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1597 and O
* Murrough O ' Brien, 4th Baron Inchiquin ( 1563 – 1597 ) was the son of Murrough McDermot O ' Brien, 3rd Baron Inchiquin and his wife Mabel Nugent. He married Margaret Cusack, daughter of Sir Thomas Cusack, Lord Chancellor of Ireland. His son Dermod was the 5th Baron Inchiquin.
The dispute proved harmful to the crown government, and Russell was recalled to England in 1597, but only after he had defeated and killed the rebel Fiach MacHugh O ' Byrne.
Saint Gonsalo Garcia, O. F. M., (, ) ( 1556 – 5 February 1597 ) was a Roman Catholic Franciscan friar from India, who died as a martyr in Japan and is venerated as a saint.
He fought at first against the English government, participating in his brother James's victory over Sir John Chichester at Carrickfergus in November 1597, and joining in O ' Neill's rebellion in 1600.

1597 and Hugh
In 1597 the Catholic supporter Hugh Barclay of Ladyland took possession of Ailsa Craig, which he was intent on using as a provisioning and stopping off point for a Spanish invasion which would re-establish the Catholic faith in Scotland.
Led by Montgomerie ’ s friend and fellow-poet Hugh Barclay of Ladyland, this enterprise soon collapsed, Barclay being killed in the process, and on 14 July 1597 Montgomerie was declared an outlaw.

1597 and Roe
In a report dated September 1597, Sir Conyers Clifford, English President of Connacht, wrote that the MacDermots Roe had come to him and were living about Boyle Abbey.

1597 and son
In modern law, the title would have fallen into abeyance between the two daughters of the second son, and nobody else would have been able to claim it even if the abeyance were settled ; in 1597, the grandson of the third son claimed the title and its precedence.
Vincent Voiture ( 24 February 1597 – 26 May 1648 ), French poet, was the son of a rich merchant of Amiens.
* Henry FitzGerald, 12th Earl of Kildare ( 1562 – 1597 ), second son of the 11th Earl, died without male issue
These were the Lords Cobham: William Brooke, 10th Baron Cobham ( died 6 March 1597 ), was Warden of the Cinque Ports ( 1558 – 97 ), Knight of the Order of the Garter ( 1584 ), and member of the Privy Council ( 1586 – 97 ); his son Henry Brooke, 11th Baron Cobham, was granted the paternal post of Warden of the Cinque Ports upon his father's death, and made a Knight of the Order of the Garter in 1599.
When Sir William Hatton died without male issue in 1597, the estates passed to a kinsman, another Sir Christopher Hatton ( d. 1619 ), whose son and successor, Christopher, was created Baron Hatton of Kirby.
The only surviving son Thomas was baptised at West Clandon, Surrey, on 30 June 1597, was knighted in 1645 by Charles I at Oxford, was alive in 1664, and was father of Thomas Sherley v., the physician.
Either Henry VII or his son and successor Henry VIII may have caused a somewhat more elaborate version of the imperial crown to be made, which is first described in detail in an inventory of royal jewels in 1521, and again in 1532, 1550, 1574, and 1597, and was carefully depicted in a painting by Daniel Mytens of King Charles I in 1631.
Captain John Underhill was born in 1597 in Baginton, Warwickshire, England, the son of John Edward Underhill.
The most prominent of the Lords Burgh, Thomas Burgh, 3rd Baron Burgh, grandson of the baron of 1529, was Lord Deputy of Ireland ; when he died in 1597, he left four daughters, all of whom married and had children, and an infant son.
It passed through a number of hands until 1597 when it was purchased by James Fisher, whose son later rebuilt it in 1641.
In 1803 Lord Seaford's four-year old son Charles Ellis inherited the barony of Howard de Walden from his great-grandfather and became the sixth Baron Howard de Walden ( this title was created by writ in 1597 ; see the Baron Howard de Walden for earlier history of this peerage ).
It was created by writ of summons, by Queen Elizabeth I for Admiral Lord Thomas Howard, a younger son of the 4th Duke of Norfolk, in 1597.
These were the Lords Cobham: William Brooke, 10th Baron Cobham ( died 6 March 1597 ), was Warden of the Cinque Ports ( 1558 – 97 ), Knight of the Order of the Garter ( 1584 ), and member of the Privy Council ( 1586 – 97 ); his son Henry Brooke, 11th Baron Cobham, was granted the paternal post of Warden of the Cinque Ports upon his father's death, and made a Knight of the Order of the Garter in 1599.
The family was continued by Sir William's eldest son, Erasmus ( b. 1502-d. 1540 ), whose son William succeeded to his grandfather's estates in 1554, and to those of his uncle Clement in 1597.
After its patron's death on 23 July 1596, the company came under the patronage of his son, George Carey, 2nd Baron Hunsdon, for whom it was briefly known as Lord Hunsdon's Men until he in turn also became Lord Chamberlain on 17 March 1597, whereupon it reverted to its previous name.
François de Bourbon ( 1558 – 1614 ), the third son of this marriage, was given the title of marquess of Conti, and between 1581 and 1597 was elevated to the rank of prince of Conti.
It was first created in 1597 as a peerage for Gabrielle d ' Estrée, Marquesses of Monceaux, the mistress of King Henry IV, with a remainder to their illegitimate son César of Bourbon-Vendôme, later also Duke of Vendôme.
The monument to his son, Sir Thomas Wroughton ( died 1597 ) and his wife, is a large standing monument, with figures of Sir Thomas and Lady Wroughton kneeling in prayer and facing east.
In December 1597 she had heard from friends that " Her Majesty is very well prepared to hearken to terms of pacification ", and was prepared to do " a winter journey " if her son thought " it be to any purpose ".

1597 and ...
Five bells hang in the tower, the oldest from 1300 cast by Adam ..., one cast in 1597 by Jens Hansen, a bell cast in 1677, and one from 1767 cast by ... Leitze.
An Act of the Scottish Parliament of 1597 talks of the " Chiftanis and chieffis of all clannis ... duelland in the hielands or bordouris "-thus using the word clan and chief to describe both Highland and Border families.
Description of the Bali nese rite of self-sacrifice or Suttee, in Houtman's 1597 Verhael vande Reyse ... Naer Oost Indien
In 1597 Yonge published a second book ( Musica transalpina: the Second Booke of Madrigalles, ... translated out of Sundrie Italian Authors ).
* Haußgespräch, darinn kurtz doch klärlich vnd gründlich begriffen wirdt, was zu wahrer Christlicher Bekanntnuß auch Gottseligem Wandel ... zu wissen von nöhten, ( conversation in the family about Christian education ) Printed in Lich 1597

1597 and Having
Having left the island of Hven with his master, he obtained his discharge at Copenhagen on 1 June 1597, in order to study at some German universities.

1597 and reached
They reached Nagasaki on 4th February 1597.

1597 and very
At what period he began to write for the stage cannot be ascertained: the earliest date in these manuscripts connected with his name is December 1597 ; but as he was perhaps a member of the Earl of Oxford's theatrical company before he went abroad, and as he was certainly at Rome prior to 1578, it is likely that he was very early the author of theatrical performances.
Europeans first learned of the mountain in 1597, when Spanish explorers were told of a mountain further inland which was " very high, shining when the sun set like a fire.
At his death the collection was inherited by his nephew, who was pressured by Rudolf II, the very acquisitive Austrian Habsburg Emperor, to sell the finest pieces to him, which in 1597 he very reluctantly did, protesting that the price offered for thirty-three works was not enough even for six, and less than he had recently refused from Cardinal Farnese for Dürer's Martyrdom of the Ten Thousand alone.
In 1597 his first volume of madrigals was published, the preface noting that he was a very young man when they were written ; this helps to fix the date of his birth to somewhere in the middle of the 1570s.
Well-connected botanists, like the great herbalist John Gerard, soon had the rarity in their gardens: Gerard notes that he had lilacs growing “ in very great plenty ” in 1597, but lilacs were not mentioned by Shakespeare, and John Loudon was of the opinion that the Persian lilac had been introduced into English gardens by John Tradescant the elder.
Won Gyun left Hansando on August 27, 1597, and soon met a very large enemy fleet near Pusan.

1597 and centre
The estate became a European cultural centre in the reign of Frederick III, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, ( 1597 – 1659 ).
In 1597 the town was granted with Magdeburg Law by Sigismund III Vasa and was allowed for creation of trade unions, which allowed it to become a notable centre of commerce in the area.

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