Peerage of England, Volume 9F. C. and J. Rivington, 1812 |
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Pagina 2
... knight's service , and paid his aid for them 20 King Edward III . when the Black Prince was made a Knight , as appears by the records of the aid enrolled in the Exchequer . ) b Third , Stephen ( who disposed of his estate at Maplesden ...
... knight's service , and paid his aid for them 20 King Edward III . when the Black Prince was made a Knight , as appears by the records of the aid enrolled in the Exchequer . ) b Third , Stephen ( who disposed of his estate at Maplesden ...
Pagina 5
... Knight's fee , and subject to the conditions of plantatión ; which were , that he and his heirs , whenever summoned so to do , should attend with the greater part of their domestics and tenants , armed in a warlike manner , with ...
... Knight's fee , and subject to the conditions of plantatión ; which were , that he and his heirs , whenever summoned so to do , should attend with the greater part of their domestics and tenants , armed in a warlike manner , with ...
Pagina 5
... Knight's tee , and s . which were , that he and his heirs , wh with the greater part of their dame with victuals for three days , uRon Tho pointed by him , for the defence of the ing Irishmen of the said courte of his lands according to ...
... Knight's tee , and s . which were , that he and his heirs , wh with the greater part of their dame with victuals for three days , uRon Tho pointed by him , for the defence of the ing Irishmen of the said courte of his lands according to ...
Pagina 17
... Knight , Lord Baron of Mellifont in the kingdom of Ireland , whom he married during his service in Ireland in the Place of Chief Justice there , and by whom he had issue a sonne , now living , and a daughter Interred with her , of whom ...
... Knight , Lord Baron of Mellifont in the kingdom of Ireland , whom he married during his service in Ireland in the Place of Chief Justice there , and by whom he had issue a sonne , now living , and a daughter Interred with her , of whom ...
Pagina 31
... knights companions of that order , and with the other knights was installed in St. Patrick's cathedral , 17th March , 1783 . February 15th , 1766 , he married Lady Anne Conway , eldest daughter of Francis , Earl of Hertford , then L. L. ...
... knights companions of that order , and with the other knights was installed in St. Patrick's cathedral , 17th March , 1783 . February 15th , 1766 , he married Lady Anne Conway , eldest daughter of Francis , Earl of Hertford , then L. L. ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
The Peerage of England: Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of ... Arthur Collins Volledige weergave - 1784 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
afterwards Alexander ancestor Anne anno appointed April August Baron Baronet Bart became extinct Bishop born British Peerage brother buried Butler Captain castle Catharine Charles church coheir Colonel created Lord daugh daughter and heir daughter of John daughter of Sir death December died unmarried died without issue died young Dublin Duke dying Earl of Mar Earl of Ormond Edmund Edward III eldest daughter England Erskine father February Fifth Francis George heirs male Henry VI Henry VIII Holroyd honour House of Peers Ibid Ireland Jane January July June Kilcash Kilkenny King James King's Knight Lady lands Loftus Lordship Lygon Madresfield Majesty's manor March Margaret Marquis Mary Nicholas November October parliament patent Peer Peerage Pierce Butler Queen Queen's County regiment reign Scotland second Earl second Lord secondly September Sir John Sir Thomas Sir William sister Stafford succeeded Tipperary title of Lord Viscount Walter wife
Populaire passages
Pagina 293 - He made a very ill appearance: he was very big: his hair red, hanging oddly about him: his tongue was too big for his mouth, which made him bedew all that he talked to: and his whole manner was rough and boisterous, and very unfit for a court.
Pagina 294 - ... to let go his hold. He was in his principles much against Popery and arbitrary government : And yet by a fatal train of passions and interests he made way for the former, and had almost established the latter. And, whereas some by a smooth deportment made the first beginnings of tyranny less discernible and unacceptable, he by the fury of his behaviour heightned the severity of his ministry, which was liker the cruelty of an inquisition than the legality of justice.
Pagina 415 - one of those divine men, who, like a chapel in a palace, remain unprofaned, while all the rest is tyranny, corruption, and folly. All the traditional accounts of him, the historians of the last age, and its best authors, represent him as the most incorrupt lawyer, and the honestest statesman, as a...
Pagina 364 - ... with a positive threatening of proceeding to military execution against such as should not come into his obedience by the last day of December. All were so terrified that they came in : and even that Macdonald went to the governor of Fort William on the last of December, and offered to take the oaths ; but he, being only a military man, could not, or would not, tender them, and Macdonald was forced to seek for some of the legal magistrates to tender them to him. The snows were then fallen, so...
Pagina 294 - He was haughty beyond expression, "voi.. is. x abject to those he saw he must stoop to, but imperious to all others. He had a violence of passion that carried him often to fits like madness, in which he had no temper. If he took a thing wrong, it was a vain thing to...
Pagina 293 - And his whole manner was rough and boisterous, and very unfit for a Court. He was very learned, not only in Latin, in which he was a master, but in Greek and Hebrew. He had read a great deal of divinity, and almost all the historians ancient and modern: So that he had great materials. He had with these an extraordinary memory, and a copious but unpolished expression. He was a man, as the Duke of Buckingham called him to me, of a blundering understanding.
Pagina 365 - ... the passes in the valley to be kept, describing them so minutely that the orders were certainly drawn by one who knew the country well. He gave also a positive direction that no prisoners should be taken,. that so the execution might be as terrible as was possible. He pressed this upon...
Pagina 415 - ... his country. In this situation, above all the little prejudices of a profession, for he had no profession but that of Solon and Lycurgus, he set himself to correct the grievances of the law, and to amend the vocation he had adorned.
Pagina 415 - All the traditional accounts of him, the historians of the last age and its best authors, represent him as the most incorrupt lawyer and the honestest statesman, as a master orator, a genius of the finest taste, and as a patriot of the noblest and most extensive views; as a man who dispensed blessings by his life, and planned them for posterity."!
Pagina 364 - State, to be both signed and countersigned by the King (that so he might bear no part of the blame, but that it might lie wholly on the King), that such as had not taken the oaths by the time limited, should be shut out of the benefit of the indemnity, and be received only upon mercy. But when it was found, that this would not...