against her right as heir at law to her grandfather, the maker of the entail. On 11 June 1446 the male line of the Beauchamp family, who [under the entail 20 February 1395/96, of William (Beauchamp), 1st Lord Bergavenny] were entitled to the castle and lands of Abergavenny, became extinct by the death, sine prole mascula, of Henry (Beauchamp), Duke and Earl of Warwick. The words of the entail are, "Thomas, Earl of Warwick, and his heirs male for ever." Under the construction that such estate constituted one in fee, the castle, &c., is stated to have been held in fee, in the Inq. post mortem of Richard, Earl of Warwick (who died 1439), and of Henry, Duke of Warwick, his son and heir. It is to be noted that Coke says "where lands are given to a man and his heirs male he hath a fee simple, because it is not limited, by the gift, of what body the issue male shall be." Anyhow, the castle, &c., was for a long time afterwards withheld from this branch of the Nevill(e) family by Anne, daughter and heiress of this Duke Henry, and Anne, sister of the said Duke, who married Richard (Neville), Earl of Warwick and Salisbury [on whose seal, of date 1 February 4 Edw. IV (1464/65) is Sigillum : ricardi : neuill : comitis : warrewici : domini : de : bergeuenny : see the Visitation of Huntingdonshire, 1613, Camden Society, page 74.]. Besides these, it was asserted in Fane's case that George, Duke of Clarence, and Richard, Duke of Gloucester, his [i.e. the Earl of Warwick and Salisbury's] sons-in-law, were successively seized of the castle and lordship as in right of their wives; that Henry VII granted the castle &c., to Jasper, Duke of Bedford; and that after the death of Jasper sine prole, the property was restored by Henry VIII to George Neville, Lord of Bergavenny, upon a petition of right. (Collins, Baronies by Writ, page 79.) "The fact seems to have been as thus stated, and therefore the Nevill family, during the seisin of the several persons before named, could not have been summoned to parliament in consequence of their seisin of the Castle and Lordship of Bergavenny, not having such seisin." (Lords' Reports, volume i, page 443.) Sir Edward Neville, however, asserted his wife's right as heir at law (notwithstanding the entail) and "Undeuly entred upon us in the place and Castel of Bergevenny, whereof the heir is our warde." See commands for his expulsion therefrom issued to the Duke of York by Henry VI on 15 October [1447?] printed in Bentley's Excerpta Historica (1831), page 6. | (Beauchamp), Elizabeth suo jure Lady Bergavenny (I2400)
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536 | In 1320 he joined the confederacy of the Marchers against the Despensers, and civil war raged for some time in South Wales, the native Welsh siding with the Marchers; however, he took no part in the rebellion of his brother Thomas in 1322. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
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537 | In 1323 he petitioned the King and Council for the earldoms of Lancaster and Leicester. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
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538 | In 1335 he was with the King at Newcastle-on-Tyne, where the invasion of Scotland by Edward III and Balliol, from Carlisle and Newcastle respectively, was planned and carried out. | (Plantagenet), Henry 3rd Earl of Lancaster and of Leicester, Count of Provence (I596)
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539 | In 1346 he was still in the retinue of the Earl of Arundel; in June 1347 he was in the train of the Earl of Lancaster. | (Percy), Henry 3rd Lord Percy (I621)
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540 | In 1348 he served on a commission of inquiry in Yorkshire. | (Percy), Henry 3rd Lord Percy (I621)
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541 | In 1378 he served in the fleet in the Channel during a projected invasion of France. | (Holand), Thomas 2nd Earl of Kent (I487)
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542 | In 1381, on her return from a pilgrimage to Canterbury, her carriage was surrounded by the Kentish insurgents raised by Wat Tyler, who were so threatening and insulting that, affrighted, she drove without a halt from Canterbury back to London (Idem, volume ix, page 391). | (Plantagenet), Lady Joan "The Fair Maid of Kent" (I448)
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543 | In 1385 he accompanied the King on his expedition to Scotland. He accompanied Richard to the borders. It was during this campaign that the followers of the Holands and the Staffords came to blows and John de Holand slew Ralph de Stafford. | (Holand), Thomas 2nd Earl of Kent (I487)
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544 | In 1385 he attended Richard II on his expedition into Scotland. | Percy, Sir Henry styled Lord Percy (I896)
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545 | In 1394 he accompanied the King to Ireland. He had licence to appoint a deputy at Calais on 26 August. | (de Mowbray), Thomas 1st Duke of Norfolk (I740)
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546 | In 1394 he and his son Thomas accompanied the King to Ireland. | (Holand), Thomas 2nd Earl of Kent (I487)
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547 | In 1415 she was co-heiress of her brother, Thomas (Fitzalan), Earl of Arundel. | Fitzalan, Lady Joan (I2405)
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548 | In 1426 Edward Neville (as "Dominus de Bourgevenny") had summons to take, with the King himself, the order of Knighthood, although he does not occur in the chronclers' lists of those knighted, consequent on this summons, by Henry VI, at Leicester, on Whitsunday, 19 May 1426. | Family F1204
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549 | In 1434 he was commissioner for array in co. York. | (Neville), George 1st Lord Latimer (I897)
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550 | In 1437 he was on the commission of the peace in Cumberland. | (Neville), George 1st Lord Latimer (I897)
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