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"sir" Definitions
  1. used as a polite way of addressing a man whose name you do not know, for example in a shop or restaurant
  2. Dear Sir/Sirs used at the beginning of a formal business letter when you do not know the name of the man or people that you are dealing with
  3. Sir a title that is used before the first name of a man who has received one of the highest British honours (= a knight), or before the first name of a baronet
  4. used as a form of address to a man in a position of authority, especially in the armed forces
  5. (British English) used as a form of address by children in school to a male teacher

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1000 Sentences With "sir"

How to use sir in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "sir" and check conjugation/comparative form for "sir". Mastering all the usages of "sir" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Beyoncé wrote "Sir Carter and Rumi" not "Sir and Rumi Carter" so is Rumi not a Carter or is Sir Carter Sir Carter Carter?
" Kelly replied: "Yes sir, understood sir, I have it.
FISCAL 2018 SECOND QUARTER RESULTS * SIR ROYALTY INCOME FUND - SIR CORP QTRLY ADJUSTED NET LOSS $0.4 MILLION VERSUS $0.2 MILLION * SIR ROYALTY INCOME FUND - SIR CORP QTRLY NET INCOME $8 MILLION VERSUS $9.9 MILLION * SIR ROYALTY INCOME FUND - SIR CORP QTRLY OVERALL SAME STORE SALES GROWTH WAS 2.3 PERCENT Source text for Eikon: Further company coverage:
He said, 'Sir, we are building an embassy in Jerusalem, sir.
Sir Martin Charteris and Sir Michael Adeane have gotten wind of Mrs.
In Act 2, Sir Toby, Sir Andrew and Feste stay up late drinking.
We have, sir…my understanding is that it's actually going very well, sir.
Regardless of whether the proper address is Sir or Sir Carter, the name Sir fits into a long history of black people using honorifics as first names.
Labeled a "sad desperate little potato" by Darrell Hammond's Trump, he replied, "Yes sir, thank you sir, please sir, may I have another" – not once, but twice.
JIM CRAMER: Sir, no, I know – sir, what are the over runs on Vogtle?
QUESTION: Sir, if I could, on the leaks -- on the leaks, sir... TRUMP: ...Go ahead.
QUESTION: Sir, if I could, on the leaks — on the leaks, sir... TRUMP: ...Go ahead.
" When the man repeatedly interrupted, Mr. Cruz moved on: "Sir, we're not going to debate, sir.
Sir Jon Cunliffe and Sir Dave Ramsden both decided that it was better to hold off.
" ðŸ˜'ðŸ˜' â€" Sir Lord Dick Pat (@Sleep_Sayings) February 21, 2016 Not to worry, Sir LDP.
"It was 'yes sir, no sir' and he was nothing but very pleasant," Mr. Tune recalled.
Don't freak out just yet, Sir Ian McKellen's bromance with Sir Patrick Stewart is far from over.
Notable signatories included Keira Knightley, Sir Patrick Stewart, Sir John Hurt, Benedict Cumberbatch and Helena Bonham Carter.
Uncertainty clouds Brexit, even after the speedy replacement of Sir Ivan by Sir Tim Barrow, previously ambassador to Russia.
"All he says is, 'Yes sir, no sir,' and goes 20 miles an hour," Fisher told reporters of Rasul.
His reply, he said, was "Sir, sir, I'm a terrible actor, but it's the only thing I do well."
His descriptions of developing new work with Alan Bennett, Sir David Hare, Sir Tom Stoppard and Mike Leigh are incisive.
The Foreign Office has replaced Sir Ivan as ambassador to the EU with one of its own, Sir Tim Barrow.
" So, as one Twitter user pointed out to The Chainsmokers, "Om Telolet Om" basically means "Sir, honk the bus, sir.
It became clearer how influential it was—from Iris Murdoch to Sir Isaiah Berlin, Sir Thomas More to Karl Marx.
Q: Mr. President, that second question for you, sir, was on the security — the second question, sir — THE PRESIDENT: Go ahead.
I was told by a top general, maybe the top of them all, 'Sir, I'm sorry sir, we don't have ammunition.
" â€" Sir Lord Dick Pat (@Sleep_Sayings) February 19, 2016 Check out more of Sir Lord Dick Pat's sleepy sayings on Twitter.
That'll be Paul McCartney and his wife Nancy Shevell; Lord Andrew Lloyd-Webber; U2; Sir Elton John; and Sir Mick Jagger.
"I have brought you, sir, only a few of my treasures, sir, but if you will call – " I heard no more.
At the end of the clip, Sir Patrick Stewarts chips in to say people are forever confusing him with Sir Ben Kingsley.
We all know sir as a way to address a man and as the title given to knights, as in Sir Lancelot.
Or is the "Carter" meant to apply to both Sir and Rumi, meaning that Sir's full name is Sir Carter, full stop?
OK. (CROSSTALK) QUESTION: President-elect, can we just ask you — sir, sir... QUESTION: President-elect Trump... (CROSSTALK) QUESTION: Mr. President — which one?
"The capital of Israel that I go to, sir, is Tel Aviv, sir, because that's where all their government people are," Mattis said.
It's also been suggested that Sir is a reference to the Persian poet Rumi, making Sir and Rumi a matched pair of names.
Wearing a long-sleeved T-shirt under his prison scrubs, Moore spoke only to say "yes, sir" or "no, sir" to Sams' questions.
Despite its size, the UK is home to 54 billionaires, including the likes of Sir Jim Ratcliffe, Alan Sugar, and Sir James Dyson.
"Table for one, right this way sir — we have the finest accommodations for you, sir," the "My Favorite Part" singer says in the clip.
Sir Humphrey Appleby, as incoming cabinet secretary, is discussing who the next prime minister might be with Sir Arnold Robinson, the incumbent, over lunch.
Sir Madam Oyster Linen Tea Towel, $34The ambitious task of listing out every single North American oyster has befallen tea towel brand Sir Madam.
Sir Philip made the threat after Field said he "would laugh" if Sir Philip offered less than £600 million to settle BHS' pension deficit.
Campaigners for democracy included Sir Frederick and Sir David Barclay, billionaire twins who live in a castle on Brecqhou, a nearby islet under Sark's jurisdiction.
Sir John x Luminess Kingdom Sculpting PaletteDon't think of this as just a six-pan contouring palette, it's so much more, according to Sir John.
Sir Martin Sorrell's Silicon Valley charm offensive Sir Martin Sorrell has enjoyed huge success, having built the world's biggest advertising conglomerate, WPP, over 32 years.
" The tailor answers, "But, my dear sir, my dear sir, look" — with a disdainful gesture — "at the world, and look" — lovingly, proudly — "at my trousers!
Duart was restored in 1911 when Sir Lachlan's great-grandfather, Sir Fitzroy Maclean, bought back the castle, which had been left in ruins for 150 years.
That is bad news for Sir Frederick and Sir David Barclay, the 85-year-old twins who own both the Ritz and the Telegraph Media Group.
Emmett had just turned 14, had been raised in the new world and was unschooled in the "yes, sir, no, sir" ways of the Southern caste system.
In contrast, the mighty proto-metallers Sir Lord Baltimore waited 34 years between their self-titled 1971 album and 2006's disappointing Sir Lord Baltimore III Raw.
Commissioners to give orders to the foot soldiers:—Sir Weston Browne, Sir Edw. Ferys, Sir Rob. Constable, Sir Ralph Egerton, Sir Thomas Lucy, Sir John Marney.
In 1768 there were seven candidates; Lord Twankum, Sir Christopher Dashem, Sir George Comefirst, Sir William Airey, Sir William Bellows, one "Batt from the Workhouse", and Sir John Harper who ended up being the most popular in the following elections. Lady Twankum promised an opulent party for the entertainment of the populace. 1775 election introduced Sir William Blaize, "Nephew to the late Lord Twankum" and Sir Christopher Dashem. The 1781 election again had nine candidates; old hands Sir John Harper, Sir Christopher Dashwood, and Sir William Blaize and the new ones Sir Buggy Bates (chimney-sweep), Sir John Gnawpost, Sir Thomas Nameless, Sir William Swallowtail (basketmaker), Sir Thomas Tubbs (waterman) and Sir Jeffrey Dunstan (wigseller).
1679; Sir Thomas Halford d. 1689; Sir William Halford d. 1695; Sir Richard Halford d. 1727 (great-grandfather of Sir Henry Halford); Sir William Halford d.
Commissioners to give orders to the gentlemen:—Sir Edw. Belknapp, Sir Nich. Vaux, Sir John Peche, Sir Maurice Berkeley.
It was by far the biggest organisation of the three, composed of about 9,000 individual firms and 272 trade associations by 1964. Presidents included Sir Vincent Caillard (1919), Sir Peter Rylands (1919–1921), Oliver Carleton Armstrong (1921–1922), Sir Eric Geddes (1923–1925), Sir Max Muspratt (1926–1927), Lord Gainford (1927–1928), Lord Ebbisham (1928–1929), Lennox B. Lee (1929–1930), Sir James Lithgow (1930–1932), Sir George Beharrell (1932–1933), Sir George Macdonogh (1933–1934), Lord Herbert Scott (1934–1935), Sir Francis Joseph (1935–1936), Lord Hirst (1936–1937), Peter Bennett (1938–1940), Sir George Nelson (1943–1944), Sir Clive Baillieu (1945–1947), Sir Frederick Bain (1947–1949), Sir Robert Sinclair (1949–1951), Sir Archibald Forbes (1951–1953), Sir Harry Pilkington (1953–1955), Sir Graham Hayman (1955–1957), Sir Hugh Beaver (1957–1959), Sir William McFadzean (1959–1961), Sir Cyril Harrison (1961–1963), and Sir Peter Runge (1963–1965). Directors (later retitled director-general) included Sir Roland Nugent from 1916 to 1917 and 1919 to 1932, Sir Guy Locock from 1932 to 1945, and Sir Norman Kipping from 1946 to 1965.
In the Arthurian legend, Orkney is the home to King Lot, Sir Gareth, Sir Gaheris, Sir Gawaine, and Sir Agravain.
The group includes: Lieutenant General Sir Oliver Leese, General Sir Harold Alexander, General Sir Alan Brooke and General Sir Bernard Montgomery.
The Knights of the Round Table in the game are King Arthur, Sir Galahad, Sir Gawain, Sir Kay, Sir Percival, Sir Palamedes, Sir Tristan of Lyonesse. An alternate character, Sir Bedivere, was distributed in games trade magazines and at conventions as a promotional item, and is also available as part of Merlin's Company.
Sir Charles Raymond Beazley was Professor of History. Prison reformer Margery Fry was first warden of University House. Vice-Chancellors and Principals include Sir Oliver Lodge, Lord Hunter of Newington, Sir Charles Grant Robertson, Sir Raymond Priestley, Sir Michael Sterling, and Sir David Eastwood.
To further conceal his intentions from telepaths, Reich visits a songwriter, Duffy Wygand (spelled "Wyg&" in the text) who teaches him a deceptively simple jingle: : Eight, sir; seven, sir; : Six, sir; five, sir; : Four, sir; three, sir; : Two, sir; one! : Tenser, said the Tensor. : Tenser, said the Tensor. : Tension, apprehension, : And dissension have begun.
Unlike the Sir Galahad, Sir Tristram and Sir Lancelot, the ship emerged unscathed from the conflict.
There have been chairs of council since the Institute was created. The first was Lord Stamp, from 1937 to 1942. He was succeeded by Sir Henry Clay, who held the position from 1942 until 1949. Subsequent chairs included Humphrey Mynors, Sir Austin Robinson, Sir John Woods, Sir Robert Hall, Sir Hugh Week, Sir Donald MacDougall, and Sir Kenneth Berrill.
Sir Norman Haworth Sir Peter Medawar The faculty and staff members connected with the university include Nobel laureates Sir Norman Haworth (Professor of Chemistry, 1925–1948), Sir Peter Medawar (Mason Professor of Zoology, 1947–1951), John Robert Schrieffer (NSF Fellow at Birmingham, 1957), David Thouless, Michael Kosterlitz, and Sir Fraser Stoddart. Physicists include John Henry Poynting, Freeman Dyson, Sir Otto Frisch, Sir Rudolf Peierls, Sir Marcus Oliphant, Sir Leonard Huxley, Harry Boot, Sir John Randall, and Edwin Ernest Salpeter. Chemists include Sir William A. Tilden. Mathematicians include Jonathan Bennett, Henry Daniels, Daniela Kühn, Deryk Osthus, Daniel Pedoe and G. N. Watson.
Sir Raman retired on 31 October 1977. Since this date, the office of Governor-General was held in an acting capacity by Sir Henry Garrioch, Sir Dayendranath Burrenchobay, Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam, and Sir Veerasamy Ringadoo in January 1986.
James Marriott, L.L.D # 1798-1828, Sir. William Scott, D.C.L. # 1828-1833, Sir. Christopher Robinson, D.C.L. # 1833-1838, Sir.
His proposers were Sir James Alfred Ewing, Charles Barkla, Sir Charles Galton Darwin and Sir Edmund Taylor Whittaker.
Sometime in 1376, Sir John Lyon married Princess Johanna (Jean), daughter of Robert II and Elizabeth Mure, daughter of Sir Adam Mure of Rowallan. The Princess was the widow of Sir John Keith, eldest son of the Earl Marischal. After Sir John Lyon's death, Johanna married Sir James Sandilands. Sir John Lyon and the Princess had only one child, another Sir John Lyon.
Sir Anthony van Dyck. Sir Kenelm Digby by Sir Anthony Van Dyck, c. 1640 Venetia Stanley on her Deathbed by Sir Anthony van Dyck, 1633. Dulwich Picture Gallery, London.
Sir Degaré, lines 1045–1085. Sir Tryamour with his father,Hudson, Harriet (Ed). 1996. Sir Tryamour. lines 1138–1161.
Sir Frederick Walter Kitchener # 1912–1917 Lt. Gen. Sir George M. Bullock # 1917–1922 Gen. Sir James Willcocks # 1922–1927 Lt. Gen. Sir J. J. Asser # 1927–1931 Lt. Gen.
Le Bel, Vol I, Ch.16 It is not clear whether the knight banneret was Sir James himself. Other knights named by the Scottish poet John Barbour included Sir William de Keith, Sir William de St. Clair of Rosslyn and the brothers Sir Robert Logan of Restalrig and Sir Walter Logan.Barbour (Duncan), Book 20, ll. 480-484 Others alleged at one time or another to have accompanied Douglas are John de St. Clair, younger brother of Sir William, Sir Simon Lockhart of Lee, Sir Kenneth Moir, William Borthwick, Sir Alan Cathcart and Sir Robert de Glen but evidence is lacking.
However, his music was earlier championed by many notable conductors including Sir Bernard Heinze, Sir Eugene Goossens, Willem van Otterloo, John Hopkins – and overseas by Sir John Barbirolli, Sir Malcolm Sargent, Norman Del Mar, Josef Krips, Walter Susskind, and Sir Colin Davis .
Combined Chiefs of Staff in Quebec – August 23, 1943. Seated around the table from left foreground: Vice Adm. Lord Louis Mountbatten, Sir Dudley Pound, Sir Alan Brooke, Sir Charles Portal, Sir John Dill, Lt. Gen. Sir Hastings L. Ismay, Brigadier Harold Redman, Comdr.
Sir John Harper and Sir Jeffrey Dunstan were "returned to parliament". In 1785 elections Sir Jeffrey Dunstan was left without opposition when Sir John Harper died. In 1796 the new candidate Sir Harry Dimsdale won but he died before the next election.
Combined Chiefs of Staff in Quebec – August 23, 1943. Seated around the table from left foreground: Vice Adm. Lord Louis Mountbatten, Sir Dudley Pound, Sir Alan Brooke, Sir Charles Portal, Sir John Dill, Lt. Gen. Sir Hastings L. Ismay, Brigadier Harold Redman, Comdr.
This is not an exhaustive list 1st Class #Lieut. Col. Sir Alexander Burnes #Lieut. General Sir Willoughby Cotton #Lord Auckland #Lieut. General Sir John Keane #Sir William Hay Macnaghten #Lieut. Col.
She was, successively, the wife of Sir Robert Doyley, the courtier Sir Henry Neville, and the judge Sir William Peryam.
Obituaries Australia, Thomas Alexander Browne. Online reference After discussions with Sir Alfred Stephen, then Chief Justice of NSW who was visiting his family in England at that time, Darley decided in 1862 to move to Sydney with his family and become a lawyer. He later became a Member of the NSW Parliament and fraternised with many notable people including Sir Edmund Barton who later became the first Prime Minister, Sir John Lackey, Sir William Macarthur, Sir W. Macleay, Sir Arthur Renwick, Sir John Robertson, Sir John Hay and others.Obituaries Australia "Sir Frederick Darley".
The current heads of chambers are Mark Howard QC and Helen Davies QC. The current senior clerks are Paul Dennison and Tony Burgess. At the 2012 Lawyer Awards, 2015 Legal Week British Legal Awards and 2017 Chambers and Partners UK Bar Awards it was awarded ‘Chambers of the Year’. Notable former members include Lord Sumption, Lord Alexander, Lord Phillips, Sir Richard Aikens, Sir David Lloyd Jones, Sir Peregrine Simon, Sir Christopher Clarke, Sir Nicholas Lyell, Sir Paul Walker, Sir Andrew Popplewell, Sir George Leggatt and Sir Gerald Barling.
In November 1884 he was present at a dinner in Singapore thrown for Governor Sir Frederick A. Weld, at which occasion was also present Admiral Sir Henry Keppel, former Governor Sir William Orfeur Cavenagh, former Governor Sir Harry St. George Ord, former Governor Sir William Cleaver Francis Robinson, Chief Justice Sir Thomas Sidgreaves, Rajah Brooke of Sarawak, Perak's British Resident Sir Hugh Low, former Colonial Secretary Sir John Douglas, and former Attorney-General Thomas Braddell, among others."Dinner to Sir Fred. A. Weld, K.C.M.G. London and China Express." Straits Times Weekly Issue [Singapore] 8 Nov.
His second marriage was with Elizabeth, the daughter of Sir John Pennington of Muncaster, Cumberland, and the widow of Sir Walter Strickland and Sir Richard Cholmley. He was succeeded by Sir John.
Sir H.Raeburn. Portrait of Sir G.S.Mackenzie,7th Bart. Size 63 x 41.5 in. Sir H.Raeburn. Portrait of Sir G.S.Mackenzie,7th Bart. Size 27x36 in. Original drawing of geyser plumbing suggested by Mackenzie.
Sir Abu Nuayr (), Sir Bu Nuayr (), or Sir al Qawasim (; also romanized as Sir Abu Neir, Sir Bu Nair or Sir Bu Nuair) is an island in the Persian Gulf. Lying off the coast of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, roughly north of Abu Dhabi city, and west of Dubai, it belongs to the Emirate of Sharjah.
In January 1896 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir Alexander Russell Simpson, Sir William Turner, Sir Andrew Douglas Maclagan and Sir John Batty Tuke.
Sir Robert's son Henry was murdered by Sir Charles Danvers and Sir Henry Danvers, after a long-running feud between the neighbouring Danvers' and the Longs, in particular, Henry and his brother Sir Walter Long. The mutual animosity came to a head in 1594, when their father Sir John Danvers, from the magistrate's bench, committed one of Sir Walter Long's servants for robbery. Sir Walter rescued the servant from the justice, and, after complaining to the judge at the next assizes, Sir John had Sir Walter locked up in the Fleet Prison. He then committed another of Sir Walter's servants on a charge of murder.
Notable Members, in addition to those above, have included the Nobel Laureates, Sir Robert Robinson, Sir Norman Haworth, and Niels Bohr, as well as Chaim Wiezmann, Sir William Roberts, Lyon, Lord Playfair, William Gaskell, Sir William de Wiveleslie Abney, Charles William Sutton, Sir James Kay-Shuttleworth, Joseph Jordan, Henry Moseley, Sir Adolphus William Ward, Stanley Jevons, James Prince Lee, Sir Edward Leader Williams, William Axon, Sir Henry Hoyle Howorth, Samuel Greg, Sir Edward Frankland, Samuel Hibbert- Ware and Moses Tyson. Honorary Members have included Stephen Hawking, William Thomson, Lord Kelvin, Robert Bunsen, Sergey Kapitsa, Dmitri Mendeleev, Sir Cyril Hinshelwood, Dame Kathleen Ollerenshaw, Jöns Jacob Berzelius and John Mercer.
Sir Thomas Deane Sir Thomas Deane (Cork, 1792 – Dublin, 1871) was an Irish architect. He was the father of Sir Thomas Newenham Deane, and grandfather of Sir Thomas Manly Deane, who were also architects.
Sir Thomas Wroth and Dame Margaret had no issue together. His estates passed to the descendants of his brother Sir Peter Wroth and Dame Margaret (nėe Dering). Sir Peter's son Sir John Wroth, the royalist, was created baronet in 1660. Sir John died in 1664 (i.e.
Had Sir Ralph been the half-brother of Sir Arthur Hopton's father, Sir Arthur would not have expressed his title in this fashion.
Sir Henry LeGuay Geary # 1904–1907 Lt. Gen. Sir Robert M. Steward # 1907–1908 Lt. Gen. Sir Josceline Wodehouse # 1908–1912 Lt. Gen.
Sir John McNeill sculpted by Sir John Steell 1859 thumb Sir John McNeill (1795 – 17 May 1883) was a Scottish surgeon and diplomat.
Sir Thomas Clere was the third son of Sir Robert Clere.
Sir William Cornwallis was Sir Charles's son by his first wife.
Yes, Sir. Sorry, Sir! is a television drama produced by TVB.
Sir Richard Guildford's second son by his first wife, George Guildford, of Hempstead Place, Kent, was the father of Sir John Guldford, High Sheriff of Kent during the reign of Edward VI. Sir John's son Sir Thomas Guldford entertained Elizabeth I in 1575. Sir Thomas was the great-great-grandfather of Sir Robert Guldford, 1st Baronet. Sir Henry Guildford, the son of Sir Richard Guildford by his second wife Joan, served as Comptroller of the Household and Master of the Horse under Henry VIII.
In music, faculty members include the composers Sir Edward Elgar and Sir Granville Bantock. Geologists include Charles Lapworth, Frederick Shotton, and Sir Alwyn Williams. In medicine, faculty members include Sir Melville Arnott and Sir Bertram Windle. Author and literary critic David Lodge taught English from 1960 until 1987.
The title and estates thus passed to Sir Drury Wray's grand-nephew, Sir John Wray, bart., of Sleningford, Yorkshire, father of Sir Cecil Wray.
Children by his first marriage to Margaret Hamilton include Sir David, Sir William and Sir Robert, in turn the third, fourth and fifth baronets.
Professor Jonathan Freeman-Attwood, CBE is the 15th PrincipalHis predecessors were William Crotch, Cipriani Potter, Charles Lucas, Sir William Sterndale Bennett, Sir George Macfarren, Sir Alexander Mackenzie, Sir John McEwen, Sir Stanley Marchant, Sir Reginald Thatcher, Sir Thomas Armstrong, Sir Anthony Lewis, Sir David Lumsden, Lynn Harrell, Sir Curtis Price of the Royal Academy of Music in London; he was appointed in 2008. Alongside his commitment to education, he is a writer, recording producer, broadcaster and trumpeter. Freeman-Attwood was born in Woking on 4 November 1961, the son of Major Harold Warren Freeman-Attwood and Marigold Diana Sneyd Freeman-Attwood (née Philips). He attended Milton Abbey School between 1975 and 1980.
The membership of the Committee incorporated many important individuals of British and international status, including Sir Frederick Pollock, Sir Edward Clarke, Sir Alfred Hopkinson, Sir Kenelm E. Digby, Mr. H. A. L. Fisher, and Mr. Harold Cox.
" > "By the duck pond?" Sir Aylmer asked, his eyes widening. > "Yes, sir.
Lord Steyn, Lord Hope, Sir Christopher Slade and Sir Andrew Leggatt concurred.
Sir David is International Chair of the Institute for War & Peace Reporting, iwpr.net. Sir David is also Chairman of Sadler's Wells. Sir David is a trustee of Common Purpose UK. Sir David was chairman of Crisis UK for 10 years until 2012. Sir David is an assessor on the Leveson Inquiry.levesoninquiry.org.
He was living and lord in 1576 and 1595. Margaret, his wife, was daughter of Sir Thomas Woodhouse, knight, of Waxham, in Norfolk. His son Sir Thomas Hobart married Willoughby Hopton, daughter of Sir Arthur Hopton of Westwood, and Blyburgh in Suffolk. Sir Thomas's son Sir Miles succeeded his father.
Other conductors who have recorded the work include Arturo Toscanini, Sir John Barbirolli, Daniel Barenboim, Sir Georg Solti, Leonard Bernstein, Giuseppe Sinopoli, Leopold Stokowski, Eugene Ormandy, Pierre Monteux, William Steinberg and André Previn, as well as leading English conductors from Sir Henry Wood and Sir Adrian Boult to Sir Simon Rattle.
Sir Thomas Rich, 1st Baronet Sir Thomas Rich, 1st Baronet (c. 1601 – 15 October 1667) was an English merchant and politician who sat in House of Commons in 1660. He established Sir Thomas Rich's School, a grammar school.A Potted History of Sir Thomas Rich's School , Sir Thomas Rich's School, Gloucester.
The first oration was given by Jonathan Hutchinson in 1890. In 1909, when Sir William Osler spoke on "The Beginning of Medicine", he was surprised that rather than a purely medical audience, it was diverse and included the Dean of York. At the following banquet, he gave particular mention to some of the Society's well known medical men including Robert Burton and Martin Lister. Orators in the early years included Sir Clifford Allbutt, Sir Victor Horsley, Sir James Crichton- Browne, Sir German Sims Woodhead, Sir T. Lauder Brunton, Sir George Savage and Sir Norman Moore.
The list includes Sir Michael Parkinson, Sir Alastair Cook, Sir Andrew Strauss, Greg James, Miles Jupp, Dame Tanni Grey-Thompson, Jonathan Agnew and Mike Gatting.
Sir Stephen Jenyns (–1523)W.A.J. Archbold, 'Jenyns, Sir Stephen (d. 1524)', Dictionary of National Biography (1885–1900), Vol. 29. E.L. Furdell, 'Jenyns, Sir Stephen (c.
Of Vane's daughters, Margaret married Sir Thomas Pelham, 2nd Baronet of Halland, Sussex; Frances married Sir Robert Honeywood of Pett, Sussex; Anne married Sir Thomas Liddell of Ravensworth, Durham; Elizabeth married Sir Francis Vincent of Stoke d'Abernon, Surrey.
The company built many notable buildings of which a good number survive today. These included ones designed by architects EW Mountford, Sir Reginald Blomfeld, Sir Herbert Baker, Sir Edwin Lutyens, Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, Sir Edward Maufe and Sir Basil Spence. The list below is far from comprehensive. 1889-90 Battersea public library and baths 1891-4 Battersea Polytechnic 1893-4 Streatham Pumping House.
The Oxford Military College Council consisted of: Lord Wolseley, Lord Wantage, Lord Napier (of Magdala), the Marquis of Hertford, the Marquis of Lorne, General Sir Dighton Probyn, General William McMurdo, Colonel Duncan, Sir Charles Tupper and Sir Saul Samuel, Sir Walter Buller, Sir James Francis Garrick, and Sir Arthur Blyth.Oxford Military Scholarship. Te Aroha News, Volume IV, Issue 204, 21 May 1887, page 8.
Cornwallis married, by 1540, Anne Jerningham, the daughter of Sir John Jerningham of Somerleyton, Suffolk, and Bridget Drury, the daughter of Sir Robert Drury of Hawstead, Suffolk, by whom he had two sons, Sir Charles Cornwallis and Sir William Cornwallis, and four daughters, including Elizabeth Cornwallis, the second wife of Sir Thomas Kitson (1540–1603), son and heir of Sir Thomas Kitson (died 1540).
Most of the Scots knights were killed, including Sir James Douglas, Sir William St. Clair of Rosslyn and Sir Robert Logan of Restalrig. The body of Sir James, and the casket, were recovered from the field, and were allegedly carried back to Scotland by Sir Symon Locard and Sir William Keith of Galston, although the latter is the only named survivor mentioned in contemporary sources.
Sir Peter Wyche, Ambassador to Constantinople (Ottoman Empire), who married Jane Meredith. Their children included (the second) Sir Peter Wyche, Sir Cyril Wyche, and Lady Jane Wyche, who married John Granville, 1st Earl of Bath. Rt. Hon. Sir Peter Wyche was one of the Chancellors of Oxford University, and his sons Sir Cyril and Sir Peter were among the founding members of the British Royal Society.
Knighthood is usually conferred for public service; amongst its recipients are all male judges of Her Majesty's High Court of Justice in England. It is possible to be a Knight Bachelor and a junior member of an order of chivalry without being a knight of that order; this situation has become rather common, especially among those recognised for achievements in entertainment. For instance, Sir Michael Gambon, Sir Derek Jacobi, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Sir Elton John, Sir Peter Stearns, Sir Michael Caine, Sir Barry Gibb and Sir Ian McKellen are Commanders of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBEs); Sir Patrick Stewart, Sir Tom Jones and Sir Van Morrison are Officers of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBEs); while Sir Paul McCartney and Sir Richard Starkey (Ringo Starr) are Members of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE). None of them would be entitled to use the honorific "Sir" by virtue of their membership of the order alone, but as they are all also Knights Bachelor, they are entitled to preface their names with that title.
The English vanguard marched towards Loix. Two English battalions, commanded by colonels Sir Edward Conway, Sir Peregrine Barty, Sir Henery Spry, had crossed the bridge. Another battalion, led by colonel Sir Charles Rich, the brother of the count of Holland Henry Rich, 1st Earl of Holland and half brother of Mountjoy Blount, 1st Earl of Newport, Sir Alexander Brett and the lieutenant of Sir Thomas Morton (he being sick), were getting ready to cross the bridge with the four cannons. The two last battalions, that had not yet engaged themselves on the bridge, were commanded by colonel Sir William Courtney, lieutenant-colonel Sir Edward Hawley and Sir Ralph Bingley.
Sir Ethais agrees, and observing that one beautiful woman is as good as another, gives Selene's ring to Darine. He takes the potion, and is cured. Sir Phyllon enters, and Sir Ethais accosts him. Their argument escalates, and Sir Ethais turns to Darine to confirm that Sir Phyllon had accused him of cowardice.
"A life in black and white", The Age, Good Weekend, p. 41 Sir Ian Potter, Sir Brian Murray,Guinness, Daphne (14 March 1998), "Late Knight Confessions", Sydney Morning Herald, Spectrum, p. 4s Sir Anthony Griffin, and Sir Robert Southey.
Sir Tryamour, lines 775–783. Sir Eglamour jousts with his son who does not recognise him.Hudson, Harriet (Ed). 1996. Sir Eglamour of Artois, lines 1174–1239.
Sir Eglamour of Artois with his true love CristobelHudson, Harriet (Ed). 1996. Sir Eglamour of Artois. lines 1240–1257. and Sir Isumbras with his entire family.
Descendants of William McCorkell include Sir Dudley, Colonel Sir Michael and David McCorkell.
Kalamazoo, Michigan: Medieval Institute Publications. Sir Orfeo, Introduction to the TEAMS Sir Orfeo.
Bargrave was married to Elizabeth, the daughter of Sir John Dering, of Pluckley, and first cousin of Sir Edward Dering. Of Bargrave's children one son, Thomas, married a niece of Sir Henry Wotton, and was an executor of Sir Henry's will.
His proposers were Sir James Alfred Ewing, Sir Thomas Hudson Beare, Sir Thomas Holland and Sir Alexander Gibb. He died at Ebor House in East Sheen south-west of London on 19 January 1953. He was unmarried and had no children.
Notable past presidents include John Charles Fields (1919-1925; founder of the Fields Medal), William Edmond Logan, Sir Daniel Wilson, Sir John Henry Lefroy, Sir John Beverley Robinson, George William Allan, William Henry Draper, Sir Oliver Mowat and Henry Holmes Croft.
By his wife Anne Preston, Paget had four sons and six daughters. Sons: # Henry (c.1665–1743) # Thomas (c.1540–1589) # Charles # Edward (died young) Daughters: # Etheldreda, who married Sir Christopher Allen # Eleanor, who married firstly, Jerome Palmer, esquire, and secondly, Sir Rowland Clarke # Grisold, who married firstly, Sir Thomas Rivett, and secondly, Sir William Waldegrave # Joan (or Jane), who married Sir Thomas Kitson # Dorothy, who married Sir Thomas Willoughby (died 1559) # Anne (died 1590), who married Sir Henry Lee.
Sir David Elias Ezra Sir David Elias Ezra (1871-1947) (or simply Sir David Ezra) was a prominent member of the Baghdadi Jewish community in Calcutta, India.
This allowed the estates to pass later that year to Sir Richard Leveson's designated heir, the son of Sir John and Christian, and another Sir Richard Leveson.
Lord Burns was President from 2003-2010, followed by Sir Nicholas Monck from 2011-2013, and subsequently Sir Charles Bean. The current President is Sir Paul Tucker.
Sir Thomas Baines, Carlo Dolci, Fitzwilliam Museum Sir Thomas Baines, M.D. (1622–1680) was an English physician, the lifelong companion of the ambassador Sir John Finch, M.D.
Sir Richard Wingfield was the son of Sir Richard Wingfield, Governor of Portsmouth, who was descended from an old Suffolk family, and Christian, daughter of Sir William Fitzwilliam of Milton, Castor, Northamptonshire, and sister of Sir William Fitzwilliam, Lord Deputy of Ireland. He became the step-son of Sir George Delves, after his mother's remarriage.
Under the spell of the necklace, Sir Pellias becomes deeply infatuated with Lady Ettard. However, Lady Ettard feels no love for Sir Pellias once he removes off the necklace. Sir Pellias humiliates himself with his unrequited affection. The Lady of the Lake tells Sir Gawain to go to Grantmesnle and bring sense to Sir Pellias.
Charles lets Sir and Jerry in, but a wounded Panic arrives and tells the group that Sir shot him before dying. Sir shoots Charles while Jerry attempts to take the van. A tick kills Jerry, who crashes the car into the cabin, injuring Sir. A large tick emerges from Panic’s corpse and mauls Sir.
Eventually, the holy knight Galahad, the son of Sir Lancelot, comes to Arthur's court. With his coming, all the knights ride throughout Europe in search of the Holy Grail of Jesus Christ. Only five knights see the Grail; Sir Lancelot, Sir Percival, Sir Bors de Gaunnes, Sir Galahad and Sir Gawain. After the Grail is found, the last battle of the Knights of the Round Table is fought.
Sir John IV Arundell married Joan Luscote in about 1370. She was the daughter of Sir William Luscote. His wife survived him and married as her second husband, Sir William Lambourne. Sir William Lambourne had previously been married to Joan, daughter and heiress of Ralph Soor of Tolverne and Joan Lansladron Sir William Lambourne and Joan Soor were the parents of Annora Lambourne, the wife of Sir John V Arundell.
Sir Robert Dashwood Sir Robert Dashwood, 1st Baronet (1662–1734) was an English politician.
Sir Charles Cornwallis (died 1629) was an English courtier and diplomat. Sir Charles Cornwallis.
" > "Sir?" > "Opera singers and people like that." > "You mean a claque, sir?" > "That's right.
Sir Arthur never married, and left his property to his nephew, Sir Nicholas Throckmorton.
Sir Robert's estate at Wanstead was sold later to Sir Josiah Child, 1st Baronet.
The EP was supported by the singles "Sir Charles"Sir Charles Official Video UDGSounds.com.
Barkham was the father of Sir Edward Barkham, 1st Baronet, of South Acre, Sir Robert Barkham and Jane Barkham, wife of Sir Charles Caesar, Master of the Rolls.
Along with Sir Paul Chater, then Governor Sir Frederick Lugard (later Lord Lugard) and others, Sir Henry was one of the founders of the University of Hong Kong.
Sir Alexander died without issue and his father, Sir Walter Buchanan, eleventh Laird of Buchanan, was succeeded by his second son, Sir Walter Buchanan, twelfth Laird of Buchanan.
The style's premier practitioners include the following: Bruce Graham, Fazlur Rahman Khan, Minoru Yamasaki, Sir Norman Foster, Sir Richard Rogers, Sir Michael Hopkins, Renzo Piano, and Santiago Calatrava.
He had married twice. From his first marriage he had a son and heir, Sir Philip Leche, and four daughters. He secondly married Katherine, the widow of Sir John Bromwich and Sir Hugh Waterton. Sir Philip Leche succeeded him as MP for Derbyshire.
Peyton had married three times; firstly a daughter of Sir Peter Osborne, secondly Cecilia Swan, widow of Sir William Swan, and thirdly Jane Monins, daughter of Sir William Monins. He left four daughters, who sold Knowlton Court to Admiral Sir John Narborough.
Sir Edward Wotton married, first, Dorothy, fourth daughter of Sir Robert Rede (she died on 8 Sept. 1529); and he married, secondly, Ursula, daughter of Sir Robert Dymoke and widow of Sir John Rudaton, lord mayor of London.Metcalfe, Visit. of Lincolnshire, p.
Dated 25 July 1832 Sir Frederick changed his surname to Fletcher Vane in 1790. He was the father of Sir Francis Fletcher-Vane, 3rd Baronet, and the grandfather of both Sir Henry Fletcher-Vane, 4th Baronet, and Sir Francis Fletcher-Vane, 5th Baronet.
The aircraft then increased its bank angle to the right. First Officer Lukman became really anxious, saying "Sir Sir Sir open Sir left left". Shortly afterwards Captain Sigit banked the aircraft to the left. The "Don't sink" alert sounded for the second time.
Thomas Shirley was the eldest son of Sir Thomas Shirley of Wiston House, Sussex, and Anne Kempe, the daughter of Sir Thomas Kempe (d. 7 March 1591) of Olantigh in Wye, Kent. Sir Anthony Shirley and Sir Robert Shirley were his younger brothers.
He was a member of a "knot of friendship" at the Scottish court that included the Secretary, Sir George Home, Sir Robert Kerr, the younger Sir Robert Melville, and Sir David Murray.Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 13 (Edinburgh, 1969), p. 443 no.
None of these judges concurred in the sentence—a £1,000 fine, one year's imprisonment, and one hour in the pillory—pronounced by the other judges, who were Sir Francis North, William Montagu, Sir Robert Atkins, Sir Thomas Jones, and Sir William Dolben.
J.S. Henslow, Rev. Dr. Hinds, Bishop of Norwich, Sir William Jackson Hooker, Joseph Dalton Hooker, Sir William Jardine, Rev. William Kirby, General Sir Edward Kerrison, Edwin Lankester, John Lee, John Lindley, Sir Charles Lyell, David William Mitchell, Sir Roderick Impey Murchison, Richard Owen, Robert Patterson, John Phillips, Lyon Playfair, James Ransome, Lovell Reeve, Rev. Stephen J. Rigaud, Right Hon.
RSW and a DL. Sir John and Lady Stirling-Maxwell were both elected Fellows of the Royal Horticultural Society in 1902. In 1938 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir Ernest Wedderburn, Sir John Sutherland, Sir Thomas Henry Holland and Sir William Wright Smith. He died on 30 May 1956.
The Lieutenants had custody of many eminent prisoners of state, including Anne Boleyn, Sir Thomas More, Lady Jane Grey, Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth I) and Sir Walter Raleigh. At least five of the Lieutenants, Sir Edward Warner, Sir Gervase Helwys, Isaac Penington, Colonel Robert Tichborne, and Sir Edward Hales, themselves later became prisoners in the Tower.
Sir John Wynn and Sir William Williams were the two largest landowners in north Wales at that time and together the combined estate dwarfed all others. In honour of his wife's ancestry Sir William Williams changed his name to Sir William Williams-Wynn of Wynnstay. The current baronet is Sir David Watkin Williams-Wynn, 11th Baronet (born 1940).
Brothers, grandsons of Sir George Herbert, had the manor next. First, Sir William Herbert had the manor in 1598, then Sir John Herbert inherited the manor after his brother's death in 1609. Sir John died in 1617 and Mary, his daughter and heiress, married Sir William Doddington. Robert Greville, 4th Baron Brooke of Warwick married Doddington's granddaughter.
The company's patrons are Bonaventura Bottone, Brian Kay, Sir Roger Norrington, Andrew Parrott, Sir David Pountney, Sir Curtis Price and Jean Rigby. Bampton Classical Opera Dame Felicity Lott, the late Sir Charles Mackerras and the late Sir Philip Ledger were also patrons, as was the Rt Hon David Cameron, in whose former Witney constituency Bampton lies.
1475), or both; the two were long-serving retainers of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick. Graham Evans lists a number of other possibilities such as Sir John Conyers (d. 1490), the father of the previous Sir John and Sir William; Sir Richard Welles (d. 1470), who married Baroness Willoughby de Eresby; her son, Sir Robert Welles (d.
Horton seems to be an ancestor of Sir Edward Paston (1550–1630), the second son of Sir Edward Paston, the grantee's youngest nephew Sir Thomas Paston, a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, by Agnes Leigh, daughter of Sir John Leigh of Addington, Surrey and Stockwell. Sir Thomas Paston's eldest brother Erasmus Paston (1502–1540) was the ancestor of Sir William Paston, 1st Baronet (c. 1610–1663), created a baronet in 1642, whose son was Robert Paston, 1st Earl of Yarmouth (1631–1683). Sir Edward (d.
This was intended to encourage woodland clearance and increase production. Kinlet was passed through the Cornwalls, to Sir John Cornwall on the death of his father, Sir Brian Cornwall in 1391. His only surviving daughter, Elizabeth, inherited Kinlet in 1414, before marrying Sir William Lichefeld. Sir William Lichefeld held Kinlet until his death in 1446, Kinlet was then passed down to Isabel, sister of Sir John Cornwall and second wife of Sir John Blount II. Sir John Blount II had a son with Isabel, also named John.
Ningbo University was established in 1986 by the donation of Yue-Kong Pao. Other major benefactors include Sir Run-run Shaw, Sir Chao An Chung (), Sir Hans Tang, Sir Yue-shu Pao (), Sir Cao Guangbiao, Sir Li Dashan (), Sir Zhu Yinglong (). In 1996, Ningbo Normal College () and Zhejiang Shuichan College, Ningbo () were merged into Ningbo University. In the early years of the school founding, Zhejiang University, Fudan University, China University of Science and Technology, Beijing University and other counterparts reconstruction, starting point to begin the school history.
Wolsey's opponents Sir William Compton, the Groom of the Stool, Sir Francis Bryan, Sir Nicholas Carew, and Thomas and George Boleyn, on the contrary, had to leave the court.
The 1st Baron was the eldest son of Sir James Harrington (c.1511–1592) of Exton. The third son of Sir James Harington was Sir James Harington, 1st Baronet.
Landowners included Sir Edward Bayntun (d. 1544), Sir James Stumpe (d. 1563) and Sir Matthew Arundell (d. 1598), whose son Thomas was created Baron Arundell of Wardour in 1605.
Episode 2, screened on 20 June 2004, featured Sir Peter Scott and Sir David Attenborough.
Sir Graham Balfour School, Stafford and Sir Graham Balfour School, Cambodia are named after Balfour.
Sir Deryck Maughan Sir Deryck Charles Maughan (born 20 December 1947) is an English businessman.
Sir William Browne Sir William Browne FRS (1692 – 10 March 1774) was an English doctor.
Sir Martin Bowes in 1562 Sir Martin Bowes (c. 1500 – 1566) was an English politician.
Sir Thomas Grantham (bap. 1641 - 1718[Anon.], ‘Grantham, Sir Thomas (bap. 1641, d. 1718)’, rev.
Sir William Coventry, PC. Sir William Coventry (c. 162823 June 1686) was an English statesman.
It includes sketches of the Duke of Newcastle, Sir Thomas Gresham, and Sir Robert Peel.
Sir Warin FitzGerold, also known as Sir Warin FitzGerald the Younger c.1167 – c.1218.
Sir. J.J Institute Of Applied Art, Mumbai. Sir J. J. Institute of Applied Art is an Indian applied art institution based in Mumbai. It is a state government college that was created through its sister school, the Sir J. J. School of Art. The "Sir J. J." in the name stands for Sir Jamsetjee Jeejebhoy, a Parsi philanthropist whose name is linked to numerous historical institutions of Mumbai, such as the Sir J. J. Hospital.
Hand of Sir John Heydon (1588 – 1653), cut off in a duel with Sir Robert Mansel in January 1600. Norwich Castle Museum. In October 1600, Sir Robert's quarrel with a Norfolk neighbour, Sir John Heydon, ended in a notorious duel. Heydon's brother, Sir Christopher Heydon, was already noted for such affairs and in fact was at that moment detained in London by the Privy Council to prevent him duelling with Sir John Townshend.
Sir Alexander hears that his son and Moll have fled to get married. Sir Guy, Mary's father, gently mocks Sir Alexander, saying it is his fault for opposing the match with Mary. Sir Guy then offers to wager all his lands, against half of Sir Alexander's, that Sebastian and Moll will not wed. Sir Alexander takes the bet, declaring that anyone in the world but Moll would make a welcome daughter-in-law.
The list of conductors with whom Joyce worked includes: Ernest Ansermet, Sir John Barbirolli, Sir Thomas Beecham, Eduard van Beinum, Sir Adrian Boult, Warwick Braithwaite, Basil Cameron, Sergiu Celibidache, Albert Coates, Sir Colin Davis, Norman Del Mar, Anatole Fistoulari, Grzegorz Fitelberg, Sir Alexander Gibson, Sir Dan Godfrey, Sir Hamilton Harty, Sir Bernard Heinze, Milan Horvat, Enrique Jordá, Herbert von Karajan, Erich Kleiber, Henry Krips, Constant Lambert, Erich Leinsdorf, Igor Markevitch, Sir Neville Marriner, Jean Martinon, Charles Münch, Eugene Ormandy, Joseph Post, Clarence Raybould, Victor de Sabata, Sir Malcolm Sargent, Carlos Surinach, and Sir Henry J. Wood. In a 1969 interview she said the greatest conductor she had ever worked with was Sergiu Celibidache. She said "he was the only one who got inside my soul". In the late 1940s and 1950s, she and her partner Christopher Mann worked tirelessly to get Celibidache good engagements in Britain.
Sir Philip was imprisoned in the Tower in November 1402 for clerical abuses against the Church. On 29 November he was forced to pay a recognizance of £100 by Sir John Arundell, and to Sir John Herle and Sir William Sturmy a surety of £1000.
Sir Gerald died on 18 January 1946, aged 78, and was succeeded by his son, Sir Richard Leslie Reginald Hanson, 3rd Baronet. Sir Richard Hanson, like his uncle Sir Francis Hanson, was a member of the Lodge of Assistance No 2773 of English Freemasonry.
Portrait of Sir William Fraser, Merchants Hall, Edinburgh Sir William Fraser's grave, Dean Cemetery Detail on Sir Wm Fraser's grave, Dean Cemetery Sir William Fraser, (18 February 1816 – 13 March 1898) was a solicitor and notable expert in ancient Scottish history, palaeography, and genealogy.
His brothers included Sir Charles Compton and Sir William Compton. Compton married 4 times. His first marriage was to Elizabeth, the daughter and co-heir of Sir Capel Bedell, 1st Baronet. The second, in June 1664, was to Jane daughter of Sir John Trevor.
Sir Thomas Hope, 1st Baronet Sir Thomas Hope, 1st Baronet, Pinkie House Portrait by George Jamesone, 1638 The grave of Sir Thomas Hope, Greyfriars Kirkyard Sir Thomas Hope, 1st Baronet Hope of Craighall (1573–1646) was a Scottish lawyer, and Lord Advocate under Charles I.
S.T. Bindoff, 1982 Available from Boydell and Brewer. His second brother was Sir Henry Palmer (d. 1559), of Wingham in Kent. Sir Henry married Jane, daughter of Sir Richard Windebank of Guisnes, and left three sons—Sir Thomas Palmer ‘the Travailer,’ Arnold, and Edward.
Wright Stephenson produced a number of New Zealand's most prominent businessmen of the 19th and 20th century including Sir William Hunt, David Allan, Sir Clifford Plimmer and Sir Ronald Trotter.
Sir John distinguished himself on the Royalist side in the English Civil War fighting alongside Sir Ralph Hopton and Sir Reginald Mohun of Boconnoc, his friend and father-in-law.
Sir Francis's sons Sir Henry (died 1583), Sir Edward (died 1580), Sir Robert (died 1625), Sir Richard (died 1596), Sir Francis (died 1648) and Sir Thomas, were all courtiers and served the queen in parliament or in the field. Richard's family continued to live at Rotherfield Greys, while Francis Junior's descendants held Battle Manor in Reading. The latter's daughter, Lettice (died 1666), was the second wife of the parliamentarian, John Hampden. Francis Senior's daughter, Lettice (1540–1634), married Walter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex and then Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester.
Gresham's School, a public school founded in 1555 by Sir John Gresham, originally for boys but co-educational since 1971 is located in the town.greshams.com – official web site of Gresham's School The school's former pupils include Benjamin Britten, W. H. Auden, Lord Reith, Sir Alan Lloyd Hodgkin, President Erskine Childers, Sir Christopher Cockerell, Donald Maclean, Sir Lennox Berkeley, Sir Stephen Spender, Richard Hand, Tom Wintringham, Sir James Dyson, Ralph Firman, Sir Peter Brook, Paddy O'Connell, Sebastian Shaw, Olivia Colman, Sienna Guillory, John Tusa, Tom Youngs and Michael Cummings.
Sir Ralph Cole, c.1700 Sir Ralph Cole, 2nd Baronet (1629 – 1704) was an English politician.
Notable organists of Peterborough Cathedral have included Stanley Vann, Sir Malcolm Sargent and Sir Thomas Armstrong.
Sir Gainsford Bruce. Sir Gainsford Bruce (1834 – 24 February 1912) was a British politician and judge.
1707-The Rt. Hon. Robert Benson. 1708-Sir Wm. Robinson, Bart. 1711-Sir Walter Hawksworth, Bart.
Christison's son was the noted Scottish toxicologist Sir Robert Christison. His grandson was Sir Alexander Christison.
Sir William was succeeded by his eldest son and heir, Sir William Payne-Gallwey, 2nd Baronet.
Mansel Island was named in 1613 by Sir Thomas Button after Vice-Admiral Sir Robert Mansell.
Sir Dugald Campbell was a Scot, the son of Sir Duncan Campbell and his wife Mary.
Sir Thomas Chaloner Sir Thomas Chaloner (1521 – 14 October 1565) was an English statesman and poet.
Sir John Bayley, 1st Baronet Sir John Bayley, 1st Baronet (1763–1841), was an English judge.
The call is a distinctive zik, and the song is a rolling siroo-sir-sir-siroo.
Sir George Essex Honyman. Sir George Essex Honyman, 4th Baronet (1819–1875) was an English judge.
Sir John Pettus Sir John Pettus (1613–1685) was an English royalist, politician and natural philosopher.
The first house and estate were owned by William, Lord Parr of Horton - the same family that Catherine Parr came from. She was the last of the six wives of Henry VIII of England. Parr's daughter, Maud, married Sir Ralph Lane and they had five sons including: Sir Ralph, Sir Robert, Sir Parr and Sir William, the latter commemorated in the church.
Born by 1513, Robert Throckmorton was the eldest son and heir of Sir George Throckmorton (died 1552) by Katherine Vaux, daughter of Nicholas Vaux, 1st Baron Vaux of Harrowden (died 1523). He had several notable brothers, in descending seniority: Sir Kenelm Throckmorton, Sir Clement Throckmorton MP, Sir Nicholas Throckmorton (1515–1571), Thomas, Sir John Throckmorton (1524–1580), Anthony, and George.
Of three companions also executed on 26 February 1552, Sir Miles Partridge was hanged, and the other two, Sir Thomas Arundell and Sir Michael Stanhope, were beheaded. Fane's forfeited manor of Penshurst was given the same year to Sir William Sidney, and all the goods and chattels found in Fane's house at Westminster to Sir John Gate, a follower of Northumberland.
Sarah had married William Gamage; Margaret had married Sir Richard Stackpole, whose da. Joan had married Sir Richard Verney; Agnes had married Sir John de la Bere of Weobly Castle, Gower; Catherine had married Sir Roger Berkerolles (d.1351), another descendant of one of the Twelve Knights of Glamorgan, of East Orchard, St. Athan. It was their son Sir Roger Berkerolles (d.
He held this office till 1970. In 1972, he was appointed to the bench as a Puisne judge. When the Chief Justice, Sir Clifford Grant, resigned in 1980 under pressure from Fiji's first Prime Minister, Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara, Tuivaga was appointed Chief Justice by the Governor-General of Fiji, Ratu Sir George Cakobau.Biography of Sir Clifford Grant at Sir Clifford Grant Chambers.
Miranda and Sir George are then free to marry without losing her fortune. A subplot deals with Isabinda, the daughter of Sir Jealous Traffick. Sir Jealous plans to marry her to Seignior Diego Babinetto, but Isabinda is in love with Charles (the son of Sir Francis). Charles disguises himself as Diego, and the oblivious Sir Jealous allows him and Isabinda to marry.
Sir Thomas Greene's father was Sir Robert Green of Bobbing Kent who married Frances Darrel, daughter of Thomas Darrel of Scotney. Sir Robert was the son of Sir Thomas Norton alias Greene and his wife Alice Heveningham, daughter of Sir George Heveningham. George, by his mother Alice Bruyn, was a first cousin of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk.Douglas Richardson.
The Times, Obituary, Sir Charlton Harrison, 4 July 1951 The Times, Obituary, Sir Arnold Musto, 31 May 1977 Who Was Who: 1951-1960. Entry for Sir Charlton Harrison. Who's Who: 1977.
Sir Thomas Echyngham had two sisters, Elizabeth (who married first Sir Thomas Hoo of Mulbarton, Norfolk (died 1420), and second Sir Thomas Lewknor of Horsted Keynes (died 1452)),D. Richardson ed.
Castled elephant and monogram of Sir Andrew Corbet. Part of medieval gatehouse, modified by Sir Andrew, viewed from north. Moreton Corbet Castle, Shropshire. Signature of Sir Andrew Corbet, 3 March 1571.
Sir Gawain encounters one in the Middle English poem Sir Gawain and the Carle of Carlisle.Hahn, Thomas. 1995. Sir Gawain: Eleven Romances and Tales. Kalamazoo, Michigan: Western Michigan University for TEAMS.
Additionally, Barbados has players that are a composite part of the West Indies cricket team. Barbados has a number of famous cricketers including: Sir Garfield Sobers, Sir Everton Weekes, Sir Clyde Walcott, and Sir Frank Worrell. Cricket grounds include the Kensington Oval and the 3Ws Oval.
In response, William of Lochmaben, Sir Ralph Dacre and Sir Anthony Lucy led an English force of 800 men into Dumfriesshire. William Douglas, Lord of LiddesdaleBattles involving the Douglases and 50 Scottish defenders along with Sir Humphrey Boys and Sir Humphrey Jardine moved to intercept them.
In 1930 Pike married Kathleen Althea Elwell; they had a son and two daughters. Sir Thomas's brother was Lieutenant General Sir William Pike and his nephew (Sir William's son) is Lieutenant General Sir Hew Pike, who commanded the 3rd Battalion, The Parachute Regiment in the Falklands War.
The Boy visits Sir Giles (not St. George as in the original story), and it is revealed that Sir Giles is an old man. The Boy tells Sir Giles that the Dragon will never fight and they decide to visit him. Sir Giles and the Boy visit the Dragon while he is having a picnic. It turns out that Sir Giles also loves to make up poetry, so The Dragon and Sir Giles serenade each other.
Sir William died in 1756 and the properties he had inherited from Sir James Lowther of Whitehaven passed to Sir James Lowther of Lowther (Wicked Jimmy), with whom he is sometimes confused.
The school has three houses named after three Governors-General of Malta: Ducane House Sir John Du Cane (Green), Campbell House Sir David Campbell (Red) and Congreve House Sir Walter Congreve (Blue).
Andrew Motion, another prominent poet, and former poet laureate, also worked at the university. Prominent former academics include: marine biologist Sir Alister Hardy, architect Sir Leslie Martin and novelist Sir Malcolm Bradbury.
Other original members included: Sir William Chambers, Thomas Sandby, Robert Adam, Matthew Brettingham the Younger, Thomas Hardwick and Robert Mylne. Members who later joined included Sir Robert Smirke and Sir Jeffrey Wyattville.
Sir John Gage was a major landowner and grandfather of the Tudor courtier Sir John Gage KG.
Sir Terry Morgan Sir Terence Keith Morgan (born 28 December 1948)Companies House is a British engineer.
Sir Peter Lely. Sir Henry Blount (1602–1682) was a 17th-century English landowner, traveller and author.
In October 2014, Sir Timoci released his memoirs titled, A Memoir of Sir Timoci Tuivaga Kt. CF.
Sir Robert Grant. Sir Robert Grant GCH (1779 – 9 July 1836) was a British lawyer and politician.
His sister, Alice More, was the fourth wife of Sir John More, father of Sir Thomas More..
Sir William Lee Sir William Lee (2 August 16888 April 1754) was a British jurist and politician.
His final work was on the Central London Railway with Sir John Fowler and Sir Benjamin Baker.
He was a maternal half-brother of Sir Walter Raleigh and a cousin of Sir Richard Grenville.
Sir Edward Cromwell Disbrowe Sir Edward Cromwell Disbrowe GCG (1790–1851) was a British politician and diplomat.
645, pedigree of Reynell son of Sir John Peryam, brother of Sir William Peryam of Little Fulford.
Sir Edward Montagu. Sir Edward Montagu (c. 1485 – 10 February 1557) was an English lawyer and judge.
Ceylon v Sir J Cahn's XI, Sir J Cahn's XI in Ceylon and Malaya 1936/37 – CricketArchive.
Sir James Allport Sir James Joseph Allport (27 February 181125 April 1892) was an English railway manager.
Sir Bani Yas Airport is an airport serving Sir Bani Yas Island in the United Arab Emirates.
Sir Robert Peyton, of Isleham was the son of Sir Robert Peyton, of Wicken by Elizabeth Clere.
He was a brother of Sir Robert Drury (1525–1593) and Sir Drue Drury (1531/2–1617)..
Another sister was Maud, who married firstly Sir John Harrington, and secondly, Sir Edmund Sutton. There was also Anne Clifford, who married firstly, Sir William Tempest, and secondly, William Conyers, esquire. John Clifford's youngest sisters were Joan (who married Sir Simon Musgrave) and Margaret (who married Robert Carr).
Sir Benjamin Julian Alfred Slade was the son of Sir Michael Nial Slade and Angela Clare Rosalind Chichester. Slade inherited his baronetcy from his father in 1962, and is usually known as Sir Ben Slade. His older brother, Robert, predeceased their father. Sir Ben was educated at Millfield School.
Pinero, Arthur. "Where Protest is Due", The Times, 11 May 1915, p. 9 In the following days, numerous letters were received by the newspaper from naturalised Britons affirming their loyalty, including public figures such as Sir Ernest Cassel, Sir George Henschel, Sir Carl Meyer and Sir Felix Schuster.
Sir Turlough was succeeded by his young son Sir Phelim O'Neill. His widow Catherine remarried to Robert Hovendon, a Catholic of recent English origin, who was stepfather to Sir Phelim. Their son, also known as Robert Hovenden, joined Sir Phelim when he launched the Irish Rebellion of 1641.
Robert Shirley was the third son of Sir Thomas Shirley of Wiston, Sussex, and Anne Kempe, the daughter of Sir Thomas Kempe (d. 7 March 1591) of Olantigh in Wye, Kent. He had two elder brothers, Sir Thomas Shirley and Sir Anthony Shirley, and six sisters who survived infancy.
Sir William Drury (2 October 152713 October 1579) was the son of Sir Robert Drury (c. 1503–1577) the grandson of Sir Robert Drury (c. 1456–2 March 1535), Speaker of the House of Commons, and the nephew of Sir William Drury. He was an English statesman and soldier.
Archbishop Baldwin's officer arrives to summon Sir Hugo to meet him. Sir Hugo declines Randal's offer to be of service to him. Ch. 2 (18): Sir Hugo cannot bear to enter Damian's sickroom.
Effigy of Sir Amyas Bampfylde, North Molton Church Sir Amyas Bampfylde (died 1626), portrait by Robert Peake the elder (ca. 1551–1619), inscribed: "Sir Amias Baumfylde Knt. of Poltimore, ob. 1625 aet. 65".
In 1991, Sir Pizza of Michigan was sold to Peter's brother Charles Jubeck, who was previously associated with Sir Pizza in Kentucky. Charles has since sold Sir Pizza of Michigan to another partnership.
Sir Robert Henry Davies Sir Robert Henry Davies, (1824 – 23 August 1902), known as Sir Henry Davies, was a British colonial official in British India, who served as Lieutenant Governor of the Punjab.
She married secondly, after 1557, Sir Henry Ughtred (–1599), the son of Sir Anthony Ughtred, Governor of Jersey and Elizabeth Seymour, daughter of Sir John Seymour of Wulfhall, Savernake, Wiltshire and Margery Wentworth.
' (So-named after Sir Terry 'T.P' McLean) In 2004, he was awarded the International Olympic Committee's 'Sport and Media' Award for services to reporting New Zealand teams at the Olympic Games. In 2010, he was awarded by the New Zealand Rugby Union the 'Steinlager Salver' for 'Outstanding Services to Rugby.' (Among other winners being Sir Wilson Whineray, Sir Brian Lochore, Sir Colin Meads and Sir John Graham).
A royalist cavalry commander in the Midlands during the English Civil War. Son of Sir Andrew Corbet and a relative of the parliamentarian, Sir John. Sir Thomas Wolryche of Dudmaston Hall Sir John Corbet, 2nd Baronet of Stoke upon Tern and Adderley, Sir John's son and heir. He fought for the royalists in the English Civil War and was present at the siege of Bridgnorth.
In July 1659, Sir Richard was a supporter of Sir George Booth in the abortive pro-Royalist Cheshire and Lancashire Rising. Sir Richard's son and heir, Roger, was killed in a duel by his cousin, Hugh Roberts, on 22 August 1661. When Sir Richard died in 1665, he was succeeded by his grandson Sir Thomas Grosvenor, 3rd Baronet, who was aged only eight at the time.
On 12 March 1968 Mauritius achieved independence and Sir John Shaw Rennie became the first Governor-General. In September 1968, Sir Arthur Leonard Williams succeeded Sir John. Sir Arthur died on 27 December 1972 and was buried in the cemetery of St. John, situated in the proximity of the Château. In 1972 Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II appointed Sir Raman Osman as the first Mauritian Governor- General.
Beaumont was the grandson of Sir Thomas Beaumont, whose brother Sir Henry Beaumont was the father of Thomas Beaumont, 1st Viscount Beaumont of Swords. Sir Thomas and Sir Henry were both descended from John Beaumont, son of Sir Thomas Beaumont (d. 1457), younger son of John Beaumont, 4th Baron Beaumont. John's brother Thomas Beaumont was the ancestor of the first Baronet of the 1627 creation.
Bonaventura Bottone has an extensive concert repertoire, which has taken him to many of the world's leading concert halls. He has sung with numerous prominent international conductors, including: Richard Bonynge, Sir Andrew Davis, Jacques Delacote, Sir Edward Downes, Sir Mark Elder, Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, Bernard Haitink KBE CH, Richard Hickox, Vladimir Jurowski, James Levine, Sir Charles Mackerras, Sir Neville Marriner, Carlo Rizzi and Jeffrey Tate.
Sir Louis Jean Bols # 1931–1936 Lt. Gen. Sir Thomas Astley Cubitt # 1936–1939 General Sir Reginald Hildyard # 1939–1941 Lt. Gen. Sir Denis John Charles Kirwan Bernard # 1941–1943 The Rt. Hon. Viscount Knollys # 1943–1945 Honorary Colonel Lord Burghley, Northamptonshire Regiment (Territorial Army) (substantive Major, Reserve of Officers) # 1945 – May 1946 William Addis (acting) # May 1946–1949 Admiral Sir Ralph Leatham # 1949–1955 Lt. Gen.
Armand, seeing an opportunity, challenges Sir Cuthbert to a duel, saying that he is insulted by the accusation. Sir Cuthbert resists, but Armand enrages his friend by suggesting that it is inappropriate for Sir Cuthbert to have accompanied Diana. As they begin the duel, Armand intentionally steps into Sir Cuthbert's blade. As he dies, he declares that he himself, not Sir Cuthbert, caused his death.
333 ;Sir Edward de Pomeroy (1478-1538) :He married Johanna Sapcot, daughter of Sir John Sapcote. ;Sir Thomas Pomeroy (1503-1566) (son) :Married Jone Edgcumbe, daughter of Sir Piers Edgcumbe of Cotohele (Mount Edgcumbe was not built till 1547-1553, by Sir Piers son Richard). On 1 December 1547 he sold the castle, park and manor of Berry Pomeroy to Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of SomersetVivian, p.
Sir Thomas had a son, also called Sir Walter Vaughan, who inherited the estates but decided to live at Fullerston. He added Caldicot Farm to the estate holdings, in around 1607. During this period, Court Farm was occupied by Sir Walter’s nephew, Roland Vaughan, until the next Vaughan heir, Sir Charles Vaughan, was old enough to take possession. Charles was Sir Walter’s son by his first wife.
Sir Walter's younger brother, Richard Coppinger, was married to Sir Fineen's daughter, Eileen. In 1600, Sir Fineen opened his lands to English "planters" by granting Sir Thomas Crooke the rights to found the town of Baltimore which grew rapidly. But the settlement proved deeply unpopular with Sir Walter who was a staunch Roman Catholic and who had his own ideas on development of West Cork.
Anthony Kingston was the son of Sir William Kingston of Blackfriars, London by one of Sir William's first two wives, Anne (née Berkeley), the widow of Sir John Guise (d. 30 September 1501), and Elizabeth, whose surname is unknown. He had a sister, Bridget, who married Sir George Baynham (d. 6 May 1546) of Clearwell, Gloucestershire, son and heir of Sir Christopher Baynham (d.
Hayward Townshend was the eldest son of Sir Henry Townshend (1537?–1621),. second justice of Chester, and his wife, Susan Hayward (d. 1592), daughter of Sir Rowland Hayward, Lord Mayor of London.. He was the grandson of Sir Robert Townshend, Chief Justice of Cheshire, and the great-grandson of Sir Roger Townshend (d. 1551).. He was a third cousin of Sir Roger Townshend (d.
A room in Sir Oliver Muckhill's house Skirmish talks with Sir Oliver Muckhill and Sir Andrew Tipstaff. Skirmish has told Sir Oliver the details of Pieboard's schemes—he apparently feels that Pieboard has abused him and wants revenge. Sir Oliver says that he has a prestigious friend (the "Nobleman") who will convince Lady Plus that Pieboard and Idle are rogues. Scene 4: A street, a church appearing The Nobleman (Sir Oliver Muckhill's friend) confronts Lady Plus before the weddings are set to commence.
In 1970, Gibbs joined the High Court of Australia replacing Sir Frank Kitto. During his early years on the Court, there was high turnover of judges, with Sir Victor Windeyer retiring in 1972, Sir William Owen dying in 1972, Sir Cyril Walsh dying in 1973 and Sir Douglas Menzies dying in 1974. As a result of this high turnover, Gibbs rapidly became second in seniority behind Sir Garfield Barwick. Gibbs' first significant case was Strickland v Rocla Concrete Pipes Ltd in 1971,.
Sir Thomas and his family were close friends of Sir Walter Scott.The Journal of Sir Walter Scott 1825–32, New edition, Edinburgh, 1891; and Corson, James C., Notes & Index to Sir Herbert Grierson's Edition of the Letters of Sir Walter Scott, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1979. His first contribution to Blackwood's Magazine in 1817, entitled Simon Roy, Gardener at Dunphail, was ascribed by some at first to Sir Walter Scott. His paper (1818) on The Parallel Roads of Glenroy, printed in vol. ix.
Sir Charles is notable as one of only seven Royalist delinquents exempted from the Parliamentary pardon passed by the commons on the 21 October 1648, cites House of Lords Journal www.british-history.ac.uk and by the Lords on 24 October: Francis, Lord Cottington, George, Lord Digby, Sir Robert Heath, Sir Francis Doddington, Sir George Radcliffe and Sir Richard Grenville. However on 11 November the House of Lords overturned their exemption on three of the men Lord Cottington, Sir Robert Heath and Sir Charles Dallison. He returned to England after the war and was fined £465, which was reduced to £351 in 1651.
Sir Alexander Hood # 1955–1959 Lt. Gen. Sir John Woodall # 1959–1964 Maj. Gen. Sir Julian Gascoigne # 1964–1972 The Rt. Hon. Lord Martonmere # 1972–1973 Sir Richard Sharples (assassinated) # 1973 – 7 April 1977 Sir Edwin Leather # 7 April 1977 – 6 September 1977 Peter Lloyd (acting – 1st tenure) # 1977–30 December 1980 The Hon. Sir Peter Ramsbotham # 1 January 1981 – February 1981 Peter Lloyd (acting – 2nd tenure) # February 1981 – 15 March 1983 Sir Richard Posnett # 14 Feb. 1983 – July 1983 Mark Herdman (acting) – Acting for Governor Posnett until 15 March 1983 # 1983–1988 The Rt. Hon.
He was second son of Vice-Admiral Sir Joshua Rowley, and was a member of a notable naval dynasty; his grandfather was Admiral of the Fleet Sir William Rowley, while his younger brother was Admiral Sir Charles Rowley, and his cousins included Admiral Sir Josias Rowley, Rear- Admiral Samuel Campbell Rowley, Vice-Admiral Sir Joshua Ricketts Rowley, and Admiral of the Fleet Sir George Martin. His sister Philadelphia Rowley was married to Admiral Sir Charles Cotton. Rowley attended Harrow School from 1775, and then entered in the Navy. By 1780 was serving as a lieutenant aboard his father's flagship, the 74-gun .
Sir Geoffrey Rowland (right) Sir Geoffrey Robert Rowland, QC, was the Bailiff of Guernsey from 2005 to 2012.
However, as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath, Sir Steuart is still styled as Sir.
General Sir David Baird, General Jansens, Commodore Sir Popham, General Ferguson and locals such as the family Stadler.
Well-known residents of Harcourt Hill have included Professor Sir Walter Raleigh, Sir Muirhead Bone and Martin Gilbert.
Sir Arthur Kekewich Sir Arthur Kekewich (26 July 1832 - 22 November 1907) was an English High Court judge.
He also developed literary friendships, among his correspondents being John Chamberlain, Sir Dudley Carleton and Sir Henry Savile.
Sir Alexander Radcliffe to Sir Robert Cecil, [June] 1599 (Cal. S. P. Ire., 1599-00, pp 68-9).
Over 600 distinguished citizens-both Europeans and Indians were present. Prominent among them were M. A. Jinnah, Seth Bomanjee Dinshaw Petit, Kaikobad Dinshaw, C. H. Setalvad, B. G. Horniman, Gokuldas Kahnadas Parekh, Gopal Krishna Gokhale, Sir Jamshetjee Jeejebhoy, Sir Cowasjee Jehangir, Sir Narayan Chandavarkar, Sir Currimbhoy Ibrahim, Sir Fazulbhoy Currimbhoy, Sir Bhalechandra Krishna, Manmohandas Ramjee, Hazee Esmail, Dinsha Vaccha, Sir Richard Lamb, K. M. Munshi, Pherozeshah Mehta, Sir Dorab Tata, C. Dinshaw Adenwallah, Hormusji Wadia, N. M. Samarth and Sir Claude Hill. He donated generously to the cause of nation and was amongst the first benefactors of Gandhi in India. He was in contact with Gandhi even before his arrival in India and has supported Gandhi's struggle in Transvaal in South Africa and activities of Servants of India Society.
In 1958, Sir J. J. School of Art was divided, with the Departments of Architecture and Applied Art becoming the Sir J. J. College of Architecture and Sir J.J. Institute of Applied Art respectively.
Haresnape (1983), p. 56 Nos. E450 Sir Kay and E753 Sir Gillemere had air scoops attached to the chimney, whilst E772 Sir Percivale was fitted with large, square German-type smoke deflectors.Haresnape (1983), pp.
Air Chief Marshal Sir Ronald Andrew Fellowes Wilson, (born 27 February 1941), often known as Sir Andrew Wilson and sometimes known informally as Sir Sandy Wilson, is a retired senior Royal Air Force officer.
Sir Nicholas Roderick O'Conor ( 1843 – 19 March 1908) was an Anglo-Irish diplomat. When he died, Sir Nicholas was the British Ambassador to Turkey."Sir Nicholas O'Conor Dead," New York Times. 20 March 1908.
Thomas Fettiplace of Swinford, Oxford, esq. (6) Charles Noel, Duke of Beaufort Sir Edward Blount of Mawley, Sallop, bart. Sir Charles Chester of Chicheley, Bucks, bart. (7) Sir Henry Tichbourne of Frimley, Surrey, bart.
It was formed in 1926, with Sir Geoffrey Jefferson and Professor Norman Dott. Sir Charles Alfred Ballance was the first President. Other founders were Wilfred Trotter, Henry Souttar, Sir Hugh Cairns and Arthur Bankart.
Edward Waldegrave was the eldest son of John Waldegrave (died 1543) by Lora Rochester, daughter of Sir John Rochester of Essex, and sister of Sir Robert Rochester. He was the grandson of Sir Edward Waldegrave of Bures, Suffolk, and a descendant of Sir Richard Waldegrave, Speaker of the House of Commons.
Sir Leo de Gale became the first governor- general during the reign of Prime Minister Sir Eric Mathew Gairy. Sir Leo de Gale reigned from 1974 to 1978. He was then followed by Sir Paul Scoon (1978 to 1992). Following his political career he took up residence in Bristol, England.
Newdigate married, in 1631, Juliana, daughter of Sir Francis Leigh, K.B., of King's Newnham, Warwickshire, and had issue six sons and five daughters. He was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, Sir Richard Newdigate, 2nd Baronet (d. 1710), whose son, Sir Richard, third baronet, was father of Sir Roger Newdigate.
Sir William Murray Jardine, 13th Baronet of Applegirth, Dumfriesshire was born on 4 July 1984. He is the son of Sir Alexander Maule Jardine of Applegirth, 12th Bt and Mary Beatrice Cross. Sir William succeeded to the title in 2008. Sir William Murray Jardine is the 24th Chief of Clan Jardine.
Stewart, p. 265. Kiplin Hall, estate built by Sir George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore (1579–1632) in the 1620s In 1613 the King commissioned Calvert to investigate Roman Catholic grievances in Ireland, along with Sir Humphrey Wynch (1555–1625), Sir Charles Cornwallis (XXX?-1629) and Sir Roger Wilbraham (1553–1616).
Tomb of Sir James, St Bride's Kirk, Douglas Sir James Douglas (also known as Good Sir James and the Black Douglas) (c. 1286 – 25 August 1330A. A. M. Duncan, " Douglas, Sir James (d. 1330) ", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.) was a Scottish knight and feudal lord.
The castle was inherited by Lt.-Col. Sir William Stucley (1836–1911), Sir Edward Stucley (1852–1927) and Sir Hugh Stucley, 4th Baronet (1873–1956), who lived at Moreton House.Lauder, pp. 148–149 The 4th Baronet gave Affeton Castle to his son, Sir Dennis Stucley, 5th Baronet (1907–1983), in 1947.
Sir Lamorak, Sir Bors, and Sir Gawain, many of whom are held captive by rebel lords. To prove his honor, Lancelot must only engage in combat when provoked. The final stage of the story sees Lancelot setting off from Castle Vagon with Sir Galahad in search of the Holy Grail.
Distraught, Sir John asks Teachwell if all women are like his mother. Sir John resolves to catch his mother in the act of adultery. Later that night, Sir John confronts Lady Galliard about her affair.
Tomb of two Sir Edwards Littleton, father and grandfather of the first baronet, at St Michael's Church Penkridge. Lower stage: Sir Edward Littleton (d. 1610) and his wife, Margaret Devereux. Upper stage: Sir Edward (d.
His proposers were Ivan De Burgh Daly, Sir David P D Wilkie, Robert Alexander Fleming and Sir John Fraser.
Sir John's son Sir Charles Bolle continued the tradition of leaving a space at dinner for the Green Lady.
After her death, Sir Richard Wingfield married Bridget Wiltshire, daughter and heiress of Sir John Wiltshire of Stone, Kent.; .
Portrait of Sir Warington Wilkinson Smyth Sir Warington Wilkinson Smyth (26 August 181719 June 1890) was a British geologist.
Sir John Morphett, c. 1834 John Morphett, c. 1866 Sir John Morphett, c. 1880 Gravestone in West Terrace Cemetery.
Sir Charles Kennedy, circa 1890s Sir Charles Kennedy (12 October 1831 – 25 October 1908) was a senior British diplomat.
Sir Horace Avory. Sir Horace Edmund Avory (31 August 1851 – 13 June 1935) was an English High Court judge.
Sir William Henry Power Sir William Henry Power, (15 December 1842 – 28 July 1916) was a British medical doctor.
Sir Thomas was succeeded by his son, Thomas (died 1432). Sir Thomas' later descendants were the Earls of Kilmarnock.
The chief engineer of the project was Sir Teja Singh Malik, and four main contractors included Sir Sobha Singh.
Sir Robert Hyde Sir Robert Hyde (1595–1665) was an English judge and Chief Justice of the King's Bench.
Sir William Markby. Sir William Markby, KCIE (31 May 182915 October 1914) was an English judge and legal writer.
Sir Thomas Reeve, in a portrait by Jacopo Amigoni. Sir Thomas Reeve (1673January 19, 1737) was a British justice.
Available for yoga, karate, violin, cricket by honorable coaches like Ramesh Sir & Louis Sir, dance, music (vocal) and Mridhangam.
Sir Clive Martin Rose (15 September 1921 – 17 April 2019Death's Announcement: SIR CLIVE ROSE G.C.M.G.) was a British diplomat.
Sir Amadace Translation in Modern English with a Commentary. and Sir Cleges.Laura A. Hibbard, 1963. Medieval Romance in England.
The play's dominating character, Sir Giles Over-reach, is based on the real-life Sir Giles Mompesson. (Sir Giles' assistant in villainy, Justice Greedy, was suggested by Mompesson's associate Sir Francis Michell.) The power of the role of Sir Giles may lie in Massinger's success in depicting a blatant villain who has a quality of everyday believability. Sir Giles is down-to-earth in his cold malice: The audience is presented with a character they might meet in their own lives, to their own cost.
Born about 1541, she was the eldest child of Queen Elizabeth's Lord Keeper of the Great Seal, Sir Nicholas Bacon, by his first wife, Jane Ferneley (d.1552).. By her father's first marriage, she had three brothers, Sir Nicholas Bacon, 1st Baronet, of Redgrave, Sir Edward Bacon, and Sir Nathaniel Bacon, and two sisters, Anne, who married Sir Henry Woodhouse, and Elizabeth, who married Francis Wyndham.. By her father's second marriage, to Anne Cooke, she was the half sister of Anthony Bacon and Sir Francis Bacon..
Sir Thomas Pettus, son to Sir Augustine Pettus (16 July 1582 - 9 July 1613) was the first of the Baronets. He firstly married Elizabeth Knyvett, daughter to Sir Thomas Knyvett of Ashwellthorpe, and secondly, the daughter to and coheiress of Sir Nathaniel Bacon of Stiffkey. Sir Thomas Pettus accompanied King Charles I on his expedition in 1640 into Scotland and Northumberland and may have been granted his Baronetcy as a result. He served as a captain under Colonel Jerom Brett and Lieutenant Colonel Sir Vivian Molineaux.
The fifth Book tells the tales of Sir Tristan of Lyonesse, Sir Dinadan, Sir Palamedes, Sir Alexander the Orphan (Tristan's young relative abducted by Morgan), "La Cote de Male Tayle", and a variety of other knights. Based on the French Prose Tristan, or a lost English adaptation of it (possibly also the Middle English verse romance Sir TristremHardman, P. (2004) "Malory and middle English verse romance: the case of 'Sir Tristrem'". In: Wheeler, B. (ed.) Arthurian Studies in Honour of P.J.C. Field. Arthurian Studies (57).
All the field officers were invited and over the years some had already died. Others in the picture were William, King of the Netherlands, Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond, Hussey Vivian, 1st Baron Vivian, Major-General Sir Peregrine Maitland and Rowland Hill, 1st Viscount Hill. Other field officers there included Sir Frederick Adam, Sir Henry Askew Bt, General Sir Andrew Francis Barnard, Colonel Sempronius Stretton. and General Sir Henry Wyndham.
Silent Information Regulator (SIR) proteins are involved in regulating gene expression. SIR proteins organize heterochromatin near telomeres, rDNA, and at silent loci including hidden mating type loci in yeast. The SIR family of genes encodes catalytic and non-catalytic proteins that are involved in de- acetylation of histone tails and the subsequent condensation of chromatin around a SIR protein scaffold. Some SIR family members are conserved from yeast to humans.
In 1953, he was created a Baronet by the Queen, of Marchmont in the County of Berwick and Bardrochat in the County of Ayr.Who's Who 1960 p.1896. Upon his death in 1962, his title passed to his eldest son, Sir James. Upon Sir James' death in 1971, his title passed to his brother and Sir John's second son, Sir Robert, as Sir James had three daughters, but no sons.
Sir John was born on 7 July 1434, the only son of Sir William Ingleby of Ripley and Joan, daughter of Sir Brian Stapleton of Carlton.Oxford Dictionary of National Biography He inherited the Ripley estate from his father, Sir William Ingleby, when he was only five. Sir John built the castle gatehouse at Ripley Castle and it is still there today, having been retained after the house was rebuilt.
The first fellows included Air Commodore Sir Frank Whittle, the jet engine developer, the structural engineer Sir Ove Arup, radar pioneer Sir George MacFarlane, the inventor of the bouncing bomb, Sir Barnes Wallis, and father of the UK computer industry Sir Maurice Wilkes. The Fellowship's first President, Lord Hinton, had driven the UK's supremacy in nuclear power.History of The Academy - Early Days. Raeng.org.uk (1976-06-11). Retrieved on 2013-08-13.
Bardolph became Sir John's mother's man servant. Sir John's Mother- Sir John's mother appeared in one episode when she looked for a manservant in secret on a visit to the castle, and almost took Captain Watt but took Bardolph instead. Food Tester- The Food Tester is Sir John's servant. As his name he tests the food Sir John was supposed to eat and every time there is something poisonous.
The panel has included Michael Billington, Thelma Holt CBE, Sue Summers, Catherine Johnson, Beryl Bainbridge DBE and John Tydeman. Patrons include Sir Alan Ayckbourn CBE, Alan Bleasdale, Stephen Daldry, Dame Judi Dench, Sir Richard Eyre, Sir Peter Hall CBE, Sir Jeremy Isaacs, Joan Plowright CBE, Sir Tom Stoppard and Sue Townsend. The scheme is administrated by Jack Andrews MBE, and is supported by The Peggy Ramsay Foundation and The Olivier Foundation.
He married secondly, Susan Alington, daughter of Sir Giles Alington of Horsebeath. They had four daughters - Mary who married Sir Ralph Hare, 1st Baronet, Anne who married firstly Sir William Airmine, 2nd Baronet and secondly John Lord Belasyse, Susan who married Sir Edward Walpole, and Katherine who married Edmund Bacon, nephew of Sir Robert Bacon, 3rd Baronet. After Crane's death, Lady Crane married secondly, Isaac Appleton, esq. of Waldingfeld.
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Henry Strachey (1816-1912) was a British officer of the Bengal Army. Despite a longstanding prohibition by the Tibetan authorities on the entry of Europeans into Tibet, Strachey surveyed parts of western Tibet during the late 1840s. He was the second son of Edward Strachey, second son of Sir Henry Strachey, 1st Baronet. His brothers included Sir Richard Strachey, Sir John Strachey and Sir Edward Strachey, 3rd Baronet.
Arthur wakes a prisoner in the dungeon of Sir Domas le Noir, and the only way to escape is to battle against Sir Ontzlake, Sir Domas's brother. Accalon awakes in a strange place with a fair maiden. She asks him to fight for Sir Ontzlake against Sir Domas and offers Excalibur as a reward if he accepts. Arthur and Accalon, not recognizing each other, fight a bloody and harsh battle.
In March 1917, the War Cabinet had set up the Mesopotamian Administration Committee. Besides Lord Curzon as chairman and Mark Sykes as secretary, members included Lord Alfred Milner, Charles Hardinge, Sir Arthur Hirtzel, Sir Thomas Holderness, Sir Ronald Graham and Sir George Clerk. Sir Henry McMahon also became a member. In July, its powers having been expanded to cover Middle Eastern matters, its name was changed to the Middle East Committee.
Eyam Moor is a plateau-topped hill between the villages of Eyam and Hathersage in Derbyshire, in the Peak District. The summit of Sir William Hill is above sea level. It is unclear whom Sir William Hill is named after. Candidates include the four Dukes of Devonshire called Sir William Cavendish, Sir William Saville (Lord of the Manor of Eyam) and Sir William Bagshaw (High Sheriff for Derbyshire in 1805).
His eldest son and heir John Hussey was summoned to Parliament as Baron Hussey of Sleaford in 1529. Sir William's second son Sir Robert Hussey of Halton in Lincolnshire was High Sheriff of Lincolnshire as was his son and heir Sir Charles Hussey, of Honington. Sir Charles's son was the first Baronet of Honington. Sir William Hussey, second son of Thomas Hussey, was Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire.
Her mother (or step-mother) was Elizabeth Rolle, who remarried to Sir John Acland (died 1620), Sir Arthur's uncle. Eleanor survived her husband and remarried to Sir Francis Vincent, 1st Baronet (c. 1568–1640) of Stoke d'Abernon, in Surrey. By Eleanor, Acland had a son and heir, Sir John Acland, 1st Baronet (c.
After Sir Steuart's death in 2013, DNA evidence demonstrated that Sir Steuart's father was not the biological son of Sir Norman Pringle, 8th Baronet. In 2016, the court agreed Norman Murray Pringle was the rightful heir to the baronetcy instead of his second cousin Simon Pringle, Sir Steuart's eldest son and heir apparent.
James Stewart was the fourth son of Sir James Steuart of Coltness (1608–1681), a banker in Edinburgh and Lord Provost of Edinburgh, and Anne Hope, niece of Sir Thomas Hope. He was the brother of Sir Robert Steuart, 1st Baronet of Allanbank (1643–1707) and Sir Thomas Stewart of Coltness, 1st Baronet.
Anthony Shirley was the second son of Sir Thomas Shirley of Wiston, Sussex, and Anne Kempe, the daughter of Sir Thomas Kempe (d. 7 March 1591) of Olantigh in Wye, Kent. He had an elder brother, Sir Thomas Shirley, and a younger brother, Sir Robert Shirley, and six sisters who survived infancy.
He died on 12 June 1869 and the baronetcy devolved to his son, Sir Arthur Victor Raoul Anduze Rumbold, 6th Baronet (1869–1877). His son died whilst still a child and the baronetcy then passed to the older Sir Arthur's brother (the younger Sir Arthur's uncle), Sir Charles Hale Rumbold, 7th Baronet.
Bran de Lis is then victorious for King Arthur, Sir Kay loses his joust and, after an interval for a hunt, Sir Yvain is also victorious. The castle's lord, the "Riche Soldoier" [sic], then decides to fight. Sir Gawain rides against him. The first day, Sir Lucan the butlerLucan[s] li botellier, "butler".
Sir Thomas Newenham Deane (1828 - 8 November 1899) was an Irish architect, the son of Sir Thomas Deane and Eliza Newenham, and the father of Sir Thomas Manly Deane. His father and son were also architects.
He was the son of Sir Godfrey Webster, 3rd Baronet and Elizabeth Cooper of Lockington, Derbyshire, and nephew of Sir Whistler Webster, 2nd Baronet.historyofparliamentonline.org, Webster, Sir Whistler, 2nd Bt. (c.1690-1779), of Battle Abbey, Suss.
Also, Sir Booth Gore, 1st Baronet, of Artarman, was a descendant of Sir Francis Gore, fourth son of Sir Paul Gore, 1st Baronet, of Magherabegg. The family seat is Castle Hill House, near Filleigh, North Devon.
Schomberg was the second son of Captain Sir Alexander Schomberg and Mary Susannah Arabella, the only child of the Reverend Henry Chalmers, and niece of Sir Edmund Aleyn. His brother was Captain Sir Charles Marsh Schomberg.
He married Elizabeth Sergeaux, daughter and co-heiress of Sir Richard Sergeaux of Colquite, Cornwall (d. 30 Sep 1393). History of Parliament: MARNEY, Sir William (c.1370-1414) History of Parliament: CERGEAUX (SERGEUX), Sir Richard (d.
He was brother of General Sir Robert Arbuthnot, KCB and Charles Arbuthnot and bishop Alexander Arbuthnot. He was uncle of Sir Alexander John Arbuthnot, Major General George Bingham Arbuthnot and Lieutenant General Sir Charles George Arbuthnot.
Sir Robert Mansell (1573–1656) was an admiral of the English Royal Navy and a Member of Parliament (MP), mostly for Welsh constituencies. His name was sometimes given as Sir Robert Mansfield and Sir Robert Maunsell.
Freeling was the son of John Clayton Freeling and grandson of Sir Francis Freeling, , and the elder brother of Sir Sanford Freeling, . In 1848 Freeling married Charlotte Augusta, daughter of Sir Henry Rivers, 9th Rivers baronet.
Sir George A. W. Shuckburgh-Evelyn, 6th Bart Armorial bookplate of Sir George Shuckburgh, Bart Sir George Augustus William Shuckburgh-Evelyn, 6th Baronet (23 August 1751 – 11 August 1804) was a British politician, mathematician and astronomer.
His impressions include Sir Alec Guinness, James Dean, Michael J. Fox, Richard Burton, Sir Tom Jones, Sir Michael Caine, Mick Jagger and Ronnie Corbett. He is also noted for his "Small Man in A Box" impression.
Sir John Dalling and fellow officers in procession; and Sir John Dalling and fellow officers watching a nautch General Sir John Dalling, 1st Baronet (c. 1731 – 16 January 1798) was a British soldier and colonial administrator.
2,000 men commanded by the Englishman Sir Walter Bentley and the Breton captain Tanguy du Chastel. (Sir Walter had succeeded Sir Thomas Dagworth, the former keeper of Brittany who had been killed in a French ambush).
William Boleyn was born at Blickling, Norfolk, the younger of the two sons of Sir Geoffrey Boleyn, a wealthy mercer and Lord Mayor of London, and his wife, Anne Hoo.. Sir William was heir to his elder brother, Sir Thomas Boleyn, in 1471/2.. Boleyn married Margaret Ormond (otherwise Butler) (d. before 20 March 1540), the daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond (died 3 August 1515), by his first wife, Anne Hankford. They had six sons, Sir Thomas, William (Archdeacon of Winchester), Sir James, Sir Edward, John and Anthony, and four daughters, Margaret (wife of John Sackville, and later Sir Nicholas Pelham), Anne (wife of Sir John Shelton), Alice (the wife of Sir Robert Clere) and Jane (wife of Sir Philip Calthorpe).. Boleyn was created a Knight of the Bath by Richard III and was charged by Henry VII to take care of the beacons that were used to warn in case of an attack on England. Sir William served as High Sheriff of Kent in 1489 and High Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1500.
Sir Robert was made heir to the estate of General Sir John Cope, a successful veteran the Wars of the Spanish and Austrian Succession who had later fallen into personal misfortune following his defeat commanding the British force at the Battle of Prestonpans. Sir John had written in 1758 to Sir Robert's father, the first Osmaston baronet, of his intention to settle his estate on Sir Robert should his children by his mistress, Mrs Metcalf, die without issue. Sir John also wrote of abusive and malicious treatment by his family members which may have motivated his desire not to leave his property to his children or Cope relatives. In the event, Sir John devised to Sir Robert a life interest in his estate, with a remainder to Sir Robert's first and other sons in tail male.
Sir William Barton Sir Andrew William Barton (5 August 1862 – 9 July 1957) was a British Liberal politician and businessman.
"Sandford, seat of Sir John Chichester, Bart." (i.e. Sir John Chichester, 6th Baronet (d.1808, grandson of the 4th Bt).
Sir Richard's son Sir John Blackham survived his father by only three days. The Baronetcy became extinct on his death.
Sir John Bland-Sutton Sir John Bland-Sutton, 1st Baronet (21 April 1855 – 20 December 1936), was a British surgeon.
Sir Harold Allan Sir Harold Egbert Allan (15 March 1895 – 18 February 1953) was a Jamaican politician, legislator and statesman.
Sir William Stephens (c.1641 –1697) was a British Member of Parliament.STEPHENS, Sir William (c.1641-97), of Barton, I.o.
Sir Robert Laurie Morant. Sir Robert Laurie Morant, (7 April 1863 – 13 March 1920) was an English administrator and educationalist.
Arms of Sir Bryan Stapleton, KG Sir Bryan Stapleton KG (c. 1322 – 1394) was an English medieval knight from Yorkshire.
Big Sir is the first album by Big Sir, which is composed of bassist Juan Alderete and vocalist Lisa Papineau.
Kingston Lacy was altered by Sir Charles Barry in the 1830s, and Ryston Hall was remodelled by Sir John Soane.
Sir Edward Petrie, 2nd Baronet and Sir Charles Petrie, 3rd Baronet were the sons of Petrie and his wife Hannah.
Through his daughter, he was the maternal grandfather of Sir Lawrence Kennard, 2nd Baronet and Sir George Kennard, 3rd Baronet.
Sir John Leman Sir John Leman (1544–1632) was a tradesman from Beccles, England who became Lord Mayor of London.
Sir Reginald Brade, c. 1900 Sir Reginald Herbert Brade (1864, Melbourne, Australia - 1933, Surrey, England) was a British civil servant.
Pearce also painted for Barrow half-length portraits of Sir Robert McClure, Sir Leopold McClintock, Sir George Nares, and Captain Penny in their Arctic dress, and a series of small portraits of other arctic explorers. Lady Franklin commissioned a similar series, which passed at her death to Miss Cracroft, her husband's niece. All these pictures are in the National Portrait Gallery, to which Barrow and Miss Cracroft respectively bequeathed them. Pearce's other sitters included Barrow himself (for the Royal Society), Sir Francis Beaufort, Sir James Clark Ross (for Greenwich Hospital), Sir Edward Sabine, Sir George Gabriel Stokes, Charles Lever, Sims Reeves, Sir Erasmus Wilson (Hospital for Diseases of the Skin, Westgate-on-Sea, copied for the Royal College of Surgeons), and the seventh Duke of Bedford.
The Council for the Defence of the British Universities (CDBU) is a group of individuals who express worries about the long-term direction of higher education policy in the United Kingdom and lobby for fundamental changes. They particularly oppose the marketisation of Higher Education in the country. The CDBU was founded in November 2012 by 66 founding members, including Sir Michael Atiyah, Sir David Attenborough, Alan Bennett, Sir Colin Blakemore, Dame Ruth Deech, Baroness Deech, Marcus du Sautoy, Sir Deian Hopkin, Sir Tim Hunt, Sir Paul Nurse, Dame Bridget Ogilvie, David Pannick, Baron Pannick, Sir Roger Penrose, Martin Rees, Baron Rees of Ludlow, Quentin Skinner, and Sir Peter Swinnerton-Dyer. It is incorporated in England as a not for profit company limited by guarantee.
Sir Henry Hobart, Bt. Sir Henry Hobart, 1st Baronet (1 Jan 1560 - 29 December 1625), of Blickling Hall, was an English politician who succeeded Sir Edward Coke to become Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas.
Wragby Church, Nostell Priory, Burial place of Sir Cotton Gargrave and father Sir Thomas Gargrave Sir Cotton Gargrave (1540–1588) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1571 and 1572.
His proposers were Sir D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson, Sir James Walker, William Peddie, and Sir Thomas Richard Fraser. He won the Society's Makdougall-Brisbane Prize for the period 1912 to 1914. He resigned from the Society in 1928.
Sir Harry Jephcott, 1st Baronet (15 January 1891 – 29 May 1978) was a British pharmaceutical industrialist.Richard Davenport-Hines, Jephcott, Sir Harry, first baronet (1891–1978). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, September 2004. Frank Hartlet, Sir Harry Jephcott.
100–101 However Risdon's contemporary Sir William Pole (d.1635) makes no mention of Sir Robert at Spencer Combe, and states that the estate descended via the heiress Jone Spencer to the Giffard family.Pole, Sir William (d.
After Naseby, the city was captured for the second time, the forces this time led by Colonel John Birch. Birch and Colonel Morgan took a number of people captive on 8 December 1645, including Coke, Judge Jenkins, Sir Henry Bedingfield, Sir Walter Blunt, Sir Henry Miller, Sir Marmaduke and Sir Francis Lloyd, Giles Mompesson, Sir Nicholas Throgmorton, and others who were initially taken to Gloucester. On 3 January 1646, Coke and others were ordered to London by the Commons and many were sent to the Tower on the 22nd to answer charges of high treason.Memoir of Sir Thomas Lunsford in The Gentleman's Magazine for 1837.
The quest ends when Sir Galahad, Sir Percival, Sir Bors, and Sir Pellinore's daughter find the grail. Sir Lancelot apparently saw the four in a room, with the Grail, an old man, and several other knights; however he was unable to enter the room himself (when he tried he was knocked out). One of the knights returned with the news that the Grail could not be brought to England and as a result Sir Galahad and the other knight brought it to Babylon (and neither of them could return to England as well). Sir Pellinore's daughter died when she allowed her blood to be taken to cure a dying princess.
Sir Humphrey has become a stereotype associated with civil servants, and the phrase "Bowler-hatted Sir Humphreys" is sometimes used when describing their image. Satirical and investigative magazine Private Eye often refers to Sir Humphrey with the definite article 'the' to indicate someone in the civil service the magazine considers of similar character, e.g. "[name] is the present Sir Humphrey at the Department for Rural Affairs". In the 1930s "Sir Horace", after Sir Horace Wilson, a senior official close to Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, became a sobriquet for a civil servant with delusions of grandeur; this is thought to have influenced the choice of the name "Sir Humphrey".
British Library Cotton Appendix XXVIII. He married Anne Browne, daughter of Sir William Browne, Lord Mayor of London. They had five sons, Sir John Fermor, Sir Thomas Fermor, Sir Jerome Fermor and two other sons whose names are not known, as well as five daughters, including Mary (1534-1573). He died in 1551 or 1552.
Sir Michael Lyons was Professor of Public Policy from 2001 to 2006. Sir Kenneth Mather was Professor of genetics (1948) and recipient of the 1964 Darwin Medal. Sir Richard Redmayne was Professor of Mining and later became first Chief Inspector of Mines. The art historian Sir Nikolaus Pevsner held a research post at the university.
He died at Leighton Bromswold on 10 May 1572. He had married twice: firstly Bridget, the daughter and heiress of Sir John Wiltshire of Stone Castle, Kent and widow of Sir Richard Wingfield of Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire and Sir Nicholas Harvey of Ickworth, Suffolk and secondly Elizabeth, the daughter of Sir Goddard Oxenbridge of Brede, Sussex.
William Rowley married Arabella Dawson and had five children: four sons and one daughter. Several of his descendants reached high positions in the Navy including his son Vice Admiral Sir Joshua Rowley, his grandson Admiral Sir Josias Rowley, his grandson Admiral Sir Charles Rowley and his grandson Admiral of the Fleet Sir George Martin.
His elder son, Sir William, succeeded to Missenden, and a younger son, Sir Thomas, of the Middle Temple, was attorney to Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales. One daughter (Cordelia) married Sir David Foulis, 1st Baronet, and the other (Elizabeth) Sir Thomas Chaloner. Fleetwood is an ancestor of actor Benedict Cumberbatch through both of his daughters.
Sir John begins to regret his actions. Sir John then becomes intrigued with a woman named Belinda, who he intends seduce or rape. Belinda narrowly avoids assault using wit and guile. Sir John is punished by a man whose wife he seeks to sleep with by setting off fireworks that light Sir John on fire.
Sir Clifford Darling GCVO (6 February 1922 - 27 December 2011)Sir Clifford Darling, The Bahamas 4th Governor General passes at 89His Excellency Sir Clifford Darling, Government Biography was the fourth Governor-General of the Bahamas from 2 January 1992 until his retirement on 2 January 1995, where he was succeeded by Sir Orville Turnquest.
Entrance gates to Fardel manor house Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.494 Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.
This group included Elizabeth Berkeley (Countess of Ormond), Sir Peter Carew, William Cecil, Sir John Cheke, Sir Anthony Cooke, Sir Francis Knollys, Sir Richard Morrison, Dame Dorothy Stafford, and Sir Thomas Wroth. Of about 500 known English exiles, there were 40 merchants, 32 artisans, 7 printers, 3 lawyers, 3 physicians, 3 yeomen, 13 servants, and 19 men with no profession. Of the artisans 12–17 were weavers who settled in Aarau. Strype names London merchant and exile Thomas Heton (or Heyton, Eaton) as the host-general of all the exiles.
Sir Nicholas Henderson, Sir Frederic Bennett, Sir Fitzroy Maclean, Bt., General Sir Harry Tuzo, and Douglas Fairbanks junior. The Chairman was Geoffrey Rippon, Lord Rippon of Hexham, Q.C., Vice-Chairmen were Sir Antony Buck, Q.C., M.P., and Sir W. Hugh-Jones. Director was Elma Dangerfield, O.B.E.who co-founded the Group in 1954 and remained active in it in her nineties. Until her decease in January 2006 her co-Director was Justin Glass, who became Finance Director in 1987 and Director in 1992, retiring from the Group in 2012.
In addition to the busts of the three founders of the gallery over the entrance, the exterior of two of the original 1896 buildings are decorated with stone block busts of eminent portrait artists, biographical writers and historians. These busts, sculpted by Frederick R. Thomas, depict James Granger, William Faithorne, Edmund Lodge, Thomas Fuller, The Earl of Clarendon, Horace Walpole, Hans Holbein the Younger, Sir Anthony van Dyck, Sir Peter Lely, Sir Godfrey Kneller, Louis François Roubiliac, William Hogarth, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Sir Thomas Lawrence and Sir Francis Chantrey.
Soon after, Trench is dispatched by Sir Edward, but not before he tells him the whereabouts of N'Galo. Hoping he will cure him of his disfigurement, Sir Edward asks N'Galo for his help. Here Sir Edward learns the truth about his time in Africa: in a case of mistaken identity he was punished for his brother's crime of killing an African child. N'Galo fails to cure Sir Edward, and they fight; N'Galo stabs Sir Edward in the chest and Sir Edward retaliates by throwing hot liquid in his face.
Henry Cary, 1st Viscount Falkland, c. 1625 Sir John Cary of Plashley, the eldest son of Thomas Cary of Chilton Foliat and his wife Margaret Spencer, was one of King Henry VIII's courtiers. He married Joyce Denny, a daughter of Sir Edmund Denny, and had two sons: Sir Edward Cary and Sir Wymond Cary. Sir Edward Cary, above, married Katherine Knyvett (sister of Thomas Knyvet, 1st Baron Knyvet), and had 9 children, including Sir Philip Cary and Henry Cary, 1st Viscount Falkland, whose descendants still hold the title today.
Like his father before him, Vidal was Secretary to several flag officers. The post demanded abilities unusual in a seaman. The Naval and Military Gazette explained why: Vidal was Secretary to Sir Graham Moore ( Baltic, 1813); Sir Edward Owen (Canada, 1815); Sir Robert Lambert (Cape and St Helena, 1820-1); Sir Edward Owen (West Indies, 1823); Sir Robert Otway (South America, 1826–29); and Sir Graham Hamond (South America, 1834–36). In those stations, therefore, it was Vidal's job to become the "oracle" who could be consulted on local affairs and politics.
Sir Anthony Mildmay by Nicholas Hilliard, small watercolour, Cleveland Museum of Art Sir Anthony Mildmay, portrait at Emmanuel College, Cambridge Arms of Mildmay: Argent, three lions rampant azure Monument to Sir Anthony Mildmay, St Leonard's Church, Apethorpe Effigy of Sir Anthony Mildmay, St Leonard's Church, Apethorpe Sir Anthony Mildmay (died 1617) of Apethorpe Palace, Northamptonshire, served as a Member of Parliament for Wiltshire from 1584 to 1586 and as English ambassador in Paris in 1597.
Sir Robert Turk and his wife, Beatrice, conveyed the manor in 1376–7 to Sir William Croyser and William Bukbridge, trustees of Sir Edward de Kendale, to whom they transferred it in the same year. Edward's widow Elizabeth, daughter of Sir William Croyser, soon married Sir Thomas Barre, and died in 1420. Her heir was her grandson, but the manor of Shalden passed to John de Kendale, who held it in 1428.
The sculpture on the buildings was designed by the provincial librarian, E.O.S. Scholefield and executed by Charles Marega and his assistant Bernard Carrier. For the exterior of the library Marega created 14 figures: Chief Maquinna, Captain George Vancouver, Sir Matthew Baillie Begbie, Dr. John McLoughlin, Hon. John Sebastian Helmcken, Captain James Cook, Sir James Douglas, Sir Francis Drake, Sir Alexander McKenzie, Simon Fraser, Lord Lytton, Sir Anthony Musgrave, David Thompson, and Col. R.C. Moody.
Along with another parliamentarian Sir Anthony Morgan, Sir Thomas was implicated in the notorious Blood plot of 1663, in which Thomas Blood had planned to kidnap the Duke of Ormond, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, from Dublin Castle. Sir Thomas and Sir Anthony wrote "obsequious letters" to Ormond proclaiming their innocence and devotion to him. Stanely married Jane Borrowes. They had several children including Thomas Stanley's son and heir Sir John Stanley, 1st Baronet.
Matching sets from South Wales came from his tours there with Sir Joseph Banks, who commissioned the whole series. A more ambitious tour together, to Italy, was planned but cancelled after Sir Watkin's second marriage.Hughes Sir Watkin commissioned Robert Adam to build 20–21 St James's Square in London which was constructed between 1771 and 1775. Sir Joshua Reynolds received several commissions from Sir Watkin, some of which remain with the family.
She married Arthur Barnardiston, youngest son of Sir Nathaniel Barnardiston, 23rd in lineal descent of his family. Sir Robert died in 1746, and was succeeded as 3rd Baronet by his son, Sir Samuel Clarke, who died in 1753. The Baronetcy and the Lordship passed to his brother, Sir Robert, who died in 1770. The last in the male line of the Clarkes was Sir Arthur, the 6th Baronet, who died in 1806 without issue.
After Sir Hercules died in 1811, Robert became the 2nd Baronet, Sir Robert Langrishe. He was heavily involved in theatre. And after he died in 1835 his second son, Hercules Richard (1782–1862), who had entered the Church, became the 3rd Baronet, Rev Sir Hercules Langrishe. They had eight children with his wife, Maria Cottingham. Sir James Langrishe (1823-1910) as 4th Baronet succeeded Rev Sir Hercules when he died in 1862.
His mother was the youngest of seven children born to his maternal grandparents, British prime minister Sir Robert Peel and his wife, Julia Floyd (the second daughter of Gen. Sir John Floyd, 1st Baronet). Among his mother's siblings were Julia Peel (wife of George Child Villiers, 6th Earl of Jersey), Sir Robert Peel, 3rd Baronet (who married Lady Emily Hay), Sir Frederick Peel, Sir William Peel, and Arthur Wellesley Peel, 1st Viscount Peel.
Pinkie House General Sir Archibald Hope's Grave, Inveresk Parish Kirkyard Sir Archibald Hope was born in 1735, the only surviving son of Archibald Hope and Catherine Todd, eldest daughter of Hugh Todd. Sir Archibald's father was the oldest son of Sir Thomas Hope, 8th Baronet. Sir Thomas was an early promoter of agriculture in Scotland. One of his more ambitious projects was the draining and cultivating of a marshy piece of land south of Edinburgh.
The orchestral version has often been recorded but not always with Douglas acknowledged as its co-orchestrator. Notable performers of this cycle include Sir Bryn Terfel, Sir Thomas Allen, Sir John Tomlinson, Roderick Williams, and John Shirley-Quirk.
Sir Syed Mosque is a mosque located in the heart of Aligarh Muslim University campus. It is located inside Sir Syed Hall. The tomb of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan is also enclosed within the walls of the mosque.
The Year of Sir Ivor is a 1969 documentary about the racehorse Sir Ivor. It was distributed by Anglo Amalgamated.Piggott and Sir Ivor in the spotlight BAERLEIN, RICHARD. The Guardian (1959-2003) [London (UK)] 26 Feb 1969: 19.
1768) were sons of Thomas Halford (1696–1766). His connection to Sir Henry Halford is not clear. The first baronetcy was created in 1641 for Sir Richard Halford d. 1658. The next baronets were Sir Thomas Halford d.
Wills was the son of William Day Wills and a cousin of Sir Edward Payson Wills Bt, Sir Frederick Wills Bt, Sir Frank William Wills Kt, and Henry Overton Wills III, first chancellor of the University of Bristol.
Raised as his own son by Sir George, Sir George wishes to leave his entire estate to John Wellington Junior, however young Johnny wishes to locate and return Sir George's surviving granddaughter who is somewhere in New Mexico.
Sir James Burges Sir James Bland Lamb, 1st Baronet (8 June 1752 – 13 October 1824), born James Burges and known as Sir James Burges, Bt, between 1795 and 1821, was a British author, barrister and Member of Parliament.
Sir George Campbell Deane was the Chief Justice of the Gold Coast Colony from 1929 until 1935. He took the office from Sir Philip Crampton Smyly in 1929 and was succeeded by Sir Philip Bertie Petrides in 1936.
The Chairman, President and Vice Presidents are elected by council members. The current President is Sir Dave Ramsden CBE. Vice Presidents are Sir Charlie Bean, Dame Kate Barker and Sir John Vickers. The current Chairman is Kevin Daly.
Educational campaigners Sir Anthony Seldon and Sir Peter Lampl have suggested steering cognition has application for understanding and improving social mobility.
Sir John Jenkins Sir John Jenkins (born 26 January 1955) is a British former diplomat who was ambassador to several countries.
Anne and her husband sued Sir Peter and his heir, Sir Richard, for her inheritance through her mother, Anne Throckmorton Temple.
Sir Nicholas Lechmere Sir Nicholas Lechmere (1613–1701), of Hanley Castle in Worcestershire, was an English Judge and Member of Parliament.
Sir Aston gained enormous debts and sold Ashbourne Hall in 1671 to Sir William Boothby in order to pay his creditors.
Portrait of Sir Harry Brooke Allen Sir Harry Brookes Allen (13 June 1854 – 28 March 1926) was a noted Australian pathologist.
He tutored and patronised Sir Philip Sidney, his uncle Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester, Edward Dyer, and Sir Christopher Hatton.
Sir Edwin Geoffrey Bowman, KCB (born 1946), commonly known as Sir Geoffrey Bowman, is a British lawyer and retired parliamentary draftsman.
With no interest from anyone in picking up the project Sir James and Sir Gordon soon lost interest in making movies.
Sir Alfred David McAlpine (6 November 1881 – 25 May 1944) was the founder of the construction company Sir Alfred McAlpine & Son.
Sir James Macdonnell General Sir James Macdonell or Macdonnell (1781 – 15 May 1857) was a Scottish officer of the British Army.
Sir Joseph Cooke Verco (1919) Sir Joseph Cooke Verco (1 August 1851 - 26 July 1933) was an Australian physician and conchologist.
Sir William Beeston's daughter, Jane, married, first, Sir Thomas Modyford, bart., and, secondly, Charles Long, to whom she was second wife.
Sir Wheeler was married to Marjory, daughter of Sir Harold Stuart, at Simla on 12 April 1909. They had one daughter.
Sir Christopher Yelverton. Sir Christopher Yelverton (1536 – 31 October 1612) was an English judge and Speaker of the House of Commons.
In 1990, after death of his father Sir Girjaprasad, he succeeded him as Sir Chinubhai Madhowlal Ranchhodlal, 3rd Baronet of Shahpur.
Sir Frederick Francis Baker, 2nd Baronet Sir Frederick Francis Baker, 2nd Baronet (1772–1830) was a Fellow of the Royal Society.
Sir Frederick Wright-Bruce Sir Frederick William Adolphus Wright-Bruce, GCB (14 April 1814 – 19 September 1867) was a British diplomat.
There were no surviving children from this marriage. His son Sir Richard, 3rd Baronet was the father of Sir Roger Newdigate.
Sir Bernard's aunt, Alice Drake, married Walter Raleigh and became the step-mother of Sir Walter Raleigh, the explorer and poet.
Mount Edgcumbe House, built by Sir Richard Edgcumbe Sir Richard Edgcumbe (1499 – 1 February 1562) was an English courtier and politician.
Unofficially, the Crick has been called Sir Paul's Cathedral, a reference to Sir Paul Nurse and St Paul's Cathedral in London.
The Story of Sir Launcelot and His Companions is a 1907 novel by the American illustrator and writer Howard Pyle. The book consists of a large series of episodes in the legend of the chief knight of the Round Table, Sir Launcelot, and many of his friends, including the Lady Elaine, Sir Ewaine, and Sir Gareth.
J.W. Burgon, The Life and Times of Sir Thomas Gresham, 2 Vols. (Robert Jennings, London 1839), II, pp. 500–03, at p. 502. In 1568–69 he joined with Sir Thomas Rowe (Mayor), Sir Thomas White, Sir Roger Martyn, Lionel Duckett and others in formulating a policy of retaliation against Spanish traders following the Duke of Alva's provocation.
Sir Richard Trevor (1558–1638) was a Welsh landowner, soldier and politician. He was the eldest son of John Trevor of Trevalyn Hall, Denbighshire. He was the elder brother of Sir John Trevor, Sir Thomas Trevor and Sir Sackville Trevor. He inherited the Trevor family estate of Trevalyn in Denbighshire on the death of his father in 1589.
Chamberlain was the second son of Sir Edward Chamberlain, MP. His brothers were the MPs Sir Leonard Chamberlain and Sir Ralph Chamberlain. In 1548, he had married Elizabeth Lawrence, daughter of Mr. Lawrence of Fulwell, Oxfordshire. She was the widow of Sir John Welsborne, who had died April 1548. Elizabeth and Chamberlain had one son, Richard.
Molyneux was the eldest son and heir of Sir William Molyneux of Sefton who died in 1372. His mother was Agnes Hoghton, daughter of MP Sir Adam Hoghton of Hoghton. Agnes was the widow of Sir Thomas Banaster. Molyneux's second wife was Ellen, daughter of MP, Sir Robert Urswyk, by whom he had two sons and one daughter.
Sir Thomas Paston (by 1517 – 4 September 1550), of London, was an English politician. He was a son of Bridget Heydon, a daughter of Sir Henry Heydon of Baconsthorpe, and Sir William Paston (c.1479 – 1554), a son of Sir John Paston and his first wife, Margery Brewes. He was a Member of Parliament (MP) for Norfolk in 1545.
Mundy married twice, firstly to a lady named Margaret, whose surname is unknown. His second marriage was to Juliana Browne (died 1537), the daughter of his mayoral predecessor, Sir Sir William Browne (died 1514), and the granddaughter of two mayors, Sir John Browne and Sir Edmund Shaa. By Juliana, Mundy had five sons and four daughters.
He married Dorothy, daughter and heiress of Sir Valentine Dale, LL.D., master of the requests, by whom he had issue: Dudley North, 3rd Baron North, godson of the Earl of Leicester; Elizabeth, wife of William, son of Sir Jerome Horsey; Sir John North, K.B.; Roger Gilbert, the navigator; and Mary, wife of Sir Francis Coningsby of South Mimms, Hertfordshire.
Sir Philip Cunliffe-Owen Sir Francis Philip Cunliffe-Owen (8 June 1828 – 23 March 1894) was an exhibition organizer and the Director of the South Kensington Museum in London.H. T. Wood (rev. R. C. Denis), Owen, Sir Francis Philip Cunliffe- (1828–1894), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. Obituary of Sir Francis Philip Cunliffe-Owen.
Sir John Randolph Leslie, 3rd Baronet (Irish: Sir Seaghán Leslaigh; 24 September 1885 – 14 August 1971), commonly known as Sir Shane Leslie, was an Irish-born diplomat and writer. He was a first cousin of Sir Winston Churchill, the British war time Prime Minister. In 1908, Leslie became a Roman Catholic and supported Irish Home Rule.
IV, p. 164] By grant dated 26 June 1615, King James VI and I granted, inter alia, two polls in Corsmongan to Sir George Graeme and Sir Richard Graeme to form part of the Manor of Greame. By 1619 Captain Nicholas Pynnar's Survey of Land Holders found that Sir Richard and Sir George Grimes have 2,000 acres.
He invented unflattering nicknames; he wrote later, "I did not (though I wish I had) think of calling Sir Hartley Shawcross Sir Shortly Floorcross, but I did call Sir Reginald Manningham-Buller Sir Reginald Bullying-Manner".Levin (1980), p. 15 When the latter was elevated to the peerage as Lord Dilhorne, Levin renamed him Lord Stillborn.Fagan, Kieran.
In April 1469, a revolt broke out in Yorkshire, under a leader called Robin of Redesdale. His true identity is unknown. Numerous candidates have been suggested: Sir John Conyers, steward of Warwick's Middleham Castle, either of his son, another John Conyers or Sir William Conyers of Marske (d. 1469), Sir Richard Welles, and Sir Henry Neville.
The Duke torments the people of Cameliard by parading in front of the castle, calling for someone to challenge him. Arthur accepts the challenge and defeats the Duke. After his victory, Arthur travels through the country and encounters Sir Geraint, Sir Gawaine, Sir Ewaine, and Sir Pellias. Arthur defeats the knights in battle and demands their servitude.
He was also a famous Elijah in Mendelssohn's oratorio of the same name. Williams appeared with most of the greatest conductors of his time, including Arturo Toscanini, Bruno Walter, Otto Klemperer, Sir John Barbirolli, Sir Adrian Boult and Sir Thomas Beecham. When in England he sang in every season of Sir Henry Wood's Promenade Concerts in 1921-51.
He learned from his new wife, Maude, that Sir Robert was a great doctor specializing in paralysis, and he had hoped Sir Robert could restore his face. Sir Robert agrees to try, but he is unsuccessful. Sardonicus demands he try more experimental treatments. When Sir Robert refuses, Sardonicus threatens to mutilate Maude's face to match his own.
It is served by Newnham Croft Primary School. From 1885, Sir George Darwin (son of Charles Darwin) lived in Newnham Grange (built in 1793), where he raised his children (including Sir Charles Darwin and Gwen Raverat). After the death of Sir Charles, son of Sir George, the building was acquired by the newly founded Darwin College.
1537) or to his son Sir John Moore of Moor Hayes, who was knighted at the Palace of Westminster by King Edward VI in 1549.Vivian, p.573 Sir John Moore married Katherine Pomeroy, a daughter of Sir Thomas Pomeroy (1503-1566), feudal baron of Berry Pomeroy in Devon. The Devon historian Sir William Pole (d.
Hyspamérica, p. 334. Six sorties were launched by the FAA against the British forces. RFA Sir Lancelot and probably Sir Galahad and Sir Bedivere and ground targets were attacked. Four attack aircraft were shot down, with one pilot killed.
A portrait photo of Sir Basil Scott in black and white. Sir Basil Scott was the Chief of Justice of Bombay (Currently - Mumbai City - India) Sir Basil Scott (1859 - 1926) was the Chief Justices of the Bombay High Court.
Sir James Hodsdon The grave of Sir James Hodsdon, Dean Cemetery Sir James William Beeman Hodsdon KBE, FRCSEd (1858-1928) was an eminent Scottish surgeon who served as president of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh 1914-1917.
Sir William Osler High School (SWOHS), formerly Sir William Osler Vocational school is a small specialized public vocational high school in Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, opened in 1975, named after Sir William Osler, a Canadian doctor and medical educator.
Thomas Barlow with his three sons, ca 1890. Wellcome Library Sir Thomas Barlow Sir Thomas Barlow Sir Thomas Barlow, 1st Baronet, (4 November 1845 – 12 January 1945) was a British royal physician, known for his research on infantile scurvy.
The Sir Dorabji Tata Trust was established by Sir Dorab Tata (fondly called Sir Dorabji), the elder son of Tata Group founder Jamsetji Tata. Founded in 1932, it is one of the oldest non-sectarian philanthropic organisations in India.
Tomb of Sir Edwarde Lyttelton and his wives, Helen Swynnerton and Isabel Wood, in Penkridge parish church. Attributed to the Royley workshop in Burton on Trent. Arms of Sir Edward Littleton. Sir Thomas de Littleton, grandfather of Edward Littleton.
Sir Creek was originally known as Ban Ganga. It was renamed Sir Creek after a representative of the British Raj.Everything You Need To Know About The Dispute Over Sir Creek Between India And Pakistan, India Times, 16 August 2016.
Born in January 1605, Gorges was son of Sir Edward and Dorothy Speke Gorges, and nephew of Sir Edward's younger brother, Sir Ferdinando Gorges. Although he was married twice, no details are known and there are no recorded children.
During 1537 Bigod was hanged at Tyburn; Lords Darcy and Hussey both beheaded; Thomas Moigne, M.P. for Lincoln was hanged, drawn, and quartered; Sir Robert Constable hanged in chains at Hull; and Robert Aske hanged in chains at York. In total 216 were executed: several lords and knights (including Sir Thomas Percy, Sir Stephen Hamerton, Sir William Lumley, Sir John Constable, and Sir William Constable), 7 abbots (Adam Sedbar, Abbot of Jervaulx, William Trafford, Abbot of Sawley, John Paslew, Abbot of Whalley, Matthew Mackarel, Abbot of Barlings and Bishop of Chalcedon, William Thirsk, Abbot of Fountains and the Prior of Bridlington), 38 monks, and 16 parish priests. Sir Nicholas Tempest, Bowbearer of the Forest of Bowland, was hanged at Tyburn, Sir John Bulmer hanged, drawn, and quartered and his wife Margaret Stafford burnt at the stake. In late 1538, Sir Edward Neville, Keeper of the Sewer, was beheaded.
Chronological list of Governors of the Hudson's Bay Company: # 1670–82 Prince Rupert of the Rhine # 1683–85 James Stuart, Duke of York – resigned as governor to become James II, King of England. # 1685–92 John Churchill, Earl of Marlborough # 1692–96 Sir Stephen Evance # 1696–1700 Sir William Trumbull # 1700–12 Sir Stephen Evance # 1712–43 Sir Bibye Lake # 1744–46 Benjamin Pitt # 1746–50 Thomas Knapp # 1750–60 Sir Atwell Lake # 1760–70 Sir William Baker # 1770–82 Sir Bibye Lake, Jr. # 1782–99 Samuel Wegg # 1799–1807 Sir James Winter Lake # 1807–12 William Mainwaring # 1812–22 Joseph Berens # 1822–52 Sir John Henry Pelly in 1826, Simpson becomes governor of the Canadian region. # 1852–56 Andrew Wedderburn Colvile # 1856–58 John Shepherd # 1858–63 Henry Hulse Berens # 1863–68 Sir Edmund Walker Head # 1868–69 John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley # 1869–74 Sir Stafford Henry Northcote # 1874–80 George Joachim Goschen # 1880–89 Eden Colvile # 1889–1914 Donald Alexander Smith # 1914–15 Sir Thomas Skinner # 1916–25 Sir Robert Molesworth Kindersley # 1925–31 Charles Vincent Sale # 1931–52 Sir Patrick Ashley Cooper – first governor to visit HBC operations in Canada. # 1952–65 William "Tony" Keswick # 1965–70 Derick Heathcoat-Amory # 1970–82 George T. Richardson # 1982–94 Donald S. McGiverin # 1994–97 David E. Mitchell # 1997–2006 L. Yves Fortier # 2006–08 Jerry Zucker # 2008 Anita Zucker – first female governor.
Sir Robert Wright. Sir Robert Wright (c. 1634 – 1689) was an English judge and Chief Justice of the King’s Bench 1687–89.
116-17 (Internet Archive). remarried to Sir Edward Echyngham of Barsham, Suffolk (died 1527).Will of Sir Edward Echyngham of Barsham (P.
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Sir John James Baddeley Sir John James Baddeley, 1st Baronet, (22 December 1842 - 28 June 1926) was a British magistrate and baronet.
Sir John Hawkins Square is a public square located in Plymouth, England. The square is dedicated to naval commander Sir John Hawkins.
His daughter Juliana married Sir Richard Berney, Sheriff of Norfolk in 1610, and was the mother of Sir Richard Berney, 1st Baronet.
Sir Robert Tasker Sir Robert Inigo Tasker, TD, DL, JP (20 October 186828 February 1959) was a British architect and Conservative politician.
Sir Herbert Angas Parsons, KBE, KC (1872-1945), generally known as Sir Angas Parsons, was a Cornish Australian lawyer, politician and judge.
The first Baron was the nephew of Sir Robert Lyle, 1st Baronet, and of Sir Alexander Lyle, 1st Baronet (see Lyle Baronets).
After his death in 1684 in straightened financial circumstances, Sir Thomas' four daughters sold the Knowlton estate to Admiral Sir John Narborough.
Sir David Rae's grave, Inveresk Sir David Rae, Lord Eskgrove, 1st Baronet FRSE FSA (1724–1804) was a Scottish advocate and judge.
Sir Francis Grant. Sir William Erle PC QC FRS (1 October 179328 January 1880) was an English lawyer, judge and Whig politician.
Sir John Vaughan Judge John Vaughan Sir John Vaughan SL (14 September 1603 – 10 December 1674), of Trawsgoed, was a British justice.
Sir Joshua Walmsley (1794–1871) was an English businessman and Liberal Party politician. Sir Joshua Walmsley, portrait about 1843 by William Daniel.
Sir William Arthur Harvey Druitt, KCB (19 April 1910 – 6 February 1973), commonly known as Sir Harvey Druitt, was a British lawyer.
In 2014 won a title of Italian Champion after winning matches against Sir Safety Perugia.SCUDETTO ALLA LUBE! APPLAUSI ALLA GRANDE SIR! - sirsafetyperugia.
He had married firstly Mary Wilbraham, daughter of Sir Richard Wilbraham of Woodhey and secondly Frances Cholmondeley sister of Sir Robert Cholmondeley.
Sir Archibald Acheson by George Jamesone, 1631 Sir Archibald Acheson of Glencairn, 1st Baronet, (1583 – 9 September 1634) was a Scottish jurist.
Sir Alfred East, by Philip de Laszlo, 1907 Sir Alfred Edward East (15 December 1844 – 28 September 1913) was an English painter.
That's pretty funny. Then why don't you quit and find another career, sir?" / Biggs: "...Hmmmm..." / Wedge: "Ha ha ha! Just kidding, sir.
Sir Lewes Roberts. Sir Lewes Roberts, also Captain Lewis Roberts (1596–1641), was a British merchant with the Levant Company and writer.
Sir George Deacon Sir George Edward Raven Deacon FRS FRSE (21 March 1906 - 16 November 1984) was a British oceanographer and chemist.
Sir Charles Waldstein (March 30, 1856 – March 21, 1927), known as Sir Charles Walston from 1918–1927, was an Anglo-American archaeologist.
Sir John Randles English Politician Sir John Scurrah Randles (25 December 1857 – 11 February 1945) was a British businessman and Conservative politician.
He married Katherine Neville, daughter of Sir Edward Neville of Addington and Eleanor Windsor, daughter of Sir Andrew Windsor, 1st Baron Windsor.
The Sir Christopher Ondaatje Medal for Exploration, named after Gold Medal and Camsell Medal recipient Sir Christopher Ondaatje, was established in 2013.
Included: # 1838-1839, Commodore, Sir John Strutt Peyton. # 1839-1842, Commodore, Sir Peter John Douglas. # 1842-1843, Commodore, Hon. Henry Dilkes Byng.
Sir William Fergusson, 1st Baronet Sir William Fergusson, 1st Baronet FRCS FRS FRSE (20 March 180810 February 1877) was a Scottish surgeon.
Sir George Hayes Sir George Hayes (19 June 1805 – 24 November 1869) was an English judge, a justice of the Queen's Bench.
Sir Edmund Filmer, 1830 portrait Sir Edmund Filmer, 8th Baronet (14 June 1809 – 8 January 1857) was an English Conservative Party politician.
He married Agnes, daughter of John Heynes, by whom he became the ancestor of Sir John Croke and of Sir George Croke.
Sir Lowry's Pass Village is a town near the base of Sir Lowry's Pass, about 60 km from Cape Town, South Africa.
Wills of Sir John Morgan of Chilworth (P.C.C. 1621), of Dame Elizabeth Morgan (P.C.C. 1633), and of Sir Nathaniel Rich (P.C.C. 1636).
Sir Gerard Lowther, Bt in 1916 Sir Gerard Augustus Lowther, 1st Baronet (16 February 1858 – 5 April 1916) was a British diplomat.
Tyrconnel became Lord Lieutenant during the reign of James II, overhauling the Royal Irish Army which then fought in the War of the Two Kings # Robert; # Peter; and # Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell. Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell, Sir William's eighth son Of Sir William's daughters, Margaret married the landowner Sir Henry Talbot; Frances married James Cusack, grandson of Sir Thomas Cusack, Lord Chancellor of Ireland; Eleanor married Sir Henry O'Neill, 1st Baronet, of Killelagh, and was the mother of Sir Neil O'Neill and of Rose O'Neill, foster daughter and heir-at-law of Rose MacDonnell, Marchioness of Antrim; Mary married Sir John Dongan, 2nd Baronet, and had at least ten children, including Sir Walter Dongan, 3rd Baronet, William Dongan, 1st Earl of Limerick, and Thomas Dongan, 2nd Earl of Limerick.
In the close-knit world of London traders at the dawn of the eighteenth century, Levett often found himself acting in conjunction with, or competing against, most of the other large traders known to him. At a meeting of the Governors and adventurers of the London East India Company held on 30 April 1701, for instance, Levett found himself in the company of his fellow London traders and ranking India servants "Gov. T. Cooke, Deputy Sir Samuel Dashwood, Sir Thomas Rawlinson, Sir Jonathan Andrews, Sir John Fleet, Sir William Gore, Sir Henry Johnson, Sir William Langhorne, Sir William Prichard and Mr. Vansittart."Revue de l'Extreme-Orient, Henri Cordier, Paris, 1887 In the year of 1695, Levett's increasingly powerful firm accounted for 3,894,864 pounds of tobacco imported into England.
Nine Worthies of London is a book by Richard Johnson, written in 1592, that borrows the theme from the Nine Worthies. The book is subtitled Explaining the Honourable Excise of Armes, the Vertues of the Valiant, and the Memorable Attempts of Magnanimous Minds; Pleasaunt for Gentlemen, not unseemly for Magistrates, and most profitable for Prentises, celebrated the rise of nine famous Londoners through society from the ranks of apprentices or commoners. The nine were Sir William Walworth, Sir Henry Pritchard, Sir Thomas White, Sir William Sevenoke, Sir John Hawkwood, Sir John Bonham, Christopher Croker, Sir Henry Maleverer of Cornhill, and Sir Hugh Calverley. The term "Nine Worthies" was later used to refer to nine of the privy councillors of William III: Devonshire, Dorset, Monmouth, Edward Russell, Carmarthen, Pembroke, Nottingham, Marlborough, and Lowther.
By his first wife, Robert Lee was the father of Sir Anthony Lee, and Thomas Lee was thus a cousin of the half blood of Sir Anthony Lee's eldest son and heir, the courtier Sir Henry Lee, Queen Elizabeth's champion.
Sir Hugh Dow, Sir Frederick Seaford, East African Royal Commission. 1st Visit to Africa Spring. 1953 Sir Hugh Dow (8 May 1886 – 20 November 1978) was an Indian civil during the British Raj. He served as the Governor of Sindh.
William Harold Cubley (9 October 1816 – 1896) was an English painter of landscapes and portraits in the tradition of Sir Joshua Reynolds. He studied with Sir William Beechey, and was an important early influence on Sir William Nicholson and William Caparne.
' These included: Chief Justice Coke, who had been Solicitor to the High Court of Justice, Major-General Harrison, Col. John Jones (also a member of the High Court of Justice), Mr. Thomas Scot, Sir. Henry Vane, Sir. Arthur Haslerig, Sir.
Robert Dixson (16 May 1842 – 27 November 1891) was a tobacco merchant and politician in the colony of South Australia. He was a brother of Sir Hugh Dixson, father of Sir Hugh Robert Denison and uncle of Sir William Dixson.
He claimed that Sir Thomas bullied him into marrying his guardian's daughter - Lucy Dutton. Sir Thomas married a third time to Anne, the fourth daughter of Sir William Stonhouse, 1st Bart. of Radley. A son by her died in infancy.
A character named Sir Daniel appears in other Arthurian romances as well, often as the brother of Sir Dinadan and Sir Le Cote Mal Taile. An edition of the Middle High German lines, with facing English translation, was published in 2003.
Clark, Linda. ‘Bagot, Sir William (d. 1407)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 He became one of Richard II's "continual councillors" together with Sir John Bussy and Sir Henry Green. The three continual councillors acquired an infamous reputation.
Archibald Hope was the second son of Sir John Hope, Lord Craighall, 2nd Baronet Hope of Craighall and Margaret Murray, daughter of Sir Archibald Murray of Blackbarony. He was the grandson of Sir Thomas Hope, 1st Baronet Hope of Craighall.
Sir Gelly Meyrick (c. 1556 – 1601), supported of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex and was a conspirator in his rebellion. Sir Francis Meyrick (died 29 July 1660), brother of Sir Gelly, commandeered the west Wales contingents in Irelend in 1599.
The Story of the Champions of the Round Table is a 1905 novel by the American illustrator and writer Howard Pyle. The book consists of many Arthurian legends, including those concerning of the young Sir Launcelot, Sir Tristram, and Sir Percival.
The Attorney- General Sir Frederic Thesiger led for the prosecution, assisted by Solicitor- General Sir Fitzroy Kelly. Newman was supported by a formidable team of lawyers led by Sir Alexander Cockburn and including sympathetic Anglo-Catholic Edward Lowth Badeley.Ward (1912), p.
Young published more than 50 books. Among those are biographies of musicians such as George Frideric Handel (1947), Ralph Vaughan Williams (1953), Sir Edward Elgar (1955), Robert Schumann (1957), Zoltán Kodály (1964), Sir Arthur Sullivan (1971) and Sir George Grove (1980).
The Marquesses of Aberdeen and Temair are related to the Marquesses of Huntly. Sir John Gordon (d. c. 1395) of Strathbogie, ancestor of Sir John Gordon, 1st Baronet, was the brother of Elizabeth Gordon. She married Sir Alexander Seton (d.
Sir Charles died, aged 86, at Tredegar House. The mourners at his funeral included Sir Benjamin Hall, Charles Kemeys Kemeys Tynte, and Sir George Tyler, 1st Baronet, and he was buried in the family vault at St Basil's Church, Bassaleg.
Full-page portrait of Sir John Mandeville. Created 1459. Sir John Mandeville is the supposed author of The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, a travel memoir which first circulated between 1357 and 1371. The earliest surviving text is in French.
Sir Edward Coke, The Selected Writings and Speeches of Sir Edward Coke, ed. Steve Sheppard (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2003), vol. 1, pp. 195–97. After Coke, the most famous common law jurist of the seventeenth century is Sir Matthew Hale.
Sir John Philipps, 6th Baronet PC (c. 1701 – 22 June 1764) was a Welsh Jacobite politician. Picton Castle Sir John was the son of Sir John Philipps, 4th Baronet. He studied at Pembroke College, Oxford, and went on to Lincoln's Inn.
They had one daughter, Frances, who was married in 1716 to Sir John Aubrey, 3rd Baronet. Jephson's widow was remarried successively to Sir John Aubrey, 2nd Baronet, to Sir Charles Kemeys, 3rd Baronet, and to William Aubrey, before dying in 1717.
Sir Herbert Frank Cobbold Ereaut (6 May 1919 – 11 September 1998) was Bailiff of Jersey from 1975 to 1985. Sir Peter Crill was appointed Deputy Bailiff in 1974 and then succeed Sir Frank Ereaut as Bailiff of Jersey in January 1986.
Sir William Courtenay ( – 29 September 1557) was a landowner in Devon. He was the son of George Courtenay (d. 1533) and Catherine, daughter of Sir George St Ledger of Annery. He succeeded his grandfather Sir William Courtenay, of Powderham in 1535.
Sir William Howe General Sir William Howe (18,000)McGuire (2006), p. 172. The author gave British total strength. Quartermaster General: Brigadier General Sir William Erskine, 1st Baronet Note: Each brigade had two or four 3-pound or 4-pound cannons attached.
Sir Owen Wynn, 3rd Baronet (1592–1660) became Lord after the death of his brother Sir Richard Wynn, 2nd Baronet during a Civil War battle. Owen was succeeded at Gwydir by his son Sir Richard Wynn, 4th Baronet in 1660.
Skullion pleads with Sir Godber to be reinstated, but is refused. Skullion hits Sir Godber, causing him to fall and sustain a mortal injury. Skullion quickly leaves. Two senior academics find the dying Sir Godber who whispers them one word: Skullion.
File:William Feilding, 1st Earl of Denbigh by John Beugo, published by Hugh Paton, after Sir Anthony van Dyck.jpg File:('Sir') James Ramsay ('Black Ramsay') by John Beugo, after Sebastian Furck.jpg File:Adam Ferguson by John Beugo, after Sir Joshua Reynolds.jpg File:John Napier.
Garter arms of Sir William Haryngton Sir William Harrington of Hornby (d. 1440), son of Sir Nicholas Harrington, was an early fifteenth-century English northern knight, fighting in the Hundred Years' War and serving the crown in the north of England.
No Sir!. Since then, the director of Sir! No Sir!, David Zeiger, has been involved in resurrecting the original documentary film F.T.A.. It was shown publicly in Los Angeles in early 2009 at the American Cinematheque with a panel that included two of the original performers in the show. F.T.A. also had its broadcast premiere on the Sundance Channel on February 23, 2009. The DVD of F.T.A. is now sold on the Sir! No Sir! website.
He was the son of Sir George St Leger (c.1475-1536), of Annery, by his wife, Anne Knyvett, daughter of Sir Edmund Knyvett of BuckenhamSon of Sir William Knyvett and his wife Eleanor Tyrrell. His paternal grandparents were Sir James St Leger, of Shipton, and Lady Anne Butler, heiress of Annery, daughter of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormonde and great-aunt of Queen Anne Boleyn. One of his great-uncles was Sir Thomas St Leger (c.
Bibby Island (variously named on maps as Bibyos, Sir Bibby, Sir Bibby's, Sir Bybie's, and Sir Bibye's) was named for Sir Bibby Lake, governor from 1712 to 1743. It is one of several uninhabited Canadian arctic islands in the Kivalliq Region, Nunavut, Canada. It is located within western Hudson Bay, from the community of Whale Cove. Other islands in the vicinity include Airartuuq Island, Flattop Island, Imiligaarjuk Island, Imilijjuaq Island, Irik Island, Ivuniraarjuq Island, Kayak Island, and Walrus Island.
His sister Ann Turvile married Sir John Leeke of Edmonton. His step-sister by his mother's second marriage to William St Barbe, Ursula St Barbe (1587-1670) married Sir Francis Verney (d. 1615), a son of his mother's third husband Sir Edmund Verney (d. 1599) and his second wife Audrey Gardner (d. 1588) widow of Sir Peter Carew. After Francis's death, in 1619 Ursula married William son of Sir William Clark of Hitcham, and thirdly John Chicely.
When the Liberal Party split in 1931 over the issue of free trade, he sided with Sir Herbert Samuel and against the Liberal National breakaway led by Sir John Simon. Under the leadership of Sir Archie Sinclair, he rose to prominence in the party. Harris was a strong supporter of the social policies advocated by Sir William Beveridge and was key to getting Beveridge to run for the Liberals.Malcolm Baines (1998) "Sir Percy Harris" in Brack et al.
Sir Perfidious has arranged a marriage between his Niece and a local knight, Sir Gregory Fop. His name clues the audience that the intended bridegroom is a fool. Sir Gregory comes to meet his intended bride with a witty friend named Cunningham (the play text pronounces his name "cunning game"). As a practical joke — his idea of a witticism — Sir Perfidious lets his Niece believe that Cunningham is her future husband, before introducing her to the real Sir Gregory.
The judges were the Lord Chief Justice, Sir Nicholas Tindal; Sir James Parke; and Sir John Williams, who was notorious for sentencing the Tolpuddle Martyrs to transportation in 1834. Counsel for the Crown was the Attorney General, Sir John Campbell; Frost's counsel was Sir Frederick Pollock. While the trial was taking place, measures were taken to protect Monmouth against Chartist insurgents. Troops were billeted at the White Swan, and some were stationed at the gatehouse on the Monnow Bridge.
However, Sir Thomas Bourchier was subsequently granted the manor of Swakeleys and Covelhall (Cowley). Upon Sir Thomas' death in 1510, the manor passed to Sir John Peeche as his executor. Sir John had no children, so Swakeleys passed to the Earl of Devon, Henry Courteney in 1521. The Earl granted a licence to control Swakeleys to Sir William Fitzwilliam in 1531, who was acting as trustee for Ralph Pexall. St Giles' church dates back to 1335.
It was orchestrated by Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton through Sir Maurice Berkeley, Sir Herbert Croft, Sir Henry Neville, and Sir Edwin Sandys. Particularly the target of parliamentary tactics by Sandys, the bill to ratify the proposed treaty was bogged down for over two years, and in mid-1607 the Parliament of England passed only a much mutilated form, which abolished laws hostile to Scotland.Theodore Rabb, Jacobean Gentleman: Sir Edwin Sandys, 1561–1629 (Princeton, 1998), pp. 130–2.
Sir Richard Sandys, 1st Baronet (6 January 1670 – 5 May 1726) was an English baronet. Sandys was the son of Sir Richard Sandys (son of Colonel Edwin Sandys, son of Sir Edwin Sandys, second son of Edwin Sandys, Archbishop of York) and his wife Mary, daughter of Sir Henry Heyman, Bt. He was created a baronet on 15 December 1684. He married firstly Jane Ward, daughter of Rev. Thomas Ward, and secondly Mary Rolle, daughter of Sir Francis Rolle.
Young was born in Oxford in 1941 into a prominent English family, the elder son of Sir George Peregrine "Gerry" Young, 5th Baronet and Elisabeth Knatchbull-Hugessen. His paternal ancestors and cousins include Admiral Sir George Young, an admiral in the Royal Navy and father of the first Baronet; civil servant Sir William Mackworth Young; colonial governors Sir Hubert Winthrop Young and Sir Mark Aitchison Young; mountaineer Geoffrey Winthrop Young, and Hilton Young, 1st Baron Kennet. Sir Brian Young (1922–2017), director-general of the Independent Television Authority, was his cousin. Young's father was a diplomat who met Elisabeth while serving in Beijing (where her father, Sir Hughe Knatchbull-Hugessen, was British Ambassador).
The university has produced ten Nobel Prize winners, from the fields of science, medicine, economics and peace. The Nobel laureates include the physician Sir Ronald Ross, physicist Charles Barkla, physicist Martin Lewis Perl, the physiologist Sir Charles Sherrington, physicist Sir James Chadwick, chemist Sir Robert Robinson, chemist Har Gobind Khorana, physiologist Rodney Porter, economist Ronald Coase and physicist Joseph Rotblat. Sir Ronald Ross was also the first British Nobel laureate in 1902. The University is also associated with Professors Ronald Finn and Sir Cyril Clarke who jointly won the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award in 1980 and Sir David Weatherall who won the Lasker-Koshland Special Achievement Award in Medical Science in 2010.
Sir Ivar was the son of Sir Iain Colquhoun, 7th Baronet and his wife Geraldine Bryde (Dinah) Tennant. He was educated at Eton.
John Dryden wrote a poem entitled, "To Sir My Honored Friend, Sir Robert Howard," in which Dryden praised Howard for his poetic abilities.
Portrait of Sir William Paddy, dated 1600. Collection of St. John's College, Oxford. Sir William Paddy (1554–1634) was an English royal physician.
Sir William Curtis, 1st Baronet as Bonnie Willie. George Cruikshank, 1822.Sir William Curtis, 1st Bt. National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
Arms of Sir Thomas Banastre, KG Sir Thomas Banastre KG (c. 1334 - 16 December 1379) was a Knight of the Garter from England.
The river was named by local runholders Sir Charles Clifford and Sir Frederick Weld in the 1850s after the Greta River in Yorkshire.
She married Reginald Ranald Macdonald, from 1836 known as Sir Reginald Ranald Seton- Steuart. Sir Reginald was created 2nd Baronet through the marriage.
Bank of England, London, 2013. Archived here. Retrieved 28 January 2016. He was a brother of Sir James Houblon and Sir John Houblon.
There is one Governor of Victoria, Sir Charles Hotham, and one Governor-General of Australia, Sir Isaac Isaacs, buried at Melbourne General Cemetery.
Sir George Schuster Sir George Ernest Schuster (25 April 1881 – 5 June 1982) was a British barrister, financier, colonial administrator and Liberal politician.
Sir John Hayward, 1630, by Willem de Passe. Sir John Hayward (c. 1564 – 27 June 1627) was an English historian, lawyer and politician.
Sir William Curtis 1st Baronet as Bonnie Willie. George Cruikshank, 1822.Sir William Curtis, 1st Bt. National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
Sir Brian Leon Barder (20 June 1934 – 19 September 2017)Sir Brian Barder was a British diplomat, author, blogger and civil liberties advocate.
Sir William Forbes in 1915 Lt. Col. Sir William de Guise Forbes (21 June 1856 – 14 February 1936) was a British railway manager.
Sir Charles Cooper (c.1880) Sir Charles Cooper (1795 – 24 May 1887) was a politician and the first Chief Justice of South Australia.
His other surviving work suggests that he was captured alongside Sir Roger Vaughan by Jasper Tudor. Sir Roger was executed whereas Dafydd survived.
On 1 June 1696 Sir Richard Newman married Frances, daughter of Sir Thomas Samwell, 1st Bt, and had three sons and four daughters.
The House of Commons, 1833 by Sir George Hayter. Sir Robert Henry Clive (23 December 1877 – 13 May 1948) was a British diplomat.
Middlebrook Sir William Middlebrook Sir William Middlebrook, 1st Baronet (22 February 1851 – 30 June 1936) was an English solicitor and Liberal Party politician.
Sir Daniel Cooper, 1st Bt. (1863, Colony of New South Wales) The baronetcy is extant. Currently held by Sir William Cooper, 6th Bt.
Jenny Booth (13 June 2007). 'Greatest polar explorer' Sir Wally Herbert dies, The Times.Bob Headland (15 June 2007). Sir Wally Herbert, The Guardian.
Sir Thomas Stanhope (1540 – 3 August 1596) was the son and heir of Sir Michael Stanhope, and a Member of Parliament for Nottinghamshire.
Sir Thomas Callender Sir Thomas Octavius Callender (9 April 1855 - 2 December 1938) was an engineer and businessman, who promoted the electrical industry.
Sir Christopher Mayhew, 19 October 1964 – 19 February 1966. # The Rt. Hon. Sir J. P. William Mallalieu, 19 February 1966 – 6 January 1967.
Sir John Barran Sir John Barran, 1st Baronet (3 August 1821 – 3 May 1905) was a British clothing manufacturer and Liberal Party politician.
Lawley married Susan Fisher, daughter of Sir Thomas Fisher, 1st Baronet of Islington. He had one daughter Ursula who married Sir Robert Bertie.
His eldest daughter, Mary Louisa, married Sir Charles Campbell MacLeod and his younger daughter, Evelyn Wynn, married Maj.-Gen. Sir Hayward Reader Whitehead.
Sir Robert Heaton Rhodes (27 February 1861 – 30 July 1956), usually known as Sir Heaton Rhodes, was a New Zealand politician and lawyer.
Norman's grandfather was Sir Henry Norman, 1st Baronet, a Liberal politician, and his father was aviator and engineer Sir Nigel Norman, 2nd Baronet.
At this time, his first wife Honora was buried 16 August 1614 at Waltham Abbey. Hay was sent to France in 1616 to negotiate the marriage of Princess Christina with Prince Charles. Before he left London news arrived that the French fashion in clothing had changed and his outfits would have to be remade. Lady Haddington made a joke about his companions, that there were three mignards; himself, Sir Henry Rich and Sir George Goring, three dancers; Sir Gilbert Hawten, John Auchmoutie, and Abercromby, and three fools or buffoons; Sir Thomas German, Sir Ralph Shelton, and Sir Thomas Badger.
Famous Phantom officers included: actors Major David Niven (who initially commanded A Squadron and who remarked in a letter, "these were wonderful days which I would not have missed for anything"), Tam Williams and Willoughby Gray; MPs Sir Jakie Astor, The Hon. Michael Astor, Peter Baker, Sir Hugh Fraser, Maurice Macmillan (Viscount Macmillan), Sir Carol Mather and Christopher Mayhew (Lord Mayhew); Law Lord Nigel Bridge, Baron Bridge of Harwich; journalist Sir Peregrine Worsthorne; and Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Robert Mark. Others, including Sir Gordon Richards, Michael Oakeshott and John Hislop, excelled in the fields of academia, athletics and horseracing.
Notable former tenants include Sir Melford Stevenson QC, Leslie Scarman QC, Thomas Bingham QC, Charles Falconer QC, Peter Goldsmith QC, Mark Potter QC, Sir Denis Henry QC, Sir Nicholas Underhill QC, Sir Henry Brooke QC and Sir Francis Jacobs QC. The set became established as pre-eminent under the leadership of Sir Melford Stevenson PC in the 1950s. This status as part of the 'Magic Circle' was further cemented in the 1960s and 1970s by a number of members who were widely regarded as leading advocates of their generation.History: Fountain Court Chambers The present head of chambers is Bankim Thanki QC.
Gov.) # 1829–1830 Lieutenant- General Sir Tomkyns Hilgrove Turner # 1830 Robert Kennedy (Act. Gov.) # 1830–1832 General Sir Tomkyns Hilgrove Turner # 1832–1835 Colonel Sir Stephen Remnant Chapman # 1835 Henry G. Hunt (Act. Gov.) # 1835–1836 Robert Kennedy # 1836–1839 Colonel (from 1837, Major-General) Sir Stephen Remnant Chapman # 1839–1846 Lieutenant-Colonel (later Major General) Sir William Reid # 1846 Lieutenant-Colonel William N. Hutchinson (Act. Gov) # 1846–1852 Captain (later Admiral) Sir Charles Elliot # 1852–1853 Lieutenant-Colonel William Hassell Eden, 56th Regiment of Foot (ex-88th Regiment of Foot, later Commandant at Chatham) (Act.
The monument raised for her was destroyed in the Great Fire of London, together with most of the church. Sir William remained clubbable, and of good appetite. At the Grocers' Company feast in June 1561 he was a guest in the company of the Lord Mayor (Sir William Chester), Sir Roger Cholmeley, Sir Martin Bowes, Sir William Garrard, Thomas Lodge and others, entertained with clerks singing and viols playing. A month later he stood deputy for the Earl of Shrewsbury as godfather at the christening of the son of Garter King of Arms Sir Gilbert Dethick.
The first book finds Sir Able on a quest to find the sword Eterne, which Dissiri says would be used by a knight worthy of her. Sir Able meets with Sir Ravd, who teaches him something of what it means to be a knight, then is killed by bandits. Sir Able takes a sea voyage to meet with Sir Ravd's lord but the ship is waylaid by cannibal barbarians called Osterlings and Sir Able is wounded. Sea Aelf take Able to Aelfrice to meet with Garsecg who teaches him about the ocean and shows him how to heal himself.
Sir becomes distraught, and Norman's attempts to comfort Sir as he lies down to sleep are largely ignored. Norman asserts that he is "never despairing," and claims to be unconcerned about his own legacy, in contrast to Sir. Sir asks Norman to read aloud the dedication to his memoirs, which contain dedications to Her Ladyship and the "spirit of all actors and those who do the work of the theatre ... and the memory of William Shakespeare"; as Norman does so, Sir dies. Norman slowly realises this, and becomes distraught and spiteful towards Sir, who has failed to mention him in the dedications.
Sir Reginald (or Reynold) Scott (1512–15 December 1554), Sheriff of Kent in 1541–42 and Captain of Calais and Sandgate, who married firstly Emeline Kempe, the daughter of Sir William Kempe of Olantigh, Kent, by Eleanor Browne, the daughter of Sir Robert Browne, by whom he was the father of Sir Thomas Scott (1535–30 December 1594) and two daughters, Katherine Scott, who married John Baker (c.1531–1604×6), by whom she was the mother of Richard Baker, and Anne Scott, who married Walter Mayney. Sir Reginald Scott married secondly Mary Tuke, the daughter of Sir Brian Tuke.
British architects whose drawings, and in some cases models of their buildings, in the collection, include: Inigo Jones,John Harris & Gordon Higgott, Inigo Jones Complete Architectural Drawings, 1989. Sir Christopher Wren, Sir John Vanbrugh, Nicholas Hawksmoor, William Kent, James Gibbs, Robert Adam,Alister Rowan, Catalogues of Architectural Drawings in the V&A;: Robert Adam, 1988. Sir William Chambers,Michael Snodin (ed.), Catalogues of Architectural Drawings in the V&A;: Sir William Chambers, 1996. James Wyatt, Henry Holland, John Nash, Sir John Soane,Pierre de la Ruffuniere du Prey, Catalogues of Architectural Drawings in the V&A;: Sir John Soane, 1985.
Sir James Layburn's role in this battle was evidently important as he is mentioned in two accounts or despatches sent by Wharton to the Earl of Hertford. Sir Thomas lists four knights with him in Carlisle on 24 November, Sir William Musgrave, Sir Thomas Curwen, Sir John Lowther and Sir James Layburn: Walter Strickland and William Pennington head the list of 18 esquires and others that were with him there.'XIV. Nov. 23. Wharton to Hertford' (with enclosed list), in J. Bain (ed.), The Hamilton Papers. Letters and Papers Illustrating the Political Relations of England and Scotland in the XVIth century, Vol.
Robert de Ros of Helmsley, Yorkshire, born before 1237, was the son of Sir William de Ros (died c.1264/5) and Lucy FitzPeter, the daughter of Peter FitzHerbert and Alice FitzRoger. He had five brothers, Sir Peter, Sir William, Sir Alexander, Sir Herbert, and John, and two sisters, Lucy and Alice.. He was the grandson of Sir Robert de Ros, one of the twenty-five barons who guaranteed the observance of Magna Carta, and Isabel of Scotland, an illegitimate daughter of William the Lion, King of the Scots, by Isabel, a daughter of Robert Avenel..
This Knight of the Green Chapel is none other than Sir Bertilak, who has appeared to him up until now in the form of an ordinary man. Sir Gawain has been innocently flirting with Sir Bertilak's wife (although she would have preferred it to have been less innocent) and for a kiss that he stole, and for the gift of a girdle that he did not give, in turn, to his host, Sir Gawain receives a superficial neck wound. The girdle that Sir Gawain wears, a gift from Sir Bertilak's wife, prevents him, while he wears it, from ever being killed.
The founders of Sons in Retirement chose the rooster as its symbol. Sons In Retirement (SIR) is a fraternal organization of retired men. It has about 110 branches and 13,000 members SIR web site in Northern California and Central California. SIR was founded in San Mateo, California in 1958 SIR home page and subsequently incorporated as a non-profit public-benefit corporation.
The grandson of Sir John de Strivelyn was Sir William who had two sons. The succession passed through his eldest son, also called William, for four generations. After this it passed to a grandson of the second son, Sir John de Strivelyn, third Laird of Cragernard. Sir John was the governor of the royal Dumbarton Castle and sheriff of Dumbartonshire.
The Honourable Company: A History of the English East India Company. Macmillan Publishing Company, New York p. 385. His nomination, made by the Court of Directors, would in future be subject to the approval of a Council of Four appointed by the Crown. Initially, the Council consisted of Lieutenant General Sir John Clavering, Sir George Monson, Sir Richard Barwell, and Sir Philip Francis.
Malaprop, Lydia, Julia, and Sir Anthony of the duel, and they all rush off to stop it. Sir Lucius explains the cause of his challenge, but Lydia denies any connection to him, and admits her love for Jack. Mrs. Malaprop announces that she is Delia, but Sir Lucius recoils in horror, realising that he has been hoaxed. Sir Anthony consoles Mrs.
Sir John Shelton (1476/7 – 1539), courtier, of Shelton near Norwich, Norfolk, England, was, through his marriage, an uncle of Henry VIII's second wife, Anne Boleyn. Sir John was appointed comptroller of the joint household of the King's daughters, Mary and Elizabeth. Sir John and Lady Shelton (née Anne Boleyn, Sir Thomas Boleyn's sister) were also Governor and Governess to the King's children.
Sir Edward Littleton and Margaret Devereux. Sons of Sir Edward Littleton and Margaret Devereux, from the double tomb in St. Michael's church, Penkridge. The younger Edward Littleton is pictured at the head of his brothers. Littleton's parents were Sir Edward Littleton (died 1610) of Pillaton Hall, near Penkridge, Staffordshire, and Margaret Devereux, the daughter of Sir William Devereux of Merevale Hall, Warwickshire .
He died in Ireland in March 1701. He had married Anne, daughter of Sir Hardress Waller and Elizabeth Dowdall. He was succeeded as baronet by his son George, who married Mary, the daughter of Sir Peter Stanley, 2nd Bt and his wife Elizabeth Leigh, daughter of Sir John Leigh. He also had a daughter Anne, who married Sir Francis Blundell, 3rd Baronet.
Military experts were divided as to the aptness of each course. Lord Roberts lent his support to the advocates of retention. Arrayed against him were formidable military authorities, such as Sir Donald Stewart, Sir Neville Chamberlain, Sir John Adye, Sir Charles Gough and Lord Chelmsford. In hindsight the danger of an attack upon India from Russia in 1895 were infinitesimal.
Sir Edward Hales, 2nd Baronet (1626 – c. 1684) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1660 to 1681. Hales was the son of Sir John Hales and his wife Christian Cromer, daughter of Sir James Cromer, of Tunstall and grandson of Sir Edward Hales, 1st Baronet. He matriculated at Magdalen College, Oxford on 20 May 1642, aged 16.
Her father was a son of Sir John Shelton and Margaret Parker, daughter of the heir to Henry, Lord Morley. John Shelton's mother was Anne Shelton née Boleyn, aunt of Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII's queen, and his sisters included Madge Shelton and Mary Shelton. Her aunt Mary Shelton married Sir John Scudamore. Audrey Shelton married Sir Thomas Walsingham, cousin of Sir Francis Walsingham.
The Order of the National Hero is the highest honour that can be given by the government of the Bahamas. It was founded in 2016. The first dedicatees of the Order were Sir Lynden Oscar Pindling, Sir Roland Theodore Symonette, Sir Milo Boughton Butler, and Sir Cecil Vincent Wallace-Whitfield, all of whom were granted the Order posthumously on July 10, 2018.
Adrian Fortescue was the son of Sir John Fortescue of Ponsbourne Park at Newgate Street Village in Hertfordshire. He descended from Richard Fortescue, younger brother of Sir Henry Fortescue (fl. 1426), Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas in Ireland, and of Sir John Fortescue (ca. 1394ca. 1480), Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, all sons of Sir John Fortescue (fl.
Sir Wolstan Dixie Sir Wolstan Dixie, 4th Baronet (1700–1767) was among the most colourful of the 13 Dixie baronets of Market Bosworth, descended from the second Sir Wolstan Dixie, knighted by James I in 1604, and Sheriff of Leicester (himself grand-nephew of the first Sir Wolstan Dixie, Lord Mayor of London in 1585, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I).
Julian catches up and Sir Edward confronts him about his crime. As Sir Edward lurches forward, Julian shoots him with both barrels. Leaning over the dying Sir Edward, Julian is bitten by him on the hand. Once again in his "oblong box", Sir Edward is resurrected by a vengeful N'Galo, but this time he is six feet under with no hope of escape.
Their son Sir Thomas Cusack served as Lord Chancellor of Ireland between 1551 and 1554. His daughter, Katherine, married Sir Henry Colley (or Cowley) (16th century), of Castle Carbery, County Kildare. Their grandson Sir Henry Colley represented Monaghan in the Irish Parliament. One of Sir Henry's sons, Dudley Colley (or Cowley), was a member of the Irish Parliament for Philipstown.
After Sir Phyllon leaves, Selene re-enters. Sir Ethais has suffered a setback, and she fears he will die. Darine suggests that the only hope is to summon the fairy Lutin's mortal counterpart, who will be able to cure Sir Ethais. Selene is grateful for the suggestion, unaware that Darine intends to woo Sir Ethais for herself, once he is recovered.
Sir Pellias accepts his help, and they devise a plan, but Sir Gawaine is charmed by Lady Ettard. Sir Pellias and Sir Gawaine fight, wherein Pellias, although victorious, is wounded by Gawaine. Pellias, near death, is brought to the chapel of a healing hermit. The Lady of the Lake comes, takes the charmed necklace, and revives Pellias with a potion.
Llewellyn was born in 1870 to Sir John Dillwyn-Llewellyn, 1st Baronet and his wife who was the daughter of Sir Michael Hicks Beach, 8th Baronet. His father was High Sheriff of Glamorgan, Mayor of Swansea and MP for Swansea. Sir Charles' son, Sir Michael set up the Field Centre at Llysdinam in 1970 which was run by Cardiff University until 2010.
Rainworth, residence of Sir Augustus Charles Gregory, Bardon, ca. 1885 Sir Augustus Charles Gregory lying in state, Masonic Hall, Alice Street, Brisbane, 1905 Funeral procession of Sir Augustus Charles Gregory, Brisbane, 1905 The grave of Sir Augustus Charles Gregory at Brisbane's Toowong Cemetery. Plaque on Gregory's grave. In 1855 Gregory became a freemason in the Sydney Samaritan Lodge in New South Wales.
The 24th parallel north passes through Sir Creek. Sir Creek is mainly fed by Nareri Lake, whose outlet joins the creek on its right bank. LBOD, a canal, also discharges water effluents into Sir Creek. On the Pakistani side are several other creeks to the west of Sir Creek, most of which are part of the Keti Bunder South Wildlife Sanctuary.
Lisnaskea Poor Law Union was formally declared on the 27 June 1840 and in August that year Sir Arthur Brooke was elected Chairman. Brooke married The Hon. Julia Henrietta, daughter of General Sir George Anson, in 1841. They had several children and their descendants include Field Marshal Sir Alan Brooke, 1st Viscount Alanbrooke, and Sir Basil Brooke, 1st Viscount Brookeborough.
Monument to Sir Robert Atkyns, Sapperton Church By his first wife Mary he had an only son and heir, Sir Robert Atkyns the younger. Mary died in 1680. Sir Robert remarried in the following year Anne Dacres, who died in 1712. His son married in 1669 Louisa- Margaret (Louisonne) Carteret, daughter of Sir George Carteret, and died in 1741 without issue.
Many other veterans of the searches for Franklin are buried there too, including Admiral Sir Horatio Thomas Austin, Admiral Sir George Back, Admiral Sir Edward Augustus Inglefield, Admiral Bedford Pim, and Admiral Sir John Ross. Franklin's wife Jane Griffin, Lady Franklin, is also interred at Kensal Green in the vault, and commemorated on a marble cross dedicated to her niece Sophia Cracroft.
Sir Nigel Gresley, 6th Baronet (c. 1727 - 7 April 1787) was an English land- owner, mine-owner and the builder of Sir Nigel Gresley's Canal. Gresley was the son of Sir Thomas Gresley, 4th Baronet, and his first wife Dorothy Bowyer, daughter of Sir William Bowyer, 4th Baronet. He succeeded his brother who died of smallpox without issue in 1753.
Robert Knyvet was slain during the suppression of Kett's Rebellion in 1549. Sir Edward Knyvet died childless in 1528, and Sir William Knyvet's lands then reverted to Sir William Knyvet's rightful heir, Edmund Knyvet, who had livery of his lands in 1533.; . By 1527 Knyvet had married Anne Shelton, the daughter of Sir John Shelton of Carrow, Norfolk, and his wife, Anne Boleyn.
Doug Mitchell The city's legal and business communities turned out in full force, and both were represented among his pall-bearers who included Sir Edward Beatty, Sir Montagu Allan, Sir Herbert Holt and Chief Justice R.A.E. Greenshields. He was buried in the Meredith plot at Mount Royal Cemetery, Montreal, next to his cousins, Sir Vincent Meredith and Charles Meredith and their respective wives.
Both he and his younger brother and successor, Sir Thomas, the third Baronet, died childless. Sir Thomas was succeeded by his nephew, Sir Carbery, the fourth Baronet, the son of Carbery Pryse, third and youngest son of the fourth Baronet. Sir Carbery also sat as Member of Parliament for Cardiganshire. The title became extinct when he died without issue in 1694.
She was the eldest daughter of John Stein of Edinburgh. She became, on 19 August 1824, the second wife of Sir Alexander Don, 6th Baronet of Newton Don, and the intimate friend of Sir Walter Scott. She had two children: Sir William Henry Don, 7th Baronet, the actor; and Alexina Harriet, who married Sir Frederick Acclom Milbank, bart., of Hart and Hartlepool.
One of Sir William's daughters by his second marriage, Anne (d. bef. March 1558), married Sir Robert Drury, of Thurston, and Hawstead, Suffolk. Another of Sir William's daughters by his second marriage, Elizabeth Calthrope married Francis Hasilden on 31 May 1494. They had a daughter, Frances Hasilden who married Sir Robert Peyton, of Isleham in January 1516, becoming ancestors of the Peyton baronets.
As noted above, Sir Edward Littleton married Hester Courten, daughter of a rich merchant and financier. They had three sons of whom two, James and William, died sine prole. Sir Edward's surviving son and successor was Sir Edward Littleton, 2nd Baronet. There were also two daughters, Anne, the second wife of Sir Thomas Holte, who remarried Charles Leigh after Holte' death, and Margaret.
Sir William Rowe was Sheriff of London in 1583 and Lord Mayor of London 1592. He was Master of the Worshipful Company of Ironmongers and was knighted (between 24 Apr and 23 May) 1593. He died 23 Oct 1593. Sir William's cousin Sir Thomas Rowe was also Lord Mayor of London, in 1568, as was Sir Thomas's son Henry Rowe in 1607.
More recent Governors-General in this category include Lord Casey, Sir Paul Hasluck, Sir John Kerr, Sir Ninian Stephen, Bill Hayden and Sir William Deane. Of the eleven Australians appointed governor-general since 1965, Lord Casey, Sir Paul Hasluck and Bill Hayden were former federal parliamentarians; Sir John Kerr was the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales; Sir Ninian Stephen and Sir William Deane were appointed from the bench of the High Court; Sir Zelman Cowen was a vice-chancellor of the University of Queensland and constitutional lawyer; Peter Hollingworth was the Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane; and Major-General Michael Jeffery was a retired military officer and former Governor of Western Australia. Quentin Bryce's appointment was announced during her term as Governor of Queensland; she had previously been the Federal Sex Discrimination Commissioner. General David Hurley was a retired Chief of Defence Force and former Governor of New South Wales.
Mo, Mabel's tag team partner in Men on a Mission, was "knighted" as Sir Mo by his partner after the latter's 1995 victory. Finlay and Regal were "knighted" as Sir Finlay and Sir Regal when they were part of King Booker's Court.
His daughter Mary married firstly Robert Echlin of Ardquin and secondly Sir Robert Ward, and was the mother of the leading judge and noted book collector Sir Henry Echlin and of Liutenant- General Robert Echlin. Another daughter Margaret married General Sir Albert Cunningham.
May married Olivia Barrington, daughter of Sir Matthew Barrington, 2nd Baronet, and Charlotte Hartigan, in 1853. She died in 1876. They had ten children, including George Chichester May, General Sir Edward Sinclair May, and Sir Francis Henry May, Governor of Hong Kong.
Spencer married Susan Knightley, the daughter of Sir Richard Knightley, of Fawsley, Northamptonshire and had a son, John Spencer, and five daughters. His daughter Isobel married Sir John Cotton, MP for Cambridgeshire. His daughter Jane married Sir Richard Brydges, MP for Berkshire.
Sir Edward Wilder Playfair KCB (17 May 1909 – 21 March 1999) was an English civil servant and businessman.Noel Annan, Obituary: Sir Edward Playfair, The Independent, 25 March 1999.Robert Armstrong, Playfair, Sir Edward Wilder (1909–1999), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, September 2004. .
Sir John addressed Gerard as "cousin", a term also used for their relationship by the History of Parliament. "Cousin" was used in the 16th century more widely for blood relatives than in modern English: Sir John and Sir Thomas were Gerard's uncles.
After passing through several families, the manor was purchased by Sir Lewis Pollard (c. 1465-1526), in whose family it remained until Sir Hugh Pollard, 2nd Baronet (c.1610-1666) sold the manor to his cousin Sir Arthur Northcote, 2nd Baronet (1628–1688).
Sir Maurice de Bunsen in 1909 Sir Maurice William Ernest de Bunsen, 1st Baronet, (8 January 1852 – 21 February 1932),de BUNSEN, Rt Hon. Sir Maurice (William Ernest)’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 was a British diplomat.
Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.481; Sir William Pole (d.1635) of Shute, Devon, author of this work, was the uncle of Col.
Detail of effigy of Sir John Stowford, West Down Church, Devon Effigy of Sir John Stowford, West Down Church, Devon Sir John Stowford (c.1290Prince, p.727 - c.1372Hoskins, W.G., A New Survey of England: Devon, London, 1959 (first published 1954), p.
After Jasper Tudor's death on 21 December 1495, Catherine Woodville married Sir Richard Wingfield (d. 22 July 1525). Catherine Woodville died 18 May 1497. After her death, Sir Richard Wingfield married Bridget Wiltshire, daughter and heiress of Sir John Wiltshire of Stone, Kent.
Chatelaine of Castle Malvern, betrothed to Sir Brian while they both wait for her father (Sir Orrin) to return home for permission to marry. Depicted as martial in character. Married to Sir Brian in The Dragon and the Fair Maid of Kent.
Sir Thomas Mauleverer, 1st Baronet (9 April 1599 – c. June 1655) was an English politician and prominent Roundhead during the English Civil War. Sir Thomas Mauleverer was born into a family with large estates in Yorkshire. His father, Sir Richard Mauleverer (c.
Portrait of Sir John Rothenstein C.B.E. 1938 Sir William Rothenstein 1872-1945 Presented by Lady Dynevor through the Friends of the Tate Gallery 1974 Sir John Knewstub Maurice Rothenstein (11 July 1901 - 27 February 1992) was a British arts administrator and art historian.
The ISM's current members include Sir Simon Rattle, Sir Mark Elder, Sir James Galway, Dame Felicity Lott, Judith Weir CBE, Suzi Digby OBE, Betty Roe OBE, Julian Lloyd Webber, Julian Bream, Andy Boyd, Paul Harris, John McCabe, Gerald Finley, and Craig Ogden.
The king and nobles meet to consider Robin Hood. They send Sir William with a hundred men. Sir William presents him with a letter from the king ordering Robin to surrender. When Robin refuses, Sir William attempts to seize him on the spot.
Sir William Parr, KG (1434–1483)Linda Porter. Katherine, the Queen, MacMillan, 2010. . was an English courtier and soldier. He was the eldest son of Sir Thomas Parr (1405–1461) and his wife Alice, daughter of Sir Thomas Tunstall of Thurland, Lancashire.
Sir Thomas Wyndham of Felbrigg (c.1466 – c.1522) was an English sea captain and Vice-Admiral of England. He was born in Bolton, Yorkshire, the son of Sir John Wyndham and Margaret, daughter of Sir John Howard, 1st Duke of Norfolk.
Sir Andrew Fraser The grave of Sir Andrew Fraser, Dean Cemetery, Edinburgh Sir Andrew Henderson Leith Fraser (14 November 1848 – 26 February 1919) was a British officer of the Indian Civil Service and the Lieutenant Governor of Bengal between 1903 and 1908.
Temptation of Sir Gawain by Lady Bertilak (late 14th century illustration) Lady Bertilak is a character in the medieval poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. She is ordered by her husband, the Green Knight, or Lord Bertilak, to test Sir Gawain's purity.
W.V. Awdry, and in the form of the owner of the Skarloey Railway, Sir Haydn was immortalised in his books as Sir Handel Brown. As in real life, loco No.3 on the Skarloey Railway was named after him as Sir Handel.
Arms of Sir James Audeley, KG Sir James Audley (or Audeley) KG (c. 1318–1369) was one of the original knights, or founders, of the Order of the Garter. He was the eldest son of Sir James Audley of Stratton Audley in Oxfordshire.
Sir Francis William Stronge (22 November 1856 – 20 August 1924), was a senior British diplomat and the second son of Sir John Calvert Stronge and Lady Margaret Stronge. Sir Francis never inherited the baronetcy but was later knighted in his own right.
The grave of Sir Henry Jardine, Canongate Kirkyard, Edinburgh Sir Henry Jardine of Harwood WS FRSE (30 January 1766 – 11 August 1851) was a solicitor, antiquarian and a founder member of the Bannatyne Club in 1823, with his friend Sir Walter Scott.
Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.481; Sir William Pole (d.1635) of Shute, Devon, author of this work, was the uncle of Col.
Thomas Scott was the eldest son of Sir Reginald Scott, a member of one of the leading families in Kent, by his first wife, Emeline Kempe, the daughter of Sir William Kempe of Ollantigh and Eleanor Browne, daughter of Sir Robert Browne..
Sir William Bull in 1913 Sir William James Bull, 1st Baronet, (29 September 1863 – 23 January 1931) was an English solicitor and Conservative politician. Officers of the C Company of Bushmen (West London Volunteers) 1915. Sir William Bull is in the centre.
Through his son, Sir Robert, has a grandfather of Sir Philip Williams, 2nd Baronet (1884–1958), who married Margaret Peek, daughter of Sir Cuthbert Peek, 2nd Baronet and the former Hon. Augusta Louisa Brodrick (a daughter of William Brodrick, 8th Viscount Midleton).
He was the eldest surviving son of Sir George Horner of Mells, Somerset by his wife Anne Poole, a daughter of Sir Neville Poole.
Sir Roger Gilla Duff O'Shaughnessy Sir Ruadhri Gilla Dubh Ó Seachnasaigh (anglicized Roger Gilla Duff O'Shaughnessy) was Chief of the Name during 1583–1650.
His proposers were James Watt, Sir Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer, Sir David Wilkie and Arthur Logan Turner. He resigned from the Society in 1948.
Sir George William Kekewich MP Sir George William Kekewich (1 April 1841 – 5 July 1921) was a British Civil Servant and Liberal Party politician.
Gerard married Anne, daughter and heir of Sir John Fitton, and widow of Sir John Brereton, son and heir of William, 1st Lord Brereton.
Sir Robert Edward Jones (born 24 November 1939), known as Sir Bob Jones, is a property investor, author and former politician in New Zealand.
The Independent: Obituaries, Sir Duncan Oppenheim - BAT chairman and arts administrator, Wednesday, 12 February 2003.The Telegraph, Obituaries, Sir Duncan Oppenheim, 11 Jan 2003.
Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.
In 1905 he was President of the Edinburgh Sir Walter Scott Club and gave the Toast to Sir Walter at the club's annual dinner.
1634, second wife of John Vaughan, 1st Earl of Carbery). Sir William Meredith (d. 1675), Henry Meredith (d. 1710) and Sir Roger Meredith (d.
In 1827, Clerk married Mary (died 26 November 1878), widow of Colonel Stewart. Their son was Sir Godfrey Clerk and grandson Sir George Clerk.
Sir Andrew Orr Sir Andrew Orr (1801–1872) was a Scottish wholesale stationer who served as Lord Provost of Glasgow from 1854 to 1857.
Sir Kevin Reginald Tebbit (born 18 October 1946)"TEBBIT, Sir Kevin Reginald (1946 - )", Debrett's People of Today, 2004 is a former British civil servant.
Sir John Cheape General Sir John Cheape (5 October 1792 – 30 March 1875) was a Scottish general in the British Army in South Asia.
Milton- Thompson married Noreen Fitzmaurice, the daughter of Sir Desmond Fitzmaurice CIE,Sir Godfrey Milton-Thompson at www.thePeerage.com in 1952. They had three daughters.
Former Canadian prime minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier and opposition leader Sir Robert Borden each presented their views in the early 1900s at the theatre.
Sir Edward Dering by William Dobson Sir Edward Dering, 1st Baronet (1598–1644) of Surrenden Dering, Pluckley, Kent was an English antiquary and politician.
Clarence was unhorsed by a Scottish knight, Sir John Carmichael, and finished off on the ground by Sir Alexander Buchanan, probably with a mace.
Sir William Cotts Sir William Dingwall Mitchell Cotts, 1st Baronet, KBE (15 July 1871 – 20 January 1932) was a Scottish businessman and Liberal politician.
20th century Oxford economists include Sir Roy Harrod, Jacob Marschak, Nicholas Stern, Sir David Hendry, Stephen Nickell, David Soskice, Tim Harford, and Mark Carney.
Their elder daughter, Jenifer, married Edward Anthony Watson Bullock, younger son of Sir Christopher Bullock. Their younger daughter, Virginia, married Sir Paul Studholme Bt.
Sir George Thomas Staunton, 2nd Baronet. Sir George Thomas Staunton, 2nd Baronet (26 May 1781 – 10 August 1859) was an English traveller and Orientalist.
Darine admits that this was only an artifice. Sir Ethais asks Sir Phyllon's forgiveness and renounces Darine. She implores him to reconsider. Selene enters.
The current Chief of the General Staff is General Sir Mark Carleton-Smith – having succeeded his predecessor, General Sir Nick Carter in June 2018.
Victoria County History, Middlesex, vol.10, 1995, Hackney, pp.75-91 Sir William's son and heir was Sir Thomas Whitmore, 1st Baronet (d. 1653).
Commissioners appointed to oversee those who shall accompany the king of France:—The earl of Essex, Lord Abergavenny, Sir Edw. Ponynges, Sir Rob. Wingfield.
The son of the late Admiral Sir Harold Walker, Sir Harold was born in 1932, and attended Winchester College and later Worcester College, Oxford.
Epacris corymbiflora was known from at least 1860.Sir Joseph Dalton Hooker, Erebus (Ship), Sir James Clark Ross, Flora Tasmaniae (Reeve Brothers, 1860) p261.
Sir John Louis' grave, Kensal Green Cemetery Admiral Sir John Louis, 2nd Baronet (1785 - 31 March 1863) was an officer in the Royal Navy.
Sir Kamuta Latasi and Kausea Natano were re-elected in the 2015 general election. Sir Kamuta Latasi resigned as MP on 17 October 2018.
Captain Sir Norman Lloyd-Edwards Sir Norman Lloyd-Edwards (born 13 June 1933) was the Lord Lieutenant of South Glamorgan from 1990 to 2008.
Sir Padampat Singhania University admits students into its engineering and management programs via the SPSAT (Sir Padampat Singhania Admission Test) from last 2 years.
Sir Harry Verney Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Harry Calvert Williams Verney, 4th Baronet, DSO (7 June 1881 – 23 December 1974), was a British Liberal politician.
His support for the charity continues through The Sir John Crofton Fund to Fight TB and the Sir John Crofton Prize for TB Nursing.
Kelsey appears in paintings by noted artists including, Sir William Reid Dick, Augustus John, Dame Ethel Walker, Sir John Lavery and Dame Laura Knight.
His son was another Sir Robert Grierson, 5th Baronet of Lag, born 1738, died 1839 who was a close friend of Sir Walter Scott.
1333), from whom came the Frasers of Lovat, Lords Lovat; Sir Andrew Fraser (d. 1333); and Sir James Fraser, 1st of Frendraught (d. 1333).
Walter Blount was born about 1416, the eldest son of Sir Thomas Blount (1378–1456) and Margery Gresley and grandson of Sir Walter Blount.
One daughter, Norah Jacintha, married Sir John Fuller, 1st Baronet, of Neston Park, Wiltshire, and was the mother of Sir Gerard Fuller, 2nd Baronet.
Sir Cyril Wyche, grand-uncle and namesake of Sir Cyril Wyche, 1st Baronet. The Wyche Baronetcy, of Chewton in the County of Somerset, was a title in the Baronetage of Great Britain. It was created on 20 December 1729 for Cyril Wyche, subsequently Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Russia. He was the son of John Wyche, Envoy Extraordinary at Hamburg, the grandson of Sir Peter Wyche, the great-grandson of Sir Peter Wyche and the grand-nephew of Sir Cyril Wyche.
Sir William's cousin Charles Wheler succeeded to the baronetcy. However Sir William and Charles Wheler had fallen out, apparently over Charles urging Sir William to execute a settlement of his estates upon Charles (which he considered part of the arrangement for using his influence at court to help secure the baronetcy for Sir William), so instead of doing what Charles wanted, Sir William left the bulk of is estate to others and Charles only received an annual stipend of £120.
Mr. Friendly obliges and Tom becomes a member of the Galliard household. Two years later, Tom’s uncle dies and with Sir John’s permission, he makes plans to leave to attend to his affairs. Mr. Teachwell proposes that he and Sir John embark on a trip to France or Italy, so as to further Sir John’s education. Teachwell hopes that Sir John will choose to attend Cambridge. Once Lady Galliard has left, Teachwell tells Sir John of his mother’s affair with the footman, Tom.
Sir Robert's son Francis Burdett by Francis Cotes in 1764. He is the father of Sir Francis Burdett and was never a baronet as he died before Sir Robert did. Foremarke Hall was commissioned to be built as a stately home in 1760 by Sir Robert Burdett for his son Francis Burdett (not to be confused with the latter's son Sir Francis Burdett). The architect was David Hiorns, a famous architect then whose architectural firm in London still thrives today.
Sir Percy was bred by Harry Ormesher at the Old Suffolk Stud in Hundon, Suffolk. His sire Mark of Esteem won the 1996 2,000 Guineas; his dam Percy's Lass won the Group 3 September Stakes in 1988 (and subsequently died of colic when Sir Percy was a foal. Sir Percy was the last of her offspring) and his damsire Blakeney won the Epsom Derby himself in 1969. Sir Percy was named after Sir Percy Blakeney, the hero of the novel The Scarlet Pimpernel.
Sir William Webb-Follett. Marble bust sculpted by Edward Bowring Stephens, presented in 1842 to the Devon & Exeter Institution, Exeter Sir William Webb Follett, portrait by Sir Martin Archer Shee (1769–1850). National Portrait Gallery, London Sir William Webb Follett Sir William Webb Follett (2 December 179628 June 1845) was an English lawyer and politician who served as MP for Exeter (1835–1845). He served twice as Solicitor-General, in 1834-5 and 1841 and as Attorney-General in 1844.
He served for over 45 years in the Australian Public Service. For most of this time he was assistant secretary or personal secretary to a succession of Ministers including the Prime Minister, Ben Chifley. Tyrrell succeeded Rear Admiral Sir Leighton Bracegirdle as Official Secretary to the Governor-General, William McKell (later Sir William), in March 1947.Christopher Cunneen: William John McKell Tyrrell also served Sir William McKell's successors Sir William Slim, Lord Dunrossil, Lord De L'Isle, Lord Casey and Sir Paul Hasluck.
Ian David Erskine (1898–1973), son of Alan David Erskine, fourth son of Sir David Erskine, was a major-general in the British Army. Sir Arthur Erskine, fifth son of Sir David Erskine, was a soldier and courtier. Sir James Elphinstone Erskine, brother of Sir David Erskine, was an admiral of the fleet. George Elphinstone Erskine (1841–1912), son of George Keith Erskine, brother of John Elphinstone Erskine, was a major-general in the Bombay Cavalry in the Indian Army.
He frequently lectures the naïve Woolley in the realities of political matters. When Woolley's loyalty to the Minister is inconvenient to Sir Humphrey's plans, he readily makes oblique threats about Woolley's job prospects should he defy Sir Humphrey. However, he is equally quick to defend Woolley from outsiders. His closest on-screen friendships are with Sir Arnold Robinson, Cabinet Secretary during Yes Minister; Sir Frederick "Jumbo" Stewart, Permanent Secretary of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office; and the banker Sir Desmond Glazebrook.
1914 Sir John Duncan of Watervale 1914 Sir John Lavington Bonython 1914 Sir Joseph Lister 1914 Rev. C. W. Evan of Stow Memorial Church 1928 Sir William Brunton Sir William Hennessy Archbishop Lowther Clarke John Howard Angas 1915 Simon Harvey, an Adelaide timber merchant 1921 John Murray, Premier of Victoria 1918 Professor Ralph Tate, a gift of Tate's daughter Mrs. W. L. McDonald to the Public Library of South Australia. and now held by the Art Gallery and may be viewed here .
In 1911, Menpes donated 38 of his copies in oil to the Australian Government; these works have subsequently become part of the Pictures Collection at the National Library of Australia. Some pencil sketches by Menpes were published in the Adelaide Observer in 1903. They are portraits of Sir Charles Todd, Sir James Fergusson and the Rev. Canon Green; Dean Marryat, Sir Anthony Musgrave and Dr. Schomburgk; Charles Mann, Sir Arthur Blyth and William Townsend Sir William Milne, Thomas Playford and George Stevenson, Jun.
Sir John Monson (right) and his father Sir Thomas Sir John Monson, 2nd Baronet (1599 – December 1683) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1625 and 1626. Monson was born in the parish of St Sepulchre's, London, the son of Sir Thomas Monson, 1st Baronet of South Carlton, Lincolnshire and his wife Margaret Anderson, the daughter of Sir Edmund Anderson. He studied Law. In 1625, he was elected Member of Parliament for Lincoln.
Sir Richard succeeded his father Sir Owen Wynn at Gwydir in 1660. Sir Richard was sheriff of Caernarvonshire (1657/1658) and twice MP for Caernarvonshire: in the Rump Parliament 1647–1653 and the Cavalier Parliament (1661–1675). Sir Richard spent some time imprisoned in Caernarvon Castle. He may have been incarcerated because of a possible involvement in the Royalist Booth's Uprising (1659) as he was by that time a son-in-law to one of the participant Sir Thomas Myddelton.
Despite its financial situation, in 1961 the Hurlstone Choral Society felt able to make an unsolicited gift of £50 to its 'major rival', the Sydney Royal Philharmonic Society, which was 'broke and in danger of extinction'.Daily Telegraph 12 March 1961, cited in The choir changed its name to Hurlstone Choral Society in 1937, Sydney Philharmonia Society in 1969 and Sydney Philharmonia Limited in 1974. It employed its first professional manager in 1974. During this time, Sydney Philharmonia has worked with many conductors, including Eugene Ormandy, Otto Klemperer, Sir Eugene Goosens, Sir David Willcocks, Sir Charles Mackerras, Sir Malcolm Sargent, Sir Granville Bantock, Sir Bernard Heinze, Sir Thomas Beecham, Georg Schnéevoigt, Hans Vonk, Ward Swingle, Zubin Mehta, Christopher Hogwood, Edo de Waart, Charles Dutoit, Mark Elder, John Nelson, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Richard Hickox, and Sir Simon Rattle.
His first daughter was Anne, who married Sir William Stonor of Stonor in Pyrton, Oxfordshire, a grandson of William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk. Elizabeth married firstly Thomas Scrope, 6th Baron Scrope of Masham, who was a dedicated Yorkist for his whole career, and secondly Sir Henry Wentworth of Nettlestead, while Margaret Neville married firstly Sir John Mortimer (who died before 12 November 1504), only son of Sir Hugh Mortimer and Eleanor Cornwall, secondly Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, and thirdly Robert Downes, gentleman. Lucy married firstly Sir Thomas FitzWilliam of Aldwark, North Yorkshire, and secondly Sir Anthony Browne. Finally, Isabel, who married firstly Sir Thomas Huddleston of Millom, Cumberland (the Huddlestons of Millom were an important regional family and old allies of the Nevilles), and secondly Sir William Smythe of Elford in Staffordshire.
It redeveloped the Farnborough airfield for the Ministry of Defence and the Carroll Aircraft Corporation held the licence for civil operations there. Directors of group companies included British establishment figures such as Air Marshal Sir Barry Duxbury, Air Marshal Sir Ivor Broom, Sir Ewen Broadbent, Group Captain Peter Townsend, Sir Curtis Keeble (a former UK ambassador to the Soviet Union), and former environment minister Sir Eldon Griffiths."SFO looks at 500m fall of Carroll empire", Dominic O'Connell, Sunday Business, 1 October 2000, p. 1. Conservative Party organiser Sir Anthony Garner was a director of the Carroll Anglo-American group, the Carroll Aircraft Corporation and the Farnborough Aerospace Development Corporation."Sir Anthony Garner, political organiser – obituary", The Daily Telegraph, 14 April 2015. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
His son and heir was Sir Edward Gresham. The successive baronets were Sir Marmaduke Gresham, 1st Baronet (1627-1696), Sir Edward Gresham, 2nd Baronet (1649-1709), Sir Charles Gresham, 3rd Baronet (1660-1718), Sir Marmaduke Gresham, 4th Baronet (1700-1742), Sir Charles Gresham, 5th Baronet (died 1750), and Sir John Gresham, 6th and last Baronet (1735-1801). Through the marriage of the heiress of the last Gresham, the house passed to the Leveson Gowers, a branch of the family of the Dukes of Sutherland. A Tudor house on the site was demolished and rebuilt by the last Gresham baronet in the 18th century, then in 1826 was given new fronts designed by William Atkinson. A tower by Philip Charles Hardwick was added in 1856.
Sir Richard Saltonstall appears to have been in Newtown, Montgomeryshire (Powys), Wales at the Restoration of King Charles II in 1660. On 18 July 1660 the Council of King Charles II issued an order to Sir Matthew Price, High Sheriff of Montgomeryshire to take into safe custody Vavasour Powell (described as, "a most factious and dangerous minister"), Sir Richard Saltonstall, and Richard Price of Aberbechan. According to Sir Matthew Price's letters to Secretary Sir Edward Nicholas, Vavasour Powell, Sir Richard Saltonstall and Richard Price were concerned in a plot to depose King Charles II. Letters were found in their possession indicating the plot extended all the way to London. By 2 August 1660 Vavasour Powell was taken into custody, while Sir Richard Saltonstall and Capt.
Arms of Tilney: Azure, a chevron between three griffin's heads erased or Elizabeth Tilney was born at Ashwellthorpe Hall sometime before 1445, the only child of Sir Frederick Tilney, of Ashwellthorpe, Norfolk, and Boston, Lincolnshire, and Elizabeth Cheney (1422–1473) of Fen Ditton, Cambridgeshire. Sir Frederick Tilney died before 1447, and before 1449 Elizabeth's mother married as her second husband Sir John Say of Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, Speaker of the House of Commons, by whom she had three sons, Sir William, Sir Thomas and Leonard, and four daughters, Anne (wife of Sir Henry Wentworth of Nettlestead, Suffolk), Elizabeth (wife of Thomas Sampson), Katherine (wife of Thomas Bassingbourne), and Mary (wife of Sir Philip Calthorpe).; ; . A fifth daughter died as a young child.
The Sir Bobby Charlton Stand (South Stand) seen from the Sir Alex Ferguson Stand (North Stand) Opposite the Sir Alex Ferguson Stand is the Sir Bobby Charlton Stand, formerly Old Trafford's main stand and previously known as the South Stand. Although only a single-tiered stand, the Sir Bobby Charlton Stand contains most of the ground's executive suites, and also plays host to any VIPs who may come to watch the match. Members of the media are seated in the middle of the Upper South Stand to give them the best view of the match. The television gantry is also in the Sir Bobby Charlton Stand, so the Sir Bobby Charlton Stand is the one that gets shown on television least often.
It covers every medical speciality and with the support from Sir Francis Champneys, Sir Raymond Crawfurd, Sir Thomas Clifford Allbutt, Sir Ronald Ross, Sir William Selby Church, Sir Henry Morris, Henry Barnes and Professor Richard Caton, the first meeting on 20 November 1912 had 160 attendees. The society's lectures by Osler, as the first president, covered William Petty's manuscripts and the history of Anaesthesia, and encouraging research and scholarship in topics. Despite opposition from Sir Richard Douglas Powell, Osler personally invited guests to join the new society. When the 50th Jubilee of the Section was celebrated at a special meeting on 21 November 1962 it was noted that "the contribution to the knowledge of medical history made by the Section has been very considerable".
Turbett has been a bassoonist with Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, the English Baroque Soloists, the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique, the Academy of Ancient Music, the New Queen's Hall Orchestra and the London Classical Players. He has worked with many other leading orchestras including the London Philharmonic Orchestra, the Philharmonia, English National Ballet, the Hanover Band, London Baroque, Collegium Musicum 90, The English Concert and many other freelance orchestras. He has appeared on hundreds recordings, of which many have received awards from the music industry. He has worked with conductors including Sir Simon Rattle, Sir Charles Mackerras, Sir Roger Norrington, Sir Andrew Davis, Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Sir Neville Marriner, Sir Mark Elder, Frans Brüggen, Vladimir Jurowski, Edward Gardner, Paul Daniel, and Daniel Harding.
Sir Richard Levett (also spelled Richard Levet) (died 1711), Sheriff, Alderman and Lord Mayor of London, was one of the first directors of the Bank of England, an adventurer with the London East India Company and the proprietor of the trading firm Sir Richard Levett & Company. He had homes at Kew and in London's Cripplegate, close by the Haberdashers Hall. A pioneering British merchant and politician, he counted among his friends and acquaintances Samuel Pepys, Robert Blackborne, John Houblon, physician to the Royal Family and son- in-law Sir Edward Hulse, Lord Mayor Sir William Gore, his brother-in-law Chief Justice Sir John Holt, Robert Hooke, Sir Owen Buckingham, Sir Charles Eyre and others.The House of Commons, 1690-1715, Vol.
Later in the romance, Sir Yvain, having heard this story from Sir Colgrievance, follows the same route, encounters the same giant herdsman and arrives at a fountain that appears to have similar properties to the Lake of Nemi, whose ancient customs Sir J G Frazer described in The Golden Bough. Here, Sir Yvain becomes the Knight of the Fountain by defeating the fountain's incumbent and, after many adventures, arrives at a castle owned by a lord whose wife is Sir Gawain's sister. Sir Gawain's nephews have been captured by a giant: :"The geant was bath large and lang :And bare a levore of yren ful strang; :Tharwith he bet tham bitterly..."Braswell, Mary Flowers. 1995. Sir Perceval of Galles and Yvain and Gawain.
Sir John Robertson "Rob" Young GCMG (born 21 February 1945YOUNG, Sir John Robertson, (Sir Rob), Who's Who 2015, A & C Black, 2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014) is a retired British diplomat. He was the British High Commissioner to India from 1999–2003.
Sir John Rankine's house at 23 Ainslie Place The grave of Sir John Rankine, Dean Cemetery Sir John Rankine of Bassendean FRSE LLD (18 February 1846-8 August 1922) was a 19th-century Scottish legal author. He established that ownership is not a right.
The church also houses the final resting place of Sir Edward Baber (1530-1578) son of Sir John Baber. He was Sergeant at Law and husband to Lady Catherine Leigh-Baber the daughter of Sir Thomas Leigh, Lord Mayor of London under Queen Elizabeth I.
Sir John Dickinson was chief magistrate of the Metropolitan Police Courts until 1920. On his retirement he was replaced by Sir Chartres Biron."New Metropolitan Chief Magistrate", The Times, 22 April 1920, p. 16."Obituary Sir Chartres Biron", The Times, 29 January 1940, p. 9.
The Geddes Axe was the drive for public economy and retrenchment in UK government expenditure recommended in the 1920s by a Committee on National Expenditure chaired by Sir Eric Geddes and with Lord Inchcape, Lord Faringdon, Sir Joseph Maclay and Sir Guy Granet also members.
Acland was born in 1904 in Christchurch. His parents were Sir Hugh Acland (1874–1956), a prominent surgeon in New Zealand, and Evelyn Mary Acland (née Ovans). His great-grandfather was Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 10th Baronet. His brother-in-law was Sir John Ormond.
For the last four years of his life, therefore, he was Sir James Steuart Denham, Baronet, of Coltness and Westshield. His major book and his posthumous collected works were published as by Sir James Steuart; economic literature also calls him Sir James Steuart Denham.
This Act was guided through the British House of Commons by Sir Hamar Greenwood, MP, the Chief Secretary for Ireland at the time. Northern Ireland had been created at the insistence of both Captain Sir James Craig and Sir Edward Carson, the Ulster Unionist leaders.
In May 2014, he signed a 3-year contract with Sir Safety Perugia.Luciano de Cecco zawodnikiem Sir Safety Perugia – sportowefakty.pl – 12-05-2014 From the season 2020-2021 he is no longer a player of Sir Safety Perugia as he signed with Cucine Lube Civitanova.
The Sir George Williams Georgians were the Canadian Interuniversity Athletics Union teams that represented Sir George Williams University. Shortly after Sir George Williams merged with Loyola College to create Concordia University in 1974, the Georgians and the Loyola Warriors were replaced by the Concordia Stingers.
Sir Richard Hoare. Sir Richard Hoare (1648 – 6 January 1719)Victoria Hutchings, "Hoare, Sir Richard (1648–1719)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 12 November 2014. was the founder of C. Hoare & Co, the oldest extant bank in the United Kingdom.
Sir Reginald William Taylor, CMG (1 December 1895 – 19 October 1971), known informally as Rex Taylor,Sir George Seel, "Sir Reginald Taylor", The Times (London), 25 October 1971, p. 15. was a British civil engineer and civil servant who worked in several British colonies.
Monument of Sir Thomas Essex (son of Sir William Essex) and his wife Margaret Sandys, St Michael and All Angels Church, Lambourn Sir William Essex (1477–1548) of Lambourn, Berkshire was an English soldier and courtier who served as High Sheriff and Member of Parliament.
He was the son of Sir George Pigot, 5th Baronet and his wife Alice, daughter of Sir James Thompson Mackenzie, 1st Baronet. He became the sixth Baronet on the death of his father in 1934."Sir George Pigot." Times [London, England] 26 May 1934: 7.
One of Gayer's daughters Katherine married Sir Robert Abdy, 1st Baronet, son of Anthony Abdy, Alderman and Sheriff. Another daughter Elizabeth married Francis Godolphin (1629–1670) and daughter Mary married Sir Andrew Henley, 1st Baronet. His nephew was Sir John Gayer, Governor of Bombay.
1 & 2 (J. G. Challenor Smith:) Will and probate for Sir Richard Cholmeley, December 1521 and March 1522, available online at www.nationalarchives.gov.uk Cholmeley's widow, Elizabeth, later married her third husband, Sir William Gascoigne of Cardington, Bedfordshire (her first husband was Sir Walter Strickland of Sizergh).
Upper stage: Sir Edward (d. 1629), and his wife, Mary Fisher. Their son, also Sir Edward, became the first baronet in 1627. Sir Edward Littleton, who succeeded in 1574 and died in 1610, as portrayed on a double tomb in St. Michael's church, Penkridge.
The Convention of Twelve is a group that assists the Hellsing organization. The only named members are Sir Hugh Islands, Sir Shelby Penwood, and Sir Rob Walsh. In 30 years Rob Walsh leads the twelve while Islands and Penwood are succeeded by their descendants.
For many years Sir Francis served on the Board of Governors of his old school Belfast Royal Academy. Sir Francis's wife, Mary, Lady Evans, whom he married in 1920, died in 1976. Sir Francis died seven years later. There were no children of the marriage.
Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.478 Sir John Chudleigh (1606 - April 1634) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1626.
Contact was a monthly live broadcast where Sir Lynden was questioned by journalists. Sir Lynden became angry when answering Johnson's questions. In November 1976, Sir Lynden refused to appear with Johnson."Pindling ducks out of Tribune questions on Contact" The Tribune, 19 October 1976.
He is the son of Sir Perceval and Acheflour, sister of King Arthur (probably a corruption of Blancheflour).Braswell, Mary Flowers. 1995. Sir Perceval of Galles and Yvain and Gawain. Kalamazoo, Michigan: Western Michigan University for TEAMS. Sir Perceval of Galles, note to line 23.
Hari Sir tries to get Akash out of jail, but doesn't succeed. Pratap who conspired with Prabhakar to rusticate Hari Sir is now a DSP. He inquires about the person who was there earlier. He finds out about Hari Sir and reason for being there.
Sir James Balfour, Sir James Balfour, 1st Baronet of Denmilne and Kinnaid ( – c. 1658), of Perth and Kinross, Scotland, was a Scottish annalist and antiquary.
Sir Peter Fairbairn (1799–1861) was a Scottish engineer, inventor, and mayor of Leeds, West Yorkshire. Statue of Sir Peter Fairbairn, in Woodhouse Square, Leeds.
Sir Lindsay Parkinson & Company Ltd, commonly known as Sir Lindsay Parkinson & Co. Ltd or Lindsay Parkinson was a large civil engineering company in the UK.
Blackridge can boast two native knights of the Realm: Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Livingstone and Sir Peter Matthews, Chief Constable of Surrey in the 1970s.
Four of his works have been placed with the National Portrait Gallery permanent collection: Martin Clunes, Sir Paul Scofield, Jack Charlton and Sir Peter Hall.
19 (1891) Sir John Willes was the father of another Sir Edward Willes who was Solicitor-General and judge of the Court of King's Bench.
In 1970, Sir John Aird, 4th Baronet revived the name for a while by forming Sir John Aird & Co as a construction and engineering business.
Portrait of Sir Roger Manwood by George Perfect Harding. Sir Roger Manwood (1525–1592) was an English jurist and Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer.
Sir Joseph Leese Sir Joseph Francis Leese, 1st Baronet, (28 February 1845 – 29 July 1914) was a British judge, Liberal politician and first-class cricketer.
His proposers were Sir Edmund Langley Hirst, Neil Campbell, Sir John Cadogan, and Duncan Taylor. He died on 24 October 1990 following a long illness.
Prof Sir Roger Mynors, Prof Basil Willey, Sir Arthur Norrington, Anne Ridler, Canon Adam Fox, Dr John Carey, and the Conveners of the Translation Panels.
Sir Anthony Ewbank QC Sir Anthony Ewbank (30 July 1925 – 25 June 2011) was a British Judge of the High Court of Justice, Family Division.
After his death the collection was maintained and added to by his son, Sir Thomas Cotton (d. 1662), and grandson, Sir John Cotton (d. 1702).
Elizabeth (b. 1418), wife of John, afterwards Sir John Cheney; 2. Isabel, wife of Sir Brian Stapleton; 3. Margery, wife of Richard Bingham the younger.
Sir John Gilbert Sir John Thomas Gilbert (b. in Dublin, 23 January 1829; d. there, 23 May 1898) was an Irish archivist, antiquarian and historian.
Sir Nigel S. Rodley in 2015 Sir Nigel Simon Rodley KBE (born Rosenfeld; 1 December 1941 – 25 January 2017) was an international lawyer and professor.
The video features rare archive footage of England's FIFA World Cup winning team of 1966 including Sir Alf Ramsey, Bobby Moore and Sir Bobby Charlton.
East bleachers at SIR, from the staging lanes. SIR, with Jody "The Kid" Beauchemin's modern long-wheelbase fuellie altered Altered Vision in the right lane.
Lieutenant Colonel Sir John Robert Chancellor (20 October 1870 – 31 July 1952)Profile of Sir John Robert Chancellor was a British soldier and colonial official.
Sir Joseph West Ridgeway, (16 May 1844 – 16 April 1930) was a British civil servant and colonial governor. He was known as "Sir West Ridgeway".
The office of Private Secretary was first established in 1805. The current Private Secretary is Sir Edward Young who succeeded Sir Christopher Geidt in 2017.
Sir Edward FitzGerald Law, British diplomat Sir Edward FitzGerald Law (2 November 1846 – 2 November 1908) was a British diplomat and expert in state finance.
Sir Archibald Hope, "Knight of the Turf", Kay's Portraits Sir Archibald Hope, 9th Baronet Hope of Craighall (1735 - 30 July 1794) was a Scottish aristocrat.
Sir William Perkins's School Boat Club (SWPSBC) is a rowing club based on the River Thames at Sir William Perkins's School Boathouse, Thameside, Laleham, Surrey.
Andres Alver (born 23 December 1953)Fletcher, Sir Banister. Sir Banister Fletcher's a History of Architecture. Architectural Press, page 1444. 1996. is an Estonian architect.
Sir Bhavsinhji Polytechnic Institute was established in commemoration of Bhavsinhji II by his son and successor Sir Krishnakumarsinhji in 1932, which commenced functioning in 1949.
He married secondly Elizabeth (d. 1598), a daughter of Sir George Sydenham of Combe Sydenham in Somerset and widow of Sir Francis Drake (d. 1596).
Sir John Filmer (d. 1797) and Rev. Sir John Filmer (d. 1834) and wife. Other monuments include Richard Argal (d. 1605), Margaret Randolph (d. 1609).
47 The last in the male line was Sir Alexander de Bonkyll, whose daughter and heiress Margaret de Bonkyl married Sir John Stewart (d.1298).
Under his will, the Sir Andrew Taylor Prize in Fine Art and the Sir Andrew Taylor Prize in Architecture were founded at University College London.
Galsworthy is the father of the diplomat, Sir Anthony Galsworthy. His brother, Sir John Galsworthy KCVO, CMG was the British Ambassador to Mexico 1972–1977.
Sir Hibbert Alan Stephen Newton MB MS FRCS (30 April 1887 – 4 August 1949), generally known as (Sir) Alan Newton was a noted Australian surgeon.
Kalamazoo, Michigan: Western Michigan University for TEAMS. Sir Amadace,Mills, Maldwyn. 1973, reissued 1992. Sir Gawain and the Carle of Carlisle,Hahn, Thomas (Ed). 1995.
Sir John Maxwell Bemrose (1 July 1904 – 13 July 1986), known as Sir Max Bemrose, was an English industrialist, politician, and county officer for Derbyshire.
Her grandfather Sir John Croke died at Chilton in February 1609.John Bruce, Liber Famelicus of Sir James Whitelocke (Camden Society, London, 1858), p. 17.
In a map of 1584 it is described as a "MacWilliam House". "The MacWilliam Eighter", who was then Sir John FitzOliver Burke, lived there in 1574. In 1618 Sir Richard FitzOliver Burke was the tenant and his son, Walter, mortgaged it to Sir Valentine Blake of Menlough, in 1628. Sir Thomas Blake leased it to John Darcy in 1668 and Pierce Joyce purchased the lands in 1852.
He was born at Scriven in North Yorkshire, eighth son of Sir Francis Slingsby of Scriven and Mary Percy, daughter of Sir Thomas Percy and sister of Thomas Percy, 7th Earl of Northumberland and Henry Percy, 8th Earl of Northumberland.Betham, William Baronetage of England London1805 Vol. 5 p. 26 Most of his brothers died young: those who survived included Sir Henry Slingsby and Sir William Slingsby.
In the late 1890s, Hamilton appears to have visited Scotland, where in 1899 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir James Crichton-Browne, Sir Thomas Grainger Stewart, Sir John Batty Tuke and Sir James Dewar. In 1912, he received an honorary LLD degree from Hamilton College on the centennial celebration of the college which was named after his grandfather.
"Your Body" is the second hit single by the R&B; group Pretty Ricky produced by Jim Jonsin. It reached #12 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was the second single from their debut album, Bluestars. The "Your Body" video starts with Pretty Ricky on the beach saying "Yes sir, yes sir, yes sir, yes sir," then they start singing, rapping and dancing the "Your Body" dance.
His son Sir John Clere was Treasurer of the King's Army in France in 1549. Sir John's son Edward Clere represented both Thetford and Grampound in Parliament.History of Parliament: Edward Clere, accessed April 2017 Edward's son Sir Edward Clere was High Sheriff of Norfolk in 1586 but was forced to sell the family estate of Blickling Hall. Sir Edward's son was the first Baronet.
Sir Martin was sired by the imported British stallion, Ogden, who had been imported as a foal with his dam Oriole to Marcus Daly's Bitteroot Farm in Montana. Ogden was purchased by John Madden in 1901 and stood at Hamburg Place Stud in Lexington, Kentucky. Sir Martin's dam Lady Sterling was a daughter of Hanover and was also the dam of Sir Barton. Sir Martin Pedigree.
C.E.Corea was educated at the Royal College, Colombo. C.E.Corea lived at 'Edirille Gedera' in Chilaw, Sri Lanka. Mahatma Gandhi and distinguished Sri Lankan politicians Don Stephen Senanayake, F.R.Senanayake, Sir Baron Jayathilake, E. W. Perera, Sir Ponnambalam Ramanathan, Sir Ponnambalam Arunachalam, A. E. Goonesinha, Sir James Peiris and others have all visited this historic home. The ancient Verandah at Edirille Gedera, the home of C.E.Corea.
Sir Julius Berlin was played by Leonard Sachs. Sir Julius appeared in Coronation Street during 1974 as the boss of the Mark Brittain mail order warehouse that was situated in the Street. When the residents complained about the lorries passing through, Ken Barlow spoke to Sir Julius about the problem. Sir Julius was so impressed by Ken that he offered him a job as executive administrative assistant.
Since the decline of the Mughal dynasty, Sir Syed promoted the use of Urdu through his own writings. Under Sir Syed, the Scientific Society translated Western works only into Urdu. The schools established by Sir Syed imparted education in the Urdu medium. The demand for Hindi, led largely by Hindus, was to Sir Syed an erosion of the centuries-old Muslim cultural domination of India.
Bird in turn sold the title and the substantial estate in and around Dinas Mawddwy to Sir Edmund Buckley, a rich industrialist from Ardwick near Manchester. Buckley passed the title and estate to his son Sir Edmund Buckley, 1st Baronet in 1864. In turn they passed to Sir Edmund Buckley, 2nd Baronet in 1910. The youngest Sir Edmund died fighting at Gallipoli in 1919.
The first Chancellor (and the last Vice-Chancellor) was Sir Andrew Morritt, who retired in 2013 to be succeeded by Sir Terence Etherton. In 2016, Sir Geoffrey Vos succeeded Sir Terence as Chancellor on the latter's appointment as Master of the Rolls. Cases heard before the Chancery Division are reported in the Chancery Division law reports. In practice, there is some overlap of jurisdiction with the QBD.
Drury made his last will on 12 and 28 April 1577, requesting burial by his wife in the church of Chalfont St Peter. Drury named his three surviving sons, Robert, Sir William and Drue as executors, and appointed as supervisors Sir William Cordell, Master of the Rolls, Sir Thomas Cornwallis, Sir Christopher Heydon, and his son-in-law, Robert Woodleaf. Drury died at Hedgerley on 21 May..
Richards met Sir George Simpson of the Hudsons Bay Company while Sir George was traveling from the Northwest Territories through Hawaii in February 1842. Sir George had heard from his cousin Alexander Simpson that Charlton argued that Britain should just annex the islands to counter the American domination of the government. Sir George instead favored Hawaiian independence, having seen the advantages of free trade in Canada.
Mary Arundell was the only childAlthough Stanton states that Mary was Sir John Arundell's only child by Katherine Grenville, Richardson states that Mary's sisters, Jane and Eleanor, were also Sir John Arundell's daughters by his second wife; . of Sir John Arundell (c.1474 – 8 February 1545) of Lanherne, Cornwall, and his second wife, Katherine Grenville (born 1489-93), a daughter of Sir Thomas Grenville (d.1513).; .
Sir Richard Waldegrave served as a Knight of the Shire in 1339 in Lincolnshire. He married Agnes Daubeny and they had one child, Sir Richard Waldegrave. Sir Richard Waldegrave (or Walgrave), Knt., of Smallbridge, Suffolk, (died 2 May 1401), was member of parliament for Lincolnshire in 1335, and Speaker of the House of Commons in the reign of King Richard II; his son, Sir Richard Waldegrave, Knt.
In 1611 Elizabeth I made Cope Sir Anthony Cope, 1st Baronet. Drayton remained with the Cope Baronets of Hanwell until the death of Sir John Cope, 5th Baronet in 1721. It then passed to another branch of the Cope family, Sir Jonathan Cope, 1st Baronet of Bruern. When Sir Charles Cope, 3rd Baronet died in 1781, Drayton passed to one of his sisters, Catherine.
41 He was the uncle of New England colonist Sir Richard Saltonstall, father-in-law of Richard Wyche (a director of the English East India Company) and Sir Thomas Myddelton (a later Lord Mayor of London), and grandfather of Sir Peter Wyche (Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire), Nathaniel Wyche (president of the English East India Company) and Sir Thomas Myddelton (a general in the English Civil War).
Sir Robert remained the commandant until his retirement in 1899. His deputy, Colonel Sir Aslam Khan Sadozai, the first Muslim commandant, succeeded him. Then, the deputy to Colonel Sir Aslam Khan Sadozai was Malik Afridi Khan of Mulazai. Although the deputy, Malik Afridi Khan spent most of his time as the acting in charge of the Khyber Rifles due to the extensive leave of Sir Aslam.
Moreover, unlike at Teal Inlet, the Argentinians held the high ground overlooking it. As a result, Sir Galahad and Sir Tristram were caught unloading in daylight on 8 June and attacked by Argentine aircraft. Both were set ablaze. The fires on Sir Tristram soon burned themselves out, some of the cargo was saved, and the ship was ultimately salvaged, but Sir Galahad was a total loss.
McConchie has won the Best Novel category in the Sir Julius Vogel Awards for New Zealand science fiction and fantasy six times, including three for novels set in Andre Norton's worlds (by Norton and McConchie): in 2003, 2005, and 2006 for Beastmaster's Ark, Beastmaster's Circus, and The Duke's Ballad.2003 Sir Julius Vogel awards.2005 Sir Julius Vogel awards.2006 Sir Julius Vogel awards.
His father was Sir Elly Kadoorie, and his uncle, Sir Ellis Kadoorie. His family were originally Iraqi Jews from Baghdad who later migrated to Bombay (Mumbai), India in the mid-18th century. Kadoorie and his brother Sir Lawrence Kadoorie worked for Victor Sassoon during the 1920s and 1930s, and managed his Shanghai hotel. They also worked for there for their father, the industrialist Sir Elly Kadoorie.
Sir Thomas was twice married with issue from both. He married (1) Margaret (d. before August 1621), eldest daughter of Sir Robert Douglas of Glenbervie, second son of William Douglas, 9th Earl of Angus. They had two sons and two daughters, He remarried by contract dated 9 August 1621 (2) Jean, daughter of Sir John Moncrieff of that Ilk, and widow of Sir Simon Fraser of Inverallochy.
He was the twelfth son of Sir John Wingfield of Letheringham, Suffolk, by Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John FitzLewis of West Horndon, Essex; Sir Richard Wingfield (1469–1525) and Sir Robert Wingfield were his brothers. Humphrey was educated at Gray's Inn, where he was elected Lent Reader in 1517. He had been on the commission of the peace both for Essex and Suffolk since 1509 at least.
The British Prime Minister Winston Churchill with military leaders during his visit to Tripoli. The group includes: Lieutenant-General Sir Oliver Leese, General Sir Harold Alexander, General Sir Alan Brooke and General Sir Bernard Montgomery. Montgomery was advanced to KCB and promoted to full general. He kept the initiative, applying superior strength when it suited him, forcing Rommel out of each successive defensive position.
His proposers were Sir Charles Wyville Thomson, Sir William Turner, Sir Archibald Geikie and Sir John Murray. He won the Society's Neill Prize for the period 1880-1883. In 1890 he founded the research station at Puffin Island off the north Wales coast, appointing Philip Jacob White as its Director. He devoted himself from 1891 to the organization of a laboratory for study of the sea.
There are many parallels between Hornblower and real naval officers of the period, notably Admiral Lord Nelson and also Sir George Cockburn, Lord Cochrane, Sir Edward Pellew, Jeremiah Coghlan, Sir James Gordon, Sir William Hoste, and many others. The actions of the Royal Navy at the time, documented in official reports, gave much material for Hornblower's fictional adventures.National Maritime Museum: "Horatio Hornblower". Retrieved 2016-02-09.
A Short History of Cardiology, P R Fleming He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1915. His proposers were Sir William Turner, Sir Thomas Richard Fraser, Sir James Ormiston Affleck, Sir John Halliday Croom, Orlando Charnock Bradley and Charles Robertson Marshall. In 1941 his Harley Street home was destroyed in the Blitz. He retired in 1950 in poor health.
Stuart was a good judge of men, and among the afterwards distinguished men who acted as demonstrators and lecturers in his department were Sir Alexander McCormick, Professor James Thomas Wilson, Sir James Graham, Sir Charles James Martin, Sir Almroth Wright and Professor Henry George Chapman. When Stuart's chair was divided in 1890 he retained physiology, and Wilson was appointed to the new professorship of anatomy.
Acland was born at Holnicote, near Porlock, Somerset, the second son of Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 11th Baronet, and Mary, daughter of Sir Charles Mordaunt, 8th Baronet. Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 12th Baronet, was his elder brother.thepeerage.com Rt. Hon. Sir Arthur Herbert Dyke Acland, 9th/13th Bt. He was educated at Rugby School and Christ Church, Oxford, and was called to the Bar, Inner Temple, in 1867.
In 2008, Sir Bonar was cited in a Guardian April 1 hoax article about the British government's "Panopticon" plan, the "National Operational Deterrence and Intelligence Surveillance System" (NODISS). The first year of Twitter postings (@sirbonar) were collected into a book, The Twitters of Sir Bonar Neville-Kingdom.Book reference at www.lulu.com/shop/sir-bonar-neville-kingdom/the-twitters-of-sir- bonar-neville-kingdom/ebook/product-17367616.
1–6 biography of Sir John Acland, p. 2 Sir John Acland's nephew Sir Arthur Acland (died 1610) married Eleanor Mallet, the daughter and heir of Robert Mallet, and thus Wooleigh passed into the Acland family, later of Killerton. The son and heir of Sir Hugh Acland, 5th Baronet (died 1713) was John Acland (died 1703) who lived at Wooleigh whilst his father lived at Killerton.Vivian, p.
Robert and James were most likely from a family of mariners from Devon, England. Sir John Popham was the Lord Chief Justice of England, while Gilbert was the son of Sir Humphrey Gilbert and half nephew of Sir Walter Raleigh. Other financiers included Sir Ferdinando Gorges, the military governor of Plymouth. Much of the information about the events in the colony comes from his letters and memoirs.
Their subsequent marital history suggests that perhaps these factors outweighed personal compatibility. By Elizabeth, Cotton had a son: Sir Thomas Cotton, 2nd Baronet (1594–1662). Sir Thomas in turn married Margaret Howard, by whom he had a son, Sir John Cotton (born 1621). Sir Robert had an extensive circle of friends and a considerable capacity to charm, which he displayed both before and after marrying.
Sir William Carew, 5th Baronet, portrait by Michael Dahl Sir William Carew, 5th Baronet (c. 1690–1744) was a British politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1711 to 1744. Carew was the second son of Sir John Carew, 3rd Baronet and his third wife Mary Morice, daughter of Sir William Morice, 1st Baronet of Werrington, Devon.and was baptized on 24 January 1690.
In his Familiar Letters (ii.348) Sir Walter Scott writes to his son in 1825: "Mama and Anne are quite well; they are with me on a visit to Sir Alex. Don and his new lady, who is a very pleasant woman, and plays on the harp delightfully". Sir Alexander died in 1826; and in 1836 his widow married Sir James Maxwell Wallace (1785–1867).
Brassbound explains that he is the son of Sir Howard's deceased brother, Miles. He blames Sir Howard for the death of his mother and for tricking him out of his inheritance by legal technicalities. He intends to hand over Sir Howard to a fanatical Islamist Sheik. He tells Sir Howard that he presides over an unfair justice system that punishes the poor and weak.
Engraving of Sir John Cheke. He was apprenticed to John Savage. Nutting's style resembled that of Robert White. His subjects included Mary Capell, Duchess of Beaufort, after Robert Walker; Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey; John Locke, after Sylvester Brownover; Thomas Greenhill, after Thomas Murray, prefixed to his Art of Embalming, 1705; Aaron Hill the poet, 1705; Sir Bartholomew Shower; Sir John Cheke; James Bonnell; the Rev.
Shurley married Mary, daughter and heiress of Edward Halfhide of Aspenden, Hertfordshire.Ball p. 329 They had at least four sons and two daughters: two of their sons, Robert and Arthur, in turn inherited Isfield from their uncle Sir John Shurley. One of George's daughters, Judith, married Sir Samuel Crooke, 2nd Baronet, son of Sir Thomas Crooke, 1st Baronet; Sir Thomas was the founder of Baltimore, County Cork.
From 1921 he chaired the Carnegie Trust for University Education. He was awarded several honorary doctorates by the Scottish Universities including being created a Doctor of Divinity by the University of Edinburgh. In 1925 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir James Alfred Ewing, Sir Edmund Whittaker, Sir Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer, and Sir Thomas Hudson Beare.
Sir Francis had only one child, a daughter called Meriel (1705–40). Her first marriage was to a member of the Legh family of Lyme Park, with whom she had one child, a daughter. In 1728 she married Sir John Byrne of Timogue, Ireland. After the death of Sir Francis, the Tabley estate was inherited by Meriel's oldest son by her second marriage, Sir Peter Byrne (1732–70), who changed his surname to Leicester in order to inherit the estate under the terms of Sir Francis' will.
He completed two versions of this painting. Among his portraits were those of David Lloyd George, Sir John Williams, Sir John Rhys, Sir Henry Jones, Sir John Morris Jones, Dr Stanton Coit, Sir Frederick Mills, John Hinds MP. He painted the first of three portraits of Lloyd George in the summer of 1911. Lloyd George described him as "one of the most gifted artists Wales has produced". During the First World War, he painted the Welsh Charge at Mametz Wood, now in Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales.
Arms of Portman:Or, a fleur-de-lis azure Sir William Portman, 5th Baronet (died 1646) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1640 to 1644. He supported the Royalist side in the English Civil War. Portman was the son of Sir John Portman, 1st Baronet and his wife Anne Gifford, daughter of Sir Henry Gifford. The baronetcy went successively to Sir John Portman's four sons, passing to William on the death of Sir Hugh Portman, 4th Baronet unmarried in 1632.
On her death in 1717 Mary's stepson Sir John Aubrey, 3rd Baronet inherited Piddington, and it remained with the Aubrey baronets until Sir Thomas Digby Aubrey, 7th Baronet died in 1856 and the title became extinct. A cousin of Sir Thomas, Elizabeth Sophia Ricketts, inherited Piddington. Her son Charles Aubrey Ricketts inherited the manor and took the name Charles Aubrey Aubrey. He died in 1901, leaving Piddington to Sir Henry Aubrey-Fletcher, 4th Baronet, who was the great grandson of Sir John Aubrey, 3rd Baronet.
Five of their daughters reached adulthood: Alice (who married Sir Ferdinando Sutton), Douglas (who married William Dansey), Katherine (who married Sir Richard Leveson), Frances (who married Sir Gilbert Kniveton), and Anne (who married Sir Robert Holborne).George Adlard, Amye Robsart and the Earl of Leycester with Memoirs and Correspondence of Sir Robert Dudley and A History of Kenilworth Castle (reprinted by Echo Library, 2007, ), p. 323 In 1605, Robert Dudley left England and fled to Florence, accompanied by his first cousin once removed, Elizabeth Southwell.
Elizabeth Spencer was born 29 June 1552 at Althorp, Northamptonshire, the second eldest daughter of Sir John Spencer of Althorp and his wife Katherine Kitson, the daughter of Sir Thomas Kitson of Hengrave, Suffolk. She had three brothers, Sir John Spencer, Sir William Spencer, and Sir Richard Spencer; and three sisters, Anne Spencer, Baroness Mounteagle, Katherine Spencer, and Alice Spencer. In the year of her birth, Elizabeth's father held the office of High Sheriff of Northamptonshire, and the following year was Member of Parliament for Northamptonshire.
Portrait of Sir Watkin Williams Wynn, 4th Baronet, by Hugh Douglas Hamilton Wynnstay the family seat, 1793 Sir Joshua Reynolds, ca. 1768 Sir Watkin Williams-Wynn, 4th Baronet (23 September 1749 – 24 July 1789) was a Welsh landowner, politician and patron of the arts. The Williams-Wynn baronets had been begun in 1688 by the politician Sir William Williams, 1st Baronet, but had inherited, in the time of the 3rd baronet, Sir Watkin's father, the estates of the Wynn baronets, and changed their name to reflect this.
Trapdoor tells Sir Alexander what he has learned: Sebastian and Moll plan to meet at 3 o'clock in his (Sir Alexander's) chamber to have sex. They decide to trap her. Meanwhile, Sir Davy Dapper talks to Sir Alexander about his son, Jack, who is still wild and profligate, whoring, drinking, and gambling. Sir Davy has decided to teach his son a lesson: he will arrange to have Jack arrested, trusting a few days in the counter (the debtor's prison) to bring him to his senses.
307, pedigree of Drewe, states "Sir Thomas Drewe...sold Killerton to Sir Arthur Acland, Bart. (sic)" (died 1610) of Acland,Buried in Landkey Church, where his large monument survives whose son Sir John Acland, 1st Baronet (died 1647) deserted Acland and moved his residence to Columb John. Killerton was first used as a residence for Sir Arthur's widow Eleanor Mallet,Acland, Anne, p.6 (daughter and heiress of Robert Mallet of Woolleigh, whose wife was Elizabeth Rolle who remarried to Sir John Acland (died 1620)).
Castle Bromwich Hall Castle Bromwich Hall is a Jacobean mansion that was built in 1599 by Sir Edward Devereux, the first MP for Tamworth in Staffordshire. It was a single storey with a plain entrance. It was bought by Sir Orlando Bridgeman (keeper of The Great Seal) in 1657, for his son Sir John Bridgeman I. Sir John extended and improved the property in 1672, adding the second floor and a large front porch. His son, Sir John Bridgeman II, inherited it in 1710.
In February Apley House was taken by the Parliamentarians under Sir John Price, when Sir William and Sir Thomas Whitmore, Sir Francis Ottley, and about 60 men, were made prisoners. On 9 February the Royalist garrison in Shrewsbury Castle was surprised. The town's governor, Sir Michael Earnley, was slain, 15 pieces of ordnance, about 60 gentlemen, and 200 soldiers, were taken by Mytton, the Parliamentarian Governor of Wem. On 23 February Parliament captured Shrewsbury, and in the same month they also captured Benthall Hall from the Royalists.
Both, Sir Alan Fersht and Sir Greg Winter were knighted in recognition of their work and for their outstanding contributions to science. From 1990 to 2010 the unit has been extremely successful, both academically and commercially. All of Sir Alan's work on protein folding and much of Sir Greg's pioneering work to humanise antibodies was carried out at CPE. For example, Cambridge Antibody Technology was a biotechnology company founded by Sir Greg Winter in 1989 that was bought for £702 million in 2006 by AstraZeneca.
Sir Giles Alington was married three times and outlived his son and heir. "The [1st] marriage, between Ursula daughter of Sir Robert Drury of Hawstead in the County of Suffolk, knight, Privy Councillor" and "Sir Gyles Alington of Horseheath in the countie of Cambridge" is recorded on the tomb on their grandson, James Alington, in Milden parish church, Suffolk. By Ursula Drury (died 1523) Sir Giles had a son and heir, Sir Robert, Knt., (1520–1552), and a daughter who married John Spencer of Althorp.
To keep up his confidence for an upcoming speaking engagement, Gussie has been keeping a notebook in which he writes insults about Sir Watkyn and Spode. He loses the notebook and Bertie fears that if it should fall into Sir Watkyn's hands, Sir Watkyn will forbid Madeline to marry Gussie. The notebook is found by Stephanie "Stiffy" Byng, Sir Watkyn's niece, who wants approval from her uncle to marry the local curate, Bertie's friend, Harold "Stinker" Pinker. Sir Watkyn considers Harold insufficiently wealthy and therefore unsuitable.
Figures of "Justice" and "Mercy". The right- hand example of the two smaller fireplaces has carved scenes from The Merchant of Venice. Statues on the north wall include: The 1st Viscount Melville by Sir Francis Chantrey (1818); The 2nd Viscount Melville by Sir Francis Chantrey (1824); Lord Cockburn by William Brodie (1863). On the east wall: Duncan Forbes by Roubiliac (1752); Lord Jeffrey by Sir John Steell (1855); Lord President Boyle by Sir John Steell (1860); Lord President Blair by Sir Francis Chantrey (1815).
He served as ADC to Sir Edward Stone between 1906 and 1916 and to the Governor Sir Gerald Strickland from 1909 to 1912. He was Private Secretary to Strickland from 1912 and to Sir Harry Barron from 1913. Upon returning from the war, Wilkinson served as Private Secretary to the Governor of Victoria the Earl of Stradbroke between 1922 and 1923. In 1924 he returned to Western Australia as Private Secretary to Lt Governor Sir Robert McMillan and to the Governor Sir William Campion.
They had five sons and eight daughters, of whom one son, George, and six daughters survived him. These included Elizabeth, wife of Sir Richard Anderson, 2nd Baronet, Arabella, wife of Sir William Wiseman, 2nd Baronet, Margaret, wife of Sir Edward Farmer, Mary, wife of Sir Charles Crofts Read, Anne, wife of Sir John Rivers, 3rd Baronet, and Jane, wife of Charles Staples. In 1635, he purchased the manor of Sawbridgeworth (Sayesbury and Pishobury) from Lionel Cranfield, 1st Earl of Middlesex, Arthur Brett, and Nicholas Harman for £16,500.
Sir Christopher George Ridley Nugent, 6th Baronet (born October 5, 1949) is a British Baronet. He is the son of Sir Robin George Colborne Nugent, 5th Baronet, and is descended from Field Marshal Sir George Nugent, 1st Baronet for whom the Baronetcy was created. Through Sir George Nugent's wife Maria Skinner Sir Christopher is descendant from the Schuyler family and the Van Cortlandt family of British North AmericaBurke, Bernard. A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland, Volume 2.
Also in 1696 Sir Topewell Clownish in Peter Anthony Motteux's Love's a Jest, Sir Thomas Testie in Doggett's Country Wake, Sir Toby Cusifle in George Granville's She Gallants, Alderman Whim in Dilke's Lover's Luck; in 1697 Bevis in Dilke's City Lady, the Doctor in Ravenscroft's Anatomist, or the Sham Doctor, Sir Blunder Bosse in D'Urfey's Intrigues at Versailles, Flywife in Mary Pix's Innocent Mistress; and played Cacafogo in a revival of Rule a Wife and Have a Wife. The next year saw him as the original Sir Wealthy Plainder in Thomas Dilke's Pretenders; and in 1700 Sir Wilfull Witwoud in Congreve's The Way of the World.
The Chola Nadu region has produced a number of noteworthy personalities in the fields of arts, science, film and politics. Long recognized as a hub of Carnatic music, the region is home to most of India's renowned Carnatic musicians. There have also been important individuals in the field of politics. In British times, civil servants and lawyers from Chola Nadu like Sir T. Madhava Rao, Sir A. Seshayya Sastri, Sir Mohammad Usman, Sir A. T. Panneerselvam, Sir T. Muthuswamy Iyer, Sir P. S. Sivaswami Iyer, T. Ananda Rao, S. Satyamurti, V. S. Srinivasa Sastri, V. P. Madhava Rao and R. Raghunatha Rao dominated the bureaucracy.
Guinness, HS Magennis of Iveagh; monograph in JRSAI (1932) pp.96-102 Sir Hugh Magennis, the son of Donal Óg Magennis, was called by Sir Henry Bagenal the "civillist of all the Irishry", with Sir Nicholas Bagnall cited as having brought Sir Hugh over to the Queen's side from that of O'Neills. In 1584 Sir Hugh was regranted 'the entire country or territory of Iveagh', but not including the territory of Kilwarlin.Proudfoot L. (ed.) Down History and Society (Dublin 1997) PP162-3 When Sir Hugh died in 1596, his heir was his son Art Roe Magennis, whose sister Catherine was married to Hugh O'Neill.
William, the elder son of Sir James Anstruther, accompanied Sir James to London following the Union of the Crowns in 1603 where he was made a Knight of the Order of the Bath. Sir James's second son, Sir Robert, served as a diplomat for both James I and Charles I. Sir Phillip Anstruther, the second son of Sir Robert fought as a royalist during the civil war, and received Charles II at Dreel Castle after his coronation at Scone in 1651. Phillip Anstruther was later taken prisoner after the Battle of Worcester in 1651. He was excluded from Cromwell's Act of Grace and his estates were confiscated.
He married twice: firstly to Margaret Courtenay, daughter of "Sir Hugh Courtenay", whose identity is unclear,Maud Courtenay, a daughter of Sir Hugh Courtenay of Boconnoc (died 1471), married Sir John Arundell (born 1428) of Tolverne (a junior branch of Arundell of Lanherne), not Sir John Arundell of Trerice, according to Vivian, 1895, (Devon) p. 245 & Vivian, 1887 (Cornwall), p. 6 by whom he had two sons Robert and Walter, who died young, without children. he married secondly to Anne Moyle, daughter of Sir Walter Moyle of Estwell, by whom he had children four sons, the eldest two of whom, Robert and Sir John III, succeeded successively to Trerice.
Grimston's first wife Mary, a daughter of Sir George Croke, bore him six sons and two daughters, He married secondly Anne Meautys, widow of Thomas Meautys and daughter of Sir Nathaniel Bacon, K.B., a grandson of Sir Nicholas Bacon and by her had one daughter. Of his sons one only, Samuel (1643–1700), survived his father, and when Samuel died in October 1700 the baronetcy became extinct. Sir Harbottle's eldest daughter, Mary, married Sir Capel Luckyn, 2nd Baronet, and their grandson, William Luckyn, succeeded to the estates of his great-uncle, Sir Samuel Grimston, and took the name of Grimston in 1700. This William Luckyn Grimston (c.
The wedding party consisted of the bride and bride groom, the bridesmaids—Miss Nereda Robinson and Miss Neva St. John—the Governor, the Lady Robinson, Captain St. John, A.D.C., Mrs St. John, and H. Littleton, private secretary; Sir John Hay and Lady Hay, Sir George W. Allen and Lady Allen, Sir Alfred and Lady Stephen, Sir George and Lady Innes, Sir William and Lady Manning, Commodore Hoskins, R.N., and several officers of HMS Wolverine. Commodore Hoskins had married Dorothea Ann Eliza Robinson, daughter of Sir George Stamp Robinson, 7th Baronet (1797–1873). Miss Deas-Thompson was still a parishioner of St James' in 1900.
Parliament was recalled in 1626, but refused to fund taxes; to finance the war, Charles adopted "forced loans"; those who refused to pay would be imprisoned without trial, and if they continued to resist, sent before the Privy Council. Although initially ruled illegal, the judiciary complied after Chief Justice, Sir Randolph Crewe, was dismissed. Over 70 individuals were jailed for refusing to contribute, including Sir Thomas Darnell, Sir John Corbet, Sir Walter Erle, Sir John Heveningham and Sir Edmund Hampden, who submitted a joint petition for habeas corpus. Approved on 3 November 1627, the court ordered the five be brought before them for examination.
Rutland married firstly, on 6 May 1602, Frances (died before 26 November 1605), (third daughter and coheir of Sir Henry Knyvet of Charlton, Wiltshire and Elizabeth, the daughter of Sir James Stumpe of Bromham, Wiltshire), and widow of Sir William Bevill of Killigarth or Kilkhampton, Cornwall. They had a daughter, Katherine, who on 16 May 1620 married George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham. After Buckingham's death, Katherine married Randal MacDonnell, 1st Marquess of Antrim. He married secondly, after 26 October 1608, Cecily, eldest daughter of Sir John Tufton, 1st Baronet, Hothfield, Kent, (and his second wife, Christian, daughter of Sir Humphrey Browne), and widow of Sir Edward Hungerford.
On the west wall: Sir Walter Scott by John Greenshields (1835); Henry Erskine by Peter Turnerelli (1811); and various busts by William Brodie and Sir John Steell. There are multiple paintings by Sir Henry Raeburn: George Joseph Bell; Sir William Nairne, Lord Dunsinane; William Craig, Lord Craig; Matthew Ross; and Lord Abercromby of Tullibody. Paintings by John Watson Gordon include Lord Robertson, Alexander Wood, General Boyle and Erskine Douglas Sandford. Other works include Sir Thomas Hope by George Jameson, Lord Mansfield by David Martin, George Deas, Lord Deas by John Graham Gilbert, Sir Ilay Campbell by John Partridge, John Inglis, Lord Glencorse by George Reid.
Sir Horace had taken the name of the estate as his territorial designation when made a baronet in 1755, but was permanently resident in Florence. Sir Horace Mann was a friend and long-time correspondent of Horace Walpole. After a visit to Edward Mann at Linton Park in 1757, Walpole wrote to Sir Horace in Florence that: "the house is fine and stands like the citadel of Kent; the whole county is its garden."Letter to Sir Horace Mann, 3 September 1757 - On the death of Sir Horace in 1786, the baronetcy and the house passed to his nephew, Sir Horatio Mann MP, of Boughton Place in nearby Boughton Malherbe.
Seal from 1952 - 1997 Design: Queen Elizabeth II succeeded King George VI as the Queen of the United Kingdom. The Public Seal was revised to the current Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom with the Royal Style and Title amended. Holders: Sir Alexander Grantham, Sir Robert Brown Black, Sir David Clive Crosbie Trench, Sir Murray MacLehose, Sir Edward Youde, Sir David Wilson and The Rt. Hon. Chris Patten At the midnight hour of 1 July 1997 when British sovereignty over Hong Kong ended, a junior Executive Council official removed the Public Seal and formally defaced it with a ragged cross, using a chisel.
Scrope married Mary Carr, daughter of Sir Robert Carr, 2nd Baronet of Sleaford, and was the father of Sir Carr Scrope. Cites: Blore, pp. 6, 9.
In the garden is a stone sundial bearing the initials of Sir Richard, son of Sir Edward, and Anne his wife with a date of 1725.
Creasy succeeded Sir Francis Campbell Ross Douglas as Governor of Malta on 16 September 1949. He was succeeded by Sir Robert Laycock on 3 August 1954.
The memorial to Sir James Brisbane in St James' Church, Sydney A memorial to Sir James Brisbane was erected in St James' Church, Sydney in 1830.
Sir Edward Bacon (died 8 September 1618), of Shrubland Hall in Suffolk, was an English Member of Parliament and a half-brother of Sir Francis Bacon.
A c. 19th-century line engraving of Sir Thomas Smith. Sir Thomas Smith (23 December 1513 – 12 August 1577) was an English scholar, parliamentarian and diplomat.
Reilly married Rachel Mary Sykes, daughter of Sir Percy Sykes. After her death in 1984, Reilly married Ruth Norrington, widow of Sir Arthur Norrington (in 1987).
Sir Arthur Renwick (1837-1908) Sydney physician, politician and philanthropist Sir Arthur Renwick (30 May 1837 - 23 November 1908) was an Australian physician, politician and philanthropist.
Sir Frederick James Halliday Sir Frederick James Halliday (25 December 1806 – 22 October 1901) was a British civil servant and the first Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal.
They protested against the dictatorial behaviour of then PM Sir Aneerood Jugnauth. However after a lengthy trial Sir Gaëtan Duval was acquitted of all murder charges.
Sir Henry Meux, 1st Baronet. Sir Henry Meux, 1st Baronet (1770–1841) was a British brewer and baronet of the second creation of the Meux baronets.
Sir Thomas Meautys Sir Thomas Meautys (1592–1649) was an English civil servant and politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1621 and 1640.
Sir Frederick Charles Thomson grave, Dean Cemetery Sir Frederick Charles Thomson, 1st Baronet, (27 May 1875 – 21 April 1935) was a Scottish Unionist politician and lawyer.
Sir Joseph Walton in 1911 Sir Joseph Walton, 1st Baronet, DL, JP (19 March 1849 – 8 February 1923) was an English coalowner and Liberal Party politician.
Alice also had six daughters named Constance (who married firstly Sir William Spencer 2nd Baronet, and secondly Sir Edward Smith), Margaret, Bridget, Alice, Mary and Elizabeth.
9 Jun 1900, d. 24 Jun 1924. On 7 September 1923 married William Dalrymple, son of Sir William Dalrymple. # Sir George Werner Albu, 2nd Bt. b.
Sir William Hepburn McAlpine, 6th Baronet, (12 January 1936 – 4 March 2018) was a British businessman who was director of the construction company Sir Robert McAlpine.
Sir George Osborne Morgan George Osborne Morgan Sir George Osborne Morgan, 1st Baronet, (8 May 1826 – 25 August 1897) was a Welsh lawyer and Liberal politician.
The 17th-century lawyer Sir Isaac Thornton is buried in the church, as is Sir Arthur Clarke (1715-1806), the last of the baronets of Snailwell.
Two of the first Viscount's younger brothers also gained distinction. Sir Gerard Lowther, 1st Baronet, was a diplomat and Sir Cecil Lowther a soldier and politician.
Sir Charles Archibald Philip Southwell, CBE, MC, GCStJ (6 June 1894 – 30 November 1981), known as Sir Philip Southwell, was an English petroleum geologist and industrialist.
He is the son of Conservative politician Sir Michael Grylls and his wife Lady Sarah "Sally" (née Ford)."Obituary: Sir Michael Grylls", Telegraph.co.uk, 13 February 2001.
1713-Sir George Tempest, Bart. 1714-Charles Fairfax. Esq. 1720-Sir Walter Hawksworth, Bart. 1725-Ed. Bell, Esq. Grand Masters 1726-Chas. Bathurst, Esq. 1729-Ed.
The hymnodist's maternal grandmother was Elizabeth, daughter of Sir William Shelley; Sir Richard Southwell was his paternal grandfather, but his father was born out of wedlock.
Sir Frederick Samson Park Sir William Frederick ("Freddy") Samson (12 January 1892 – 6 February 1974) was a businessman and long-term Mayor of Fremantle, Western Australia.
Sir Christopher Rupert Walford (15 October 1935 – 21 October 2015)Sir Christopher Walford was an English solicitor who served as the 667th Lord Mayor of London.
Timbs, John (1881). Anecdote Lives of William Hogarth, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Gainsborough, Henry Fuseli, Sir Thomas Lawrence, and J.M.W. Turner. R. Bentley. pp. 57–58.
They protested against the dictatorial behaviour of then PM Sir Aneerood Jugnauth. However after a lengthy trial Sir Gaëtan Duval was acquitted of all murder charges.
Sir Thomas Kavali was a politician from Jimi District of Jiwaka Province, Papua New Guinea. He held various ministries portfolio and served under Sir Michael Somare.
Sir Richard Southwood married, in 1955, Alison Langley (née Harden) who he met at Rothamsted; Sir Richard and Lady Southwood had two sons and six grandchildren.
He was succeeded by his son, Sir Francis Anthony Charles Peter Hartwell, 6th Baronet (born 1940). Sir Broderick Hartwell, 5th Baronet died on 14 December 1993.
Sir John McMichael Sir John McMichael FRSE LLD (1904-1993) was a 20th-century Scottish cardiologist. He developed the Royal Post Graduate Medical School at Hammersmith.
He was succeeded by his brother, the third Sir Adam, who died on 3 Sept. 1296, and was succeeded by his son, the fourth Sir Adam.
Sir Launcelot Dinadan James Henderson (born 20 November 1951), styled The Rt Hon. Lord Justice Henderson or Sir Launcelot Henderson, is a Lord Justice of Appeal.
Sir William Don and fellow actor and impresario George Coppin in Australia Sir William Henry Don, 7th Baronet (1825–1862) was a British peer and actor.
His proposers were D. A. Bannerman, Sir Landsborough Thomson, Sir George Taylor, Edward Hindle and V. C. Wynne-Edwards. He resigned from the Society in 1987.
One of his sons was Vice Admiral Sir Geoffrey Biggs (1938–2002)."Vice-Admiral Sir Geoffrey Biggs", The Telegraph, 3 July 2002. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
Born and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, Irving attended David Lloyd George Elementary School, Sir Wilfrid Laurier Elementary School and Sir Winston Churchill Secondary School.
Braswell, Mary Flowers. 1995. Sir Perceval of Galles and Yvain and Gawain. Kalamazoo, Michigan: Western Michigan University for TEAMS. Sir Perceval of Galles, lines 1190-1192\.
Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Liston Sir Robert Liston, GCB FRSE PC (8 October 1742 - 15 July 1836) was a Scottish diplomat and ambassador to several countries.
When the British resident in Kabul, Sir Louis Cavagnary, was killed in 1878, the British sent off a successful punitory expedition under General Sir Frederic Roberts.
Sir Thomas was the son of Sir Thomas Greene (d. 1468) and Matilda Throckmorton (d. 1496). This branch of the Green family resided at Greens Norton in Northamptonshire from the fourteenth century until the death of the last Sir Thomas Green without male heirs in 1506.
He was the son of Judge George Gough and Charlotte Margaret Becher; brother of General Sir Hugh Gough; father of General Sir Hubert Gough and Brigadier General Sir John Gough; and greatnephew of Field Marshal The 1st Viscount Gough. He later achieved the rank of general.
He was born at Orchard Wyndham, Somerset, the eighth son of Sir John Wyndham (1558–1645) of Orchard Wyndham, by his wife Joan Portman, daughter of Sir Henry Portman (d.1590) of Orchard Portman, Somerset. His younger brother was the judge Sir Wadham Wyndham (d.1668).
Sir Theobald I Russell( d. 1341) of Kingston Russell, Dorset, grandfather of Sir Maurice Russell of Dyrham, had been the ward of Sir Ralph III de Gorges, 1st Baron Gorges (d. 1324), and had been married-off by his warder to his 2nd. daughter Eleanor de Gorges.
Sir Robert Dalzell, 1st Baronet (1639−1686), was a Scottish politician. He was the son of the Honourable Sir John Dalzell and Agnes Nisbet. His paternal grandfather was Robert Dalzell, 1st Lord Dalzell. He married, firstly, Catherine Sandilands, daughter of Sir James Sandilands and Lady Agnes Carnegie.
Born in her father's house at Brede, she was one of five children of Sir Goddard Oxenbridge (died 1531) and his second wife Anne (died 1531), widow of John Windsor and daughter of Sir Thomas Fiennes, of Claverham in Arlington (a son of Sir Richard Fiennes).
Headstone of Sir Henry Bessemer, West Norwood cemetery Bessemer died in March 1898 at Denmark Hill, London. He is buried in West Norwood cemetery, London SE27. Other influential Victorians such as Sir Henry Tate, Sir Henry Doulton and Baron de Reuters are buried in the same cemetery.
Sir Richard Winn Livingstone (23 January 1880 – 26 December 1960) was a British classical scholar, educationist, and academic administrator.H. M. Palmer, Livingstone, Sir Richard Winn (1880–1960), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, September 2004. Sir Richard Winn Livingstone, Encyclopædia Britannica. He promoted the classical liberal arts.
Sir James Barr Sir James Barr Sir James Barr FRCP FRSE CBE DL LLD (25 September 1849 – 16 November 1938) was an Ulster-born physician, who rose to be President of the British Medical Association and is noted for his work on the medical care of prisoners.
Guy Campbell in Kenya, 1953 Colonel Sir Guy Theophilus Halswell Campbell, 5th Baronet OBE, MC (18 January 1910 - 19 July 1993) was a British soldier. Sir Guy's branch of the Campbell baronets, of St Cross Mede, were created in 1815 with Sir Guy Campbell, 1st Baronet.
Sir Thomas Wodehouse in 1605, by an unknown artist. Sir Thomas Wodehouse, 2nd Baronet (c. 1585 - 18 March 1658), was an English baronet and Member of Parliament. Wodehouse was the son of Sir Philip Wodehouse, 1st Baronet, of Kimberley, Norfolk, and Grizell, daughter of William Yelverton.
Sir Darryl Farris (born November 8, 1986), known mononymously as Sir (stylized as SiR), is an American singer, songwriter and record producer from Inglewood, California. He is signed to Top Dawg Entertainment and released his debut album on the label titled November on January 19, 2018.
Sir Henry Bingham, 1st Baronet (1573 – c. 1658) was an Irish politician. Born at Milton Abbas, he was the son of Sir George Bingham, nephew of Sir Richard Bingham, and his wife Cicely Martin, daughter of Robert Martin. Bingham served as captain in the Irish Army.
Notable recent office-holders have included Sir Lionel Cust (1901–1927), Sir Kenneth Clark (1934–1944), Professor Anthony Blunt (1945–1972), one of the infamous Cambridge Five, and Sir Oliver Millar (1972–1988). The current Surveyor of the Queen's Pictures is Desmond Shawe- Taylor, appointed in 2005.
1612), Auditor-General of Ireland, and his wife Anne Palmer. After his death Anne remarried Sir Henry Colley (d. 1637), of Castle Carbury, grandson of Sir Henry Colley. Cooke was the father of Sir Walsingham Cooke, of Tomduffe, High Sheriff of Wexford, and a younger son William.
Hutchinson was the son of Sir Thomas Hutchinson (1589–1643) of Owthorpe Hall and Margaret daughter of Sir John Byron of Newstead {she was a descendant of Sir William Sidney}. He was baptised on 18 September 1615. cites: Brown, Worthies of Notts, p. 190; Life of Col.
10, 1995, Hackney, pp.75-91 Whitmore was the brother-in-law of Sir William Craven who was Lord Mayor in 1611. His daughter Elizabeth married Sir John Weld and his daughter Anne married Sir John Robinson, 1st Baronet, of London who was Lord Mayor in 1662.
Field Marshal Sir George Howard Lady Elizabeth Howard née Beckford, wife of Sir George Howard Field Marshal Sir George Howard lived at Stoke Place from 1764 until 1796. He was born in 1718 into a military family. His father was Lieutenant General Thomas Howard.The Peerage website.
He married firstly Mary Rushe, daughter of Sir Francis Rushe and secondly Jane Hannay, daughter of Sir Robert Hannay and had issue by both wives, including Charles who succeeded as 2nd Earl. His widow, Jane, quickly remarried Sir Robert Reading, 1st Baronet, and had further issue.
Haute, Sir Nicholas (1357-c. 1415), of Wadden Hall in Waltham, Kent, History of Parliament Retrieved 17 July 2013. John was the grandson and heir of Sir Thomas Tyrrell (d.1382)The History of Parliament states that John Tyrrell was the nephew of Sir Thomas Tyrrell (d.
Sir Thomas Wyatt the Younger is a central character in the history play Sir Thomas Wyatt (published in 1607) by John Webster and Thomas Dekker. The younger Sir Thomas Wyatt also features in the historical novel Kett's Oak by Anne Stevens, published on Amazon c 2018.
Sir Gawain is invited to spend the night in the Carle's own chamber. Here, a bed is prepared for him and the Carle's beautiful wife is soon lying in it. The Carle invites Sir Gawain to do as he wishes with her and Sir Gawain courteously complies.
Bright married four times. He married first, about 1645, Catherine Lister, daughter of Sir Richard Hawksworth. Secondly, about 1665, he married Elizabeth Norcliffe, daughter of Sir Thomas Norcliffe. In July 1682 he married Susanna Vane, daughter of Sir Thomas Liddell, 2nd baronet, and widow of Thomas Vane.
Hudson, Harriet. 1996. Four Middle English Romances. Kalamazoo, Michigan: Medieval Institute Publications. TEAMS Middle English text of Sir Eglamour of Artois In The Tale of Sir Gareth of Orkney in Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, Sir Gareth is given a magic ring by a damsel of Avalon.
Sir Robert Hamilton Sir Robert William Hamilton (26 August 1867 – 5 July 1944) was a Scottish Liberal Party politician and Chief Justice of the East Africa Protectorate.
Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles John Thomson, (7 June 1941 – 10 July 1994), usually Sir John Thomson, was a senior officer in the Royal Air Force (RAF).
Sir Derek Keppel, by Leslie Ward. Lieutenant Colonel Sir Derek William George Keppel (7 April 1863 – 26 April 1944) was a member of the British Royal Household.
Visitation of England and Wales. Priv. print.; 1905. p. 9. Monsell's great uncles were Sir Aubrey de Vere and Sir Stephen de Vere.Burke's Irish Family Records, ed.
Sir William married Margery, daughter of Sir Peter Martell of Chilwell, Nottinghamshire. They had five sons and five daughters. The conspirator Anthony Babington was a direct descendant.
Sir Walden Hanmer Sir Walden Hanmer, 1st Baronet (1717–1783) was a British lawyer and politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1768 and 1780.
The SIR model can be modified to model vaccination. Typically these introduce an additional compartment to the SIR model, V, for vaccinated individuals. Below are some examples.
Sir Arthur died in 1688 and was buried at King's Nympton, the manor he had recently purchased from Sir Hugh Pollard, 2nd Baronet, his father's first cousin.
Monument over Sir Alexander Muir Mackenzie in Delvine. Sir Alexander Muir MacKenzie, 1st Baronet FRSE (2 March 1764 – 11 March 1835) was a Scottish advocate and landowner.
The British contingent was chaired by Sir John Singleton, with the remaining members being Lord Morrison, Sir Frederick Leggett, Wilfrid Crick, Reginald Manningham-Buller, and Richard Crossman.
Sir Lees Knowles, 1st Baronet, in 1909. Sir Lees Knowles, 1st Baronet (16 February 1857 – 7 October 1928) was a British barrister, military historian and Conservative politician.
Lieutenant-General Sir Andrew Agnew, 5th Baronet JP (21 December 1687 – 14 August 1771) was the son of Sir James Agnew, 4th Baronet and Lady Mary Montgomerie.
Also Clematis texensis 'Sir Trevor Lawrence', Tulipa 'Sir Trevor Lawrence' and Begonia were also named after him. A genus of orchids, Trevoria, bears his name as well.
Tomb of two Sir Edward Littletons, father and son. East wall of north chancel aisle. Lower stage: Sir Edward Littleton (d. 1610) and his wife, Margaret Devereux.
Sir Edward Penton Sir Edward Penton (18 June 1875 – 21 December 1967) was a British Clothing administrator and Liberal Party politician who was Mayor of St Marylebone.
Sir Wilfred Grenfell Wilfred Grenfell and his wife in 1916 Sir Wilfred Thomason Grenfell, KCMG (28 February 1865 – 9 October 1940) was a medical missionary to Newfoundland.
He thus became Sir James Ah Koy, effective from 19 June 2006, a spokesman for Papua New Guinea's Governor-General, Sir Paulias Matane, announced on the 17th.
Cecil Papers. vol 19.p.374 (123.113) and then sold in 1608 to Sir Henry Billingsley (jnr) of Doynton Manor, Glos., the son of Sir Henry (c.
Sir John Boys Sir John Boys (1607 – 8 October 1664) is best known as the Royalist Governor of Donnington Castle in Berkshire during the English Civil War.
Sir William Charles Fleming Robertson (1867– 27 June 1937Profile of Sir William Charles Fleming Robertson) was a British colonial administrator, Governor of Barbados from 1925 to 1932.
NDTV, Sir Edmund Hillary revisits Antarctica, 20 January 2007. Radio Network, PM and Sir Edmund Hillary off to Scott Base, 15 January 2007. Retrieved 20 January 2007.
The Academy was estabilsed on 13 September 1994, by Sir S.Y. Chung, Prof. Yau-Kai Cheung, Sir Charles K. Kao and other engineering scholars in Hong Kong.
Sir Constant Hendrik de Waal, KCB, QC (1 May 1931 – 1 October 2016), known as Sir Henry de Waal, was a British-Dutch lawyer and parliamentary draftsman.
Burke's Peerage 1833 Vol. IV p. 455 They had three daughters, and one son Sir Thomas Reynell, 3rd Baronet. Sir Richard died at Laleham in June 1723.
General Sir Robert Archibald Cassels, (15 March 1876 – 23 December 1959) was a British Indian Army officer. He was the father of Field Marshal Sir James Cassels.
Raikes's uncle was Admiral Sir Robert Raikes. His cousins were Vice Admiral Sir Iwan Raikes who became Flag Officer Submarines and Raymond Raikes the producer and director.
Sir Steuart Colvin Bayley Sir Steuart Colvin Bayley (26 November 1836 – 3 June 1925) was a British civil servant and Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal from 1887-1890.
Sir John Byron (c. 1526 – 1600) was an Elizabethan English nobleman, landowner, politician, and knight. He was also known as Little Sir John with the Great Beard.
Moll kisses him. Lady Plus enters with Sir Godfrey. Moll and Pennydub exit to avoid being seen together. Sir Godfrey continues to encourage Lady Plus to remarry.
Now That's What I Call Big Sir is a remix album by Big Sir. It consists of various remixes of songs from their first self-titled album.
His father was Sir Walter Hely-Hutchinson, the last Governor of the Cape Colony. He was married to Melita Keppel, daughter of Admiral Sir Colin Richard Keppel.
Led resistance against the Roman army. # Sir Steve Redgrave, rower. Won gold medals at five consecutive Olympic Games (1984–2000). # Sir Thomas More, author and philosopher (Utopia).
Sir Robert Harry Inglis Palgrave (1827–1919) photographed c.1911 or earlier Sir Robert Harry Inglis Palgrave (11 June 1827 - 25 January 1919) was a British economist.
In 1944 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Sir James Wordie, George Tyrrell, Sir Arthur Trueman and John Weir.
Monument to Sir Harry Calvert in All Saints Church, Middle Claydon Lieutenant General Sir Harry Calvert, 1st Baronet (March 1763 – 3 September 1826) was a British general.
Bust of Sir William Whitla on the Whitla Hall, Queen's University, Belfast Sir William Whitla (15 September 1851 – 11 December 1933) was an Irish physician and politician.
His proposers were Alexander Veitch Lothian, Sir John James Burnet, George Adam Smith and Sir J. Arthur Thomson. He died on 31 March 1945 in Port Appin.
Sir Francis Burdett (5th Bart.) was a member of the Burdett family of Bramcote and inherited the family baronetcy from his grandfather Sir Robert Burdett in 1797.
In 2010 Latasi was appointed acting Governor-General between the terms of Sir Filoimea Telito and Sir Iakoba Italeli. This was quite remarkable considering Latasi's republican tendencies.
In 2009, the headquarters moved again to Charles Darwin House, near Gray's Inn Road. Past presidents include Professor Ron Laskey, Sir Philip Cohen, and Sir Tom Blundell.
Sir Francis Wenman. Sir Francis Wenman (9 December 1599 - 26 June 1640) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1628 and 1640.
Wenman married Ann Sandys, daughter of Sir Samuel Sandys of Ombersley, Worcestershire. His son Francis became a baronet. His daughter Anne married Sir John Fettiplace, 1st Baronet.
Tomb of two Sir Edward Littletons, father and son. East wall of north chancel aisle. Lower stage: Sir Edward Littleton (d. 1610) and his wife, Margaret Devereux.
Oxford University Press, London. 1957. pp. 721–726 There are also rash promises in the Breton lays 'Sir Orfeo' and 'Sir Launfal', which Chaucer may have known.
His first published monograph was a catalogue of the iconography of Sir Walter Scott.Francis Russell, Portraits of Sir Walter Scott: A study of romantic portraiture, London, 1987.
The tomb of Sir Goddard Oxenbridge in St George's church, Brede, East Sussex, England Sir Goddard Oxenbridge (died 1531) was an English landowner and administrator from Sussex.
Penguin Books Limited. 12. The Dragon. pp 159–172. Sir Lancelot kills a dragon that is living inside a tomb, in Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d'Arthure.
Sir Thomas's son and heir was Sir John Willys, 2nd Baronet (c. 1635–1704) who succeed to the baronetcy on the death of his father in 1701.
Sir Henry Morris. The Times (Obituaries). Tuesday, 15 June 1926, issue 44298; p. 11, column C.Morris, Sir Henry – Biographical entry – Plarr's Lives of the Fellows Online. Livesonline.rcseng.ac.uk.
Following independence, Sir Kenneth and Lady O'Connor retired to their house, Buckland Court, in Surrey, England in 1962.Sir Kenneth died on 13 January 1985, aged 88.
The test case went to a panel of 14 judges drawn from different courts. Two of those dissented: Sir Thomas Foster (1548–1612) and Sir Thomas Walmsley.
One son was Sir Charles Jenkinson, 10th Baronet, a second son was John Jenkinson, Bishop of St David's. Their daughter Frances married Sir William Boothby, 8th Baronet.
Sir Hamilton Edward de Coucey Howard, 2nd Baronet (19 October 1915 – 16 March 2001), known as Sir Edward Howard, was an English aristocrat, businessman and public official.
His proposers for the latter were Sir John Graham Kerr, Sir John Arthur Thomson, Frederick Orpen Bower, and John Walter Gregory. He died on 19 March 1963.
Sir Daniel Cooper. Sir Daniel Cooper. Rose Bay in 1855 showing Rose Bay Cottage, almost alone. The fountain in the grounds of Rose Bay Cottage in 1855.
Sir John Bramston Sir John Bramston (or Brampston) the elder (18 May 1577 – 22 September 1654) was an English judge and Chief Justice of the King's Bench.
During the disestablishment of the great Cistercian house of Furness Abbey, Sir James Leyburn as commissioner and Sir John Lamplugh (the younger) as his assistant by the command of the Lord Lieutenant of Lancashire, gave good service, and Robert Southwell wrote to Cromwell in July 1537 asking that they be thanked and seeking their further assistance in Cumberland and Northumberland.'205. Robert Southwell to Cromwell (2 July)', in Letters and Papers, Henry VIII, XII Part 2: June-December 1537, pp. 88-89 (British History Online). At the appointment of Sir Thomas Wentworth as Captain of Carlisle Castle, and of Sir Thomas Wharton as Deputy Warden of the West Marches, Leyburn and Lamplugh, together with Sir William Musgrave and Sir John Lowther, Sir Richard Bellingham and some 30 others were appointed as Wharton's assistants.'249.
Scotland Yard's Inspector Higgins (Joachim Fuchsberger) becomes involved in a case that began with the corpse of Sir Oliver supposedly laughing from inside of his own coffin during his funeral. Soon people who were close to Sir Oliver start to get killed. Sir Oliver's brother Sir Cecil swears he saw his dead brother jaunting around the countryside in a skeleton costume. Higgins teams up with reporter Peggy Brand (Siw Mattson) and his bumbling chief Sir Arthur (Hubert von Meyerinck) to unmask the villain who is killing people with a poisoned scorpion ring.
Sir William Lowther, 3rd Baronet Memorial to Sir William Lowther in Cartmel Priory Sir William Lowther, 3rd Baronet (1727 – 15 April 1756) was an English landowner, of Marske Hall, Yorkshire and Holker Hall. He was the eldest son of Sir Thomas Lowther, 2nd Baronet and Lady Elizabeth Cavendish. In January 1755, he inherited the Whitehaven estates and coal mines from his fourth cousin once removed, Sir James Lowther, 4th Baronet, and succeeded him as Member of Parliament for Cumberland. However, he died unmarried in 1756, last of his line.
Sir Robert Drury (c. 1503 – 21 May 1577) of Hedgerley and Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire, was the second son of Sir Robert Drury, Speaker of the House of Commons, and was the father of Sir Robert Drury (1525–1593), Sir William Drury, and Sir Drue Drury. He was active in local administration in Buckinghamshire, and a Member of Parliament for that county. His name appears in the Ellesmere manuscript of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. Guide To Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in the Huntington Library, EL 26 C 9 “Ellesmere Chaucer”.
He married twice. By his first wife he had a son, Sir Thomas Perrott, 1st Baronet of Haroldston, created 28 June 1611, who died before his Letters Patent was even issued, having married in 1583 Lady Dorothy, sister of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex. Sir Thomas had two daughters: Elizabeth, who married John Pryse of Gogerthan; and Penelope, who first married famed astronomer Sir William Lower in 1601, and second, Sir Robert Naunton, one of the biographers of Sir John, and Secretary of State to James I of England.
Hewett was thus concerned in these affairs with Sir William Cecil, Sir Edmund Peckham (High Treasurer of the Mint), Sir John Yorke, Sir Thomas Parry, the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths, and also the Marquess of Winchester and Sir Richard Sackville, Commissioners for the Coinage, whom Her Majesty suspected of deceiving her.R. Lemon, Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reigns of Edward VI, Mary, Elizabeth 1547–1580 (Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans & Roberts, London 1857), pp. 160–61. (Hathi Trust). This reference is mistakenly transposed by Welch (D.N.B.).
The play's opening scene introduces Sir Andrew Mendicant and his daughter Charissa. Sir Andrew is a country gentleman who has come to London, neglecting his estates in the pursuit of wealth and preferment at Court. So far, however, his attempts have proved futile, and he is reduced to a last-gasp strategy of marrying his daughter to the prominent courtier Sir Ferdinando. Charissa wants no part of Sir Ferdinando; she is in love with Frederick, a young man of "valor, wit, and honour" — but no estate, which earns the scorn of Sir Andrew.
"Super Junior's Yesung to star in third musical 'Spamalot'" 10Asia. 19 August 2010. Retrieved 30 March 2012 A Norwegian production ran from September to December 2012, with a cast featuring Atle Antonsen as King Arthur, Trond Espen Seim as Sir Lancelot, Anders Baasmo Christiansen as Sir Robin, Espen Beranek Holm as Sir Belvedere and Trond Fausa Aurvåg as Prince Herbert. A Serbian production at Sava Centar in Belgrade had a cast including Nikola Kojo as King Arthur, Nikola Đuričko as Sir Lancelot and Gordan Kičić as Sir Robin.
He reports this to the town mayor, who demands an explanation from Sir Edgar. Sir Edgar's secretary explains that the noises are from Lord Barrat, Sir Edgar's nephew (the 'young lord' of the title), who has arrived recently in Germany and is learning German, but is making mistakes and is punished with lashings. However, the prospect of a pending social event at Sir Edgar's mansion becomes evident. This is fulfilled in scene 2 of act 2, where Lord Barrat is presented to the townspeople at a social event at Sir Edgar's mansion.
Biddick Hall; Sir Henry's birthplace was demolished and replaced by this in 1701 Henry Belasyse was born in 1648, at Biddick House in Durham, son of Sir Richard Belasyse (1612-1651) of Potto, North Yorkshire, and his second wife, Margaret (d. after 1670), daughter of Sir William Lambton. He had an elder half brother from Sir Richard's first marriage, William, who died in 1681 and a sister Catherine. The Belasyse were a prolific and long-established Durham family; his paternal grandfather, Sir William, was High Sheriff of Durham from 1625-1640.
The first Earl of Seafield's branch of the Ogilvy family descended from Sir Walter Ogilvy, whose brother Sir John Ogilvy was the ancestor of the Earls of Airlie. In 1616, the aforementioned Sir Walter Ogilvy's descendant and namesake, Sir Walter Ogilvy, was created Lord Ogilvy of Deskford in the Peerage of Scotland. His son, the second Lord, was created Earl of Findlater in the Peerage of Scotland in 1638. Three years later, in 1641, Lord Findlater obtained a new patent with remainder to his daughter Elizabeth and her husband Sir Patrick Ogilvy.
Sir William Garrard, who bought the manor of Dorney from James Hill in 1542, served as Lord Mayor of London in 1555. He died in 1571, and was succeeded by his elder son, also called Sir William Garrard, who died in 1607 to be succeeded by his younger brother, Sir John Garrard.Burke's Extinct Baronetcies (1841) s.v. Garrard of Lamer The daughter of Sir William Garrard was Martha (died 1617), who married James Palmer (later Sir James Palmer, knighted 1629), and Dorney Court was acquired by her husband in 1624.
Sir Richard de Stapledon, detail from his effigy in Exeter Cathedral Monument and effigy of Sir Richard de Stapledon, dressed as an armed knight, Exeter Cathedral. The cross-legged posture is supposed to denote a crusader Pole, Sir William (d.1635), Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, Sir John-William de la Pole (ed.), London, 1791, p.502 Sir Richard de Stapledon (died 1326) of Annery in the parish of Monkleigh, North Devon, England, was a judge and the elder brother of Walter de Stapledon (1261-1326), Bishop of Exeter.
The Walker Baronetcy was created in the Baronetage of England in 1679, for Sir George Walker of Bushey Hall in the County of Hertford. Sir George, the first baronet, was the son of Sir Walter Walker, the legal adviser to Queen Catherine of Braganza from 1661, who received a knighthood for his services. Sir Walter's grandson was named after him and, in turn, inherited the Walker baronetcy. This Sir Walter, the second baronet, was the last holder of the title: upon his death without an heir, the Bushey Hall baronetcy became extinct.
A television interviewer (Michael Palin) introduces two archaeologists: Professor Lucien Kastner (Terry Jones), of Oslo University, and Sir Robert Eversley (John Cleese). It soon becomes obvious that the host is interested mainly in their heights; he insults Kastner (5′10″) and fawns over Sir Robert (6′5″). When Sir Robert brings up his discovery of Polynesian influences, the host asks about the Polynesians' stature; Sir Robert replies that it "has nothing to do with archaeology," whereupon the host takes an artifact and smashes it, enraging Kastner. Sir Robert punches the host, who swears revenge.
His daughter, Frances b. (posthumous) 2 December 1577, d. 9 November 1657, married Sir Anthony Dering of Kent (1558–1636), JP, of Surrenden Dering in Pluckley, Kent; the parents of Sir Edward Dering, 1st baronet (1598–1644), who married Elizabeth (1602–1622), daughter of Sir Nicholas Tufton, 1st earl of Thanet.Salt, S. P., 'Dering, Sir Edward, first baronet (1598–1644)’, ODNB, OUP, 2004 accessed 23 May 2005 Following the Elizabethan era, Sir Robert Bell's descendants set sail for America, and arrived in Jamestown, Virginia, before and after the Mayflower landed on Plymouth Rock.
Sir John Spencer was left his "best gowne of velvett furred with marteins" provided he ceased pressure for more than Sir Giles thought "kindlie and frindlie." His second wife Alice was the stepdaughter of Sir Thomas More.p.384, Eric Ives, Anne Boleyn There are several Alington memorials within Horseheath parish church including a tomb of Sir Giles (died 1586) who lies in splendour with one of his sons, one above the other, both in armour, heads on helmets and feet on hounds. There is in addition a brass to Sir Robert Alington, Knt.
Charles' second son, Sir John Moore (born 1620), is responsible for the village's most famous building, the Sir John Moore Church of England Primary School. Since his elder brother, Charles, was expected to inherit the family estates, as the second son Sir John was expected to make his own way in the world. Sir John, and all subsequent generations of younger sons, went to London to make a living as merchants. Sir John was unquestionably the most successful, becoming friends with Charles II, as well as Lord Mayor and subsequently Alderman of London.
Sir Charles was a chestnut stallion bred in Virginia by James J. Harrison and foaled at Harrison's Diamond Grove plantation in Brunswick County. He was sired by Sir Archy, who is generally regarded as the first great American-bred racehorse and sire. In addition to Sir Charles, Sir Archy sired Bertrand (who also became a leading sire) and Timoleon (the sire of Boston who in turn sired the great Lexington). Sir Archy was by Diomed, who won the first Epsom Derby in 1780 but had little success at stud in England.
43 On 11 November 1824, he was gazetted to the 47th (Lancashire) regiment, this being backdated to November 1815, and went on leave in Europe. In March 1826, he was appointed as Assistant Military Secretary to the Commander-in-Chief, Ireland (first Lieutenant-General Sir George Murray, followed by Sir John Byng, then Sir Richard Hussey Vivian and finally Sir Edward Blakeney), holding this post until 1843. In 1827, he published his second book, A Practical Treatise on Topographical Surveying and Drawing, which was dedicated to his commander-in-chief Sir George Murray.
In England he received the patronage of Sir Philip Sidney, Sir Francis Walsingham and Sir Christopher Hatton when he became interested in publishing Renaissance works. He was closely involved with the English embassy in Venice and became friends with Sir Henry Wotton who was ambassador there before Sir Dudley Carleton. In 1592 he was appointed Italian tutor to King James VI of Scotland and Anne of Denmark. He gave James VI a manuscript of his works in August 1592, and another manauscript to the Danish ambassador, Niels Krag in 1593, seeking Danish royal patronage.
Colonel Fainwell shows up at the park dressed nicely to impress Sir Phillip with a few footmen to show off. Fainwell is supposedly dressed in a French style which attracts the attention of Sir Phillip as Colonel approaches him. Once they begin to "praise one another", the woman sitting with Sir Phillip leaves and the Colonel says everything that Sir Philip wants to hear. Sir Philip gives the consent to the Colonel to marry Anne Lovely, Fainwell is arranged to be introduced personally to the other three guardians.
In 1658 the estate was purchased by Sir William Ducie; on his death, in 1680, it was bought by Sir William Langhorne. It passed to his nephew, Sir John Conyers, in 1715, and remained in the family (being inherited by Jane (née Weller), the wife of Sir Thomas Spencer Wilson, in 1777). Under their grandson Sir Thomas Maryon Wilson a wing was added to the house by Norman Shaw, in 1877. During World War I, Charlton House was the divisional headquarters of the Red Cross for Greenwich and Woolwich.
1493), Comptroller of the Household during the reign of King Edward IV. After supporting the Earl of Richmond (later Henry VII), Sir John and his son, Sir Richard Guildford, were attainted by Parliament. However, they were restored to favour after the accession of Henry in 1485. Sir Richard gained prominence under Henry and notably served as Master of the Ordnance. By his first wife Sir Richard was the father of Sir Edward Guildford, Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and Master of the Ordnance, whose daughter Jane Guildford married John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland.
In 1586, when he was about 24, he married Anne, daughter of Edwin Sandys, the Archbishop of York, and his wife Cecily, daughter of Sir Thomas Wilford and half-sister of Sir James Wilford. Their children included: :Sir William (born 1593), his heir, who married Dorothy, daughter of the MP Sir Peter Manwood. :Robert (died after 1632), of Grimsby, who married Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Twysden and niece of Sir William Twysden, 1st Baronet. :Miles (born 1600), who became a parson in Kent and married Jane, daughter of Henry Travers, a London lawyer.
Sir Nicholas Pelham (by 1513 – 15 September 1560) of Laughton, Sussex was an English politician. He was the eldest son of Sir William Pelham of Laughton, Sussex, and his first wife Mary Carew, daughter of Sir Richard Carew and his wife Malyn Oxenbridge, and sister of Sir Nicholas Carew. After his mother's death, his father remarried Mary Sandys, sister of William Sandys, 1st Baron Sandys; after his death, she remarried John Palmer. Nicholas was half-brother of the Irish judge Edmund Pelham and of Sir William Pelham junior, Lord Justice of Ireland.
His will was proved 17 October 1550 by one of his executors, Sir William Paget. None of Sir Anthony Lee's four legitimate sons left legitimate issue, and the heir at law of his eldest son, Sir Henry Lee, was thus Henry Lee (d. 9 October 1657) of Kildare, son of Sir Henry's Lee's half-cousin, Captain Thomas Lee, 'the traitor', executed at Tyburn on 17 February 1601 after the Earl of Essex's rebellion.Chambers recounts an anecdote in which Sir Henry Lee's heir at law, Henry Lee, is familiarly termed Whip-and-away; .
Garrard was born in 1650, the second son of Sir John Garrard, 2nd baronet, and his wife Jane Lambard, daughter of Sir Moulton Lambard of Westcombe. He was a grandson of the first baronet Sir John Garrard, and maternal grandson of Dr. John Cosin, Bishop of Durham. His family were connected with the city of London for more than two centuries and intermarriages took place between the Garrards and the city families of Roe, Gresham, and Barkham. Two of his ancestors were Lord Mayors, Sir William Garrard in 1555, and Sir John Garrard in 1601.
George Booth was the son of Sir William Booth of Dunham Massey and Margaret Assheton. Sir William Booth was the son and heir apparent to Sir George Booth, 1st Baronet (1566–1652), of the ancient family settled at Dunham Massey in Cheshire, by his wife Vere Egerton, daughter and co-heir of Sir Thomas Egerton. He took an active part in the Civil War alongside his grandfather, Sir George Booth, on the Parliamentarians' side. He was returned to the Long Parliament as Member of Parliament for Cheshire in 1645.
They had a son, also Hildebrand, and a daughter, Anne They made their home at West Wratting, Cambridgeshire. He never succeeded to his father's seat, dying in 1739, a year before Sir John. His son Sir Hildebrand Jacob (1717 or 1718–1790) succeeded Sir John at his death on 31 March 1740, becoming the fourth baronet. The junior Sir Hildebrand was known as an excellent scholar, particularly of Hebrew.
11 He was succeeded by his son, Sir John Dalyngrigge, who was married to Alice, daughter and heir of Sir John Beauchamp of Powick, and relict of Sir Thomas Butler of Sudeley, Gloucestershire.L.S. Woodger, 'Dallingridge, Sir John (d.1408), of Bodiam Castle, Suss.', in J.S. Roskell, L. Clark and C. Rawcliffe (eds), The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1386-1421 (from Boydell and Brewer 1993), History of Parliament Online.
Anne was born in 1470, the youngest daughter of Sir Humphrey Bourchier and Elizabeth Tilney. Anne’s paternal grandparents were Sir John Bourchier, 1st Baron Berners and Lady Margery Berners. Sir John Bourchier was knighted and the title of Baron Berners was created, which passed directly to Anne’s brother John Bourchier, 2nd Baron Berners due to her father’s death. Anne’s maternal grandparents were Sir Frederick Tilney and Elizabeth Cheney, Lady Say.
George Browne was the second but eldest surviving son of Sir Thomas Browne of Betchworth Castle, Surrey, and Eleanor FitzAlan, the daughter of Thomas Fitzalan. By his mother's first marriage, he had six brothers, including Sir Anthony Browne, and two sisters. After his father's death, his mother married Sir Thomas Vaughan who was executed at Pontefract on 25 June 1483 (along with Anthony Woodville, 2nd Earl Rivers and Sir Richard Grey).
John inherited Kinlet after his father's death. The estate was passed onto Humphery Blount (grandson of Sir John Blount and his marriage with Isabel) in 1453. Sir George Blount inherited Kinlet in 1531, on the death of his father, John. In 1581, Sir George Blount gave Kinlet to Rowland Lacon, son of his eldest sister Agnes, married to Sir Richard Lacon, instead of his only surviving child, Dorothy.
Up until 2009, there was a fifth house - Brunel, representing Isambard Kingdom Brunel. Early "House" names were also after famous names, Sir Humphrey Gilbert, Sir Francis Drake, Sir Philip Sydney and Sir Richard Grenville and their colours were blue, red, green and yellow respectively. At the end of the 1980s there were two registration form classes per year belonging to each house. Form class designations were year/house/number.
Gervase Clifton (II) was the son of Sir Gervase Clifton (I) (died 15 November 1453) of Hodsock and Clifton, Nottinghamshire, only son of Sir John Clifton (slain at the Battle of Shrewsbury on 21 July 1403), and his wife, Katherine Cressy. The younger Sir Gervase Clifton's mother was Isabel Fraunceys (d. 13 June 1457), the daughter of Sir Robert Fraunceys of Foremark, Derbyshire. His only sibling was a brother, Robert Clifton.
A baronet is referred to and addressed as, for example, "Sir Joseph" (using his forename). The correct style on an envelope for a baronet who has no other titles is "Sir Joseph Bloggs, Bt." or "Sir Joseph Bloggs, Bart." The letter would commence: "Dear Sir Joseph". The wife of a baronet is addressed and referred to as "Lady Bloggs"; at the head of a letter as "Dear Lady Bloggs".
Sir Robert was appointed Governor of South Australia in August 1952. He and Lady George arrived in Adelaide early the following year. The Premier, Sir Thomas Playford, noted in his welcome address to Sir Robert that governors were expected to be "an inspiration in times of danger." Playford's words turned out to be portentous – South Australia would suffer through earthquake, fire and flood in consecutive years during Sir Robert's tenure.
English Chronicle, pp. 106-7: "Among Yorkists left dead on the field were William Lord Harrington (Salisbury's son- in-law), Thomas Neville (Salisbury's son), Edward Bourchier, Sir Henry Radford, Sir James Pickering, Sir Thomas Harrington (who was either killed during the battle or died of his wounds the following day) and, perhaps, Sir Thomas Parre."Roskell. The History of Parliament: The House of Commons 1386-1421. Vol. 2, (1992): pp.
Throughout his career he played lyrical leading roles in a host of operas, including Madama Butterfly, The Magic Flute, La bohème and Tosca which was one of his favorites. He sang with Dame Nellie Melba in La bohème. The role he enjoyed most was David in Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg. He worked with conductors such as Sir John Barbirolli, Sir Malcolm Sargent, Sir Thomas Beecham and Sir Henry Wood.
General Wade's report on the Highlands in 1724, estimated the clan strength at 1,000 men. In 1726. Kenneth Mackenzie and Sir Alexander Macdonald, 7th Baronet, the heir male, entered into a contract of sale, whereby the whole estate which had belonged to Sir Donald was sold to Sir Alexander. In 1727, Sir Alexander received a Crown charter for his lands, erecting the whole into a barony – called the Barony of Macdonald.
Amery was Colonial Secretary in Baldwin's government from 1924 to 1929. Amery expanded the role of the Commercial Adviser into the Economic and Financial Advisership under Sir George Schuster. He also created the post of Chief Medical Adviser, under Sir Thomas Stanton, and a range of advisers on education (Sir Hanns Visscher for Tropical Africa), agriculture (Sir Frank Stockdale), a Veterinary Adviser, and a Fisheries Adviser.Amery, Volume Two, p. 338.
Peel was second son of Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, by his wife Julia Floyd, daughter of General Sir John Floyd, 1st Baronet. He was the brother of Sir Robert Peel, 3rd Baronet, Sir William Peel and Arthur Peel, 1st Viscount Peel.The Peerage He was educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge, becoming a barrister in 1849. At Cambridge he was a member of the Pitt Club.
Also, he finds letters written to Sir Claud telling him to keep distance from the child of Selma Goetz. Poirot learns that Sir Claud learnt of the theft by accident. He establishes that Sir Claud was already poisoned when he had everybody locked in the room. A key is found beneath Edward Raynor's chair, which is found to be the copy of the key of Sir Claud's safe.
Sir Jacob Downing, 4th Baronet Sir Jacob Gorman Downing, 4th Baronet (c. 1717 – 6 February 1764) was an English baronet and politician. He was the grandson of Sir George Downing, 1st Baronet, namesake of Downing Street; and cousin and heir of Sir George Downing, 3rd Baronet, whose Gamlingay estate would eventually establish Downing College, Cambridge despite illegal attempts by Jacob and his widow to prevent the university from receiving the estate.
Gustavus Hamilton studied at Trinity College, Dublin but seems to have abandoned his studies without obtaining a degree as in 1672 he went to France and became a captain in the regiment of Sir George Hamilton. Sir George was the son of his cousin Sir George Hamilton, 1st Baronet, of Donalong. Gustavus returned in 1676 after Sir George's death. Soon afterwards Gustavus was made a captain in the Irish Army.
Because he had squandered what money he had on gambling, Tom is forced to become a footman. Lady Galliard and Sir John realize Mr. Friendly told Tom’s story because he feared Sir John would have a similar fate. Mr. Friendly then proposes that Sir John begin learning from his acquaintance, a tutor named Mr. Teachwell. Sir John accepts the proposition, and asks that in exchange Tom become his footman.
Sculpture of Baird by Lawrence Macdonald, 1828 Sir David Baird was the fifth son of an Edinburgh merchant, William Baird of Newbyth, who was grandson of Sir Robert Baird, Bart., of Saughton, and cousin and heir of Sir John Baird, Bart., of Newbyth, and Alicia Johnston. Sir David married Anne Preston Menzies Campbell Preston, daughter and heiress of Major Patrick Preston, Younger of Valleyfield, on 4 August 1810.
She trained for the stage at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. Le Breton earned a scholarship there at the age of fifteen. Founded by Sir Herbert Tree, the academy grant was presented to her by Sir Squire Bancroft and Sir John Hare. She secured the role of a London flower girl and played opposite Sir Gerald du Maurier for an entire year in the English capital.
Lubbock's elder son, John, was created a baronet, and his great-great-grandson, Sir John Lubbock, fourth baronet, was created the first Baron Avebury. His descendants include Sir John Lubbock, 1st Baronet, Sir John William Lubbock, 2nd Baronet, Sir John William Lubbock, 3rd Baronet, John Lubbock, 4th Baronet and 1st Baron Avebury, John Lubbock, 2nd Baron Avebury, John Lubbock, 3rd Baron Avebury, and Eric Lubbock, 4th and present Baron Avebury.
Sir David's sons who were present at the battle were known as the "Seven Spears of Wedderburn". Sir David Home was a descendant of Sir David Home (15th century), younger son of Sir Thomas Home of that Ilk, who is also the ancestor of the Earls of Home. The seventh Baronet was a Vice-Admiral of the Blue. The tenth Baronet assumed in 1878 the additional surname of Speirs.
St John the Baptist Church, Bromsgrove, monument to George Lyttelton, the brother of Sir John Lyttelton (1520–1590). John Lyttelton was the son of Sir John Littleton (c. 1500–1533), son of Sir William Littleton (1450–1507), knighted after the Battle of Stoke, and his second wife, Mary Whittington, in turn the eldest son and heir of Sir Thomas de Littleton (d. 1481), justice and author of Littleton's Tenures.
Sir Derek marries her and takes her back to England as his wife. George with the aid of Diana Vane, who had hoped to win Sir Derek's title, promote discord in the Anstruther household. Pressed for money, Sir Derek says he would trade anything for 10,000 pounds. Sheka goes to sell herself to a notorious roue who has made advances towards her, and Sir Derek learns of her intentions and follows.
Elizabeth Wriothesley, portrait by Sir Peter Lely, for the Windsor Beauties series at Hampton Court Elizabeth Wriothesley, portrait by Sir Peter Lely, private collection Lady Elizabeth Wriothesley, portrait c.1662/1663 by Sir Peter Lely, collection of the National Trust, Petworth House Elizabeth Percy, Countess of Northumberland (née Wriothesley; 1646 – 19 September 1690), was a British courtier. She was one of the Windsor Beauties, painted by Sir Peter Lely.
Sir Alexander Strachan of Thornton obtained the Baronet of Nova Scotia from King Charles I in 1625. The baronetcy passed to a distant relative, Sir James Strachan of Inchtuthill. Sir James, minister of Keith, is believed to be from the senior line of Monboddo by a charter under the great seal in 1663. In 1683, Sir James sold the Mains and Estate of Thornton to his wife's father (Robert Forbes).
Gertrude Carew (1682–1736), a daughter of Sir John Carew, 3rd Baronet (1635-1692) of Antony, wife of Sir Coplestone Bampfylde, 3rd Baronet. Portrait by Charles d' Agar, National Trust, collection of Antony House In June 1716 Bampfylde married Gertrude Carew, daughter of Sir John Carew, 3rd Baronet (died 1692) of Antony, Cornwall. They had two daughters and a son and heir Sir Richard Warwick Bampfylde, 4th Baronet (1722–1767).
D. 1593]. Roll 274 (15). William Whitmore's eldest son was Sir William Whitmore of Apley, knight, High Sheriff of Shropshire in 1620, and his second son was Sir George Whitmore (d. 1654), Lord Mayor of London. Sir William resided at Apley and in 1634 purchased the manor of Balmes in Hackney, held under a lease by his father, for his brother Sir George, who there received King Charles I in 1641.
In 1315 a group of men led by Sir William Bradshaigh of Haigh Hall, Sir Henry Lea of Charnock Richard and Sir Adam Banastre met at Wingates to plan a campaign of violence against Sir Robert de Holland of Upholland, chief retainer of the powerful Earl of Lancaster. The campaign came to be known as the Banastre Rebellion and ended with the deaths of most the main protagonists.
Will of Sir Walter Denys, National Archives, PROB 11/15: Ego Walterus Denys miles de Alston nuper de Newlands in foresta de dene... ("I Walter Denys, knight, of Alveston, lately of Newland, Forest of Dean") Christopher's son was Sir George Baynham (d.1546), who married as his second wife Cecilia Gage, daughter of Sir John Gage. Sir George dated his will at Clearwell, 9 June 1546, and was buried at Newland.
On 18 March 2016, Michael Crawford and Michele Dotrice reprised their roles for a one-off sketch for Sport Relief. Gemma Arterton guest stars as a grown up version of Baby Jessica, alongside Boris Johnson, Sir Paul McCartney, Roy Hodgson, Arsène Wenger, David Walliams, Jessica Ennis, Sir Bradley Wiggins, Clare Balding, Sir Chris Hoy, Sir Andy Murray, and Jamie Murray playing themselves, and featured Chris Wilson as the Newsagent.

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