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Edward and Devereux
He was the son of Sir Edward Devereux, 1st Baronet, of Castle Bromwich, fourth son of the first Viscount ( see below for earlier history of the baronetcy ).
Edward Devereux, of Castle Bromwich Hall, fourth son of the first Viscount Hereford.
* Edward Devereux, 8th Viscount Hereford ( 1675 – 1700 )
* Edward Devereux, 12th Viscount Hereford ( 1740 – 1783 )
Edward Mark de Breteuil Devereux ( b. 1977 ).
* Sir Edward Devereux, 1st Baronet ( c. 1550 – 1622 )
Pursuing a property dispute with the Worcestershire Lytteltons, Dudley put up his brother John as a candidate, in an attempt to stop the election of Sir Edward Littleton of Pillaton Hall, a close ally of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex.
Castle Bromwich Hall was built between 1557 and 1585 by Sir Edward Devereux, the first MP for Tamworth.
Henry Aldrich-William Allingham-Drummond Allison-John Amner-Matthew Arnold-W. H. Auden-Philip Ayres-William Baldwin-George Barker-Jane Barker-Clement Barksdale-Richard Barnfield-Thomas Bastard-Francis Beaumont-Samuel Beckett-Thomas Lovell Beddoes-Thomas Beedome-Hilaire Belloc-Sir William Berkeley-John Berryman-John Betjeman-Elizabeth Bishop-Thomas Blackburn-William Blake-Edmund Blunden-Francis William Bourdillon-Anne Bradstreet-Robert Bridges-John Digby, Earl of Bristol-Emily Brontë-Elizabeth Barrett Browning-Robert Browning-John Bunyan-Robert Burns-George Gordon, Lord Byron-Norman Campbell-Roy Campbell-Thomas Campion-Thomas Carew-George Chapman-Thomas Chatterton-Geoffrey Chaucer-G. K. Chesterton-Richard Church-John Ciardi-Arthur Hugh Clough-Mary Coleridge-Samuel Taylor Coleridge-William Collins-William Congreve-Frances Cornford-William Johnson Cory-Francis Coutts-William Cowper-George Crabbe-Hart Crane-Stephen Crane-Richard Crashaw-Robert Creeley-John Crowne-E. E. Cummings-J. V. Cunningham-George Daniel-Sir William Davenant-John Davies of Hereford-W. H. Davies-C. Day-Lewis-Walter De La Mare-Sir John Denham-John Warren, Lord De Tabley-Emily Dickinson-Robert Dodsley-John Donne-Ernest Dowson-William Drummond of Hawthornden-John Dryden-Alan Dugan-Sir Edward Dyer-Clifford Dyment-Richard Eberhart-T. S. Eliot-Ralph Waldo Emerson-William Empson-D. J. Enright-Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex-Sir George Etherege-Gavin Ewart-Mildmay Fane, Earl of Westmorland-Sir Richard Fanshawe-Robert Fitzgerald-Thomas Fitzgerald-Thomas Flatman-James Elroy Flecker-Richard Flecknoe-John Fletcher-Phineas Fletcher-Ford Madox Ford-John Ford-Robert Francis-John Freeman-Robert Frost-Roy Fuller-John Gay-Oliver Goldsmith-Robert Graves-Thomas Gray-Fulke Greville-Ivor Gurney-John Hall-Thomas Hardy-Sir John Harington-Seamus Heaney-Robert Heath-Anthony Hecht-Edward, Lord Herbert of Cherbury-George Herbert-Robert Herrick-Thomas Heywood-Aaron Hill-Ralph Hodgson-A. D. Hope-Gerard Manley Hopkins-A. E. Housman-Ted Hughes-T. E. Hulme-Randall Jarrell-Robinson Jeffers-Elizabeth Jennings-Esther Johnson-Sir William Jones-Ben Jonson-Patrick Kavanagh-P. J. Kavanagh-John Keats-X. J. Kennedy-Henry King-Galway Kinnell-Rudyard Kipling-Mary Lamb-Walter Savage Landor-George Granville, Lord Landsdowne-Philip Larkin-D. H. Lawrence-Laurie Lee-Vachel Lindsay-Richard Lovelace-James Russell Lowell-Robert Lowell-Edward Bulwer, Earl of Lytton-Norman MacCaig-Hugh MacDiarmid-Patrick MacDonogh-Phyllis McGinley-Louis MacNeice-Derek Mahon-Edward May-Herman Melville-William Meredith-James Merrill-W. S. Merwin-Charlotte Mew-Alice Meynell-James Michie-Thomas Middleton-Edna St. Vincent Millay-John Milton-Adrian Mitchell-Lady Mary Wortley Montagu-James Graham, Marquis of Montrose-Marianne Moore-Thomas Moore-Thomas Nashe-Howard Nemerov-Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle-William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle-Norman Nicholson-Dudley, Lord North-Wilfred Owen-Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford-Philip Pain-Coventry Patmore-William Pattison-Thomas Love Peacock-George Peele-Katherine Philips-Eden Phillpotts-Sylvia Plath-Alexander Pope-Ezra Pound-F. T. Prince-Matthew Prior-Francis Quarles-Sir Walter Ralegh-Thomas Randolph-John Crowe Ransom-James Reeves-Edwin Arlington Robinson-John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester-W. R. Rodgers-Theodore Roethke-Christina Rossetti-Dante Gabriel Rossetti-Samuel Rowlands-George William Russell-Thomas Rymer-Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset-Carl Sandburg-Siegfried Sassoon-Sir Walter Scott-William Shakespeare-Percy Bysshe Shelley-William Shenstone-Sir Edward Sherburne-James Shirley-Sir Philip Sidney-James Simmons-C. H. Sisson-Edith Sitwell-John Skelton-Jonathan Smedley-Stevie Smith-William Jay Smith-Robert Southey-Muriel Spark-Sir John Squire-Sir Richard Steele-James Stephens-Wallace Stevens-Anne Stevenson-Robert Louis Stevenson-Trumbull Stickney-William Strode-Jonathan Swift-Arthur Symons-J. M. Synge-Nahum Tate-Alfred, Lord Tennyson-A. S. J. Tessimond-Dylan Thomas-Edward Thomas-R. S. Thomas-Francis Thompson-Henry Thoreau-Thomas Traherne-George Turbervile-John Updike-Mark Van Doren-Henry Vaughan-Edmund Waller-William Walsh-Vernon Watkins-Samuel Wesley-Walt Whitman-John Greenleaf Whittier-Anna Wickham-John Wigson-Richard Wilbur-Oscar Wilde-William Carlos Williams-Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea-William Wordsworth-Judith Wright-Sir Thomas Wyatt-Elinor Wylie-W. B. Yeats-Andrew Young
He was the son of William Devereux and a companion-in-arms of the Edward, the Black Prince.
Edward VI created Walter Devereux, a descendant of the de Bohun family, Viscount Hereford, in 1550, and his grandson, the famous earl of Essex, was born in this county.
Devereux welcomed Edward L. French, Ph. D. who would serve as the Director of Psychology and Education for seven years, before becoming the Director of the Devereux Foundation upon Helena Devereux ’ s resignation in 1957.
On the grounds of his holding a prebend, he was deprived of his fellowship in 1579, but was reinstated in 1581, at the instance of Lord Burghley, the chancellor, who, moved by the representations of Richard Barnes, the Bishop of Durham, the Earl of Huntingdon, and Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, overcame the opposition of John Hatcher, the vice-chancellor, and Edward Hawford, master of Christ's.

Edward and 11th
* June 6 – Edward la Zouche, 11th Baron Zouche, English politician and diplomat ( d. 1625 )
A recent study translates his words as follows :" And a very great betrayal of a lord it is also in the world, that a man betray his lord to death, or drive him living from the land, and both have come to pass in this land: Edward was betrayed, and then killed, and after that burned ..." Later sources, further removed from events, such as the late 11th century Passio S. Eadwardi and John of Worcester, claim that Ælfthryth organised the killing of Edward, while Henry of Huntingdon wrote that she killed Edward herself.
In 1621 and 1624, through the influence of his cousin Edward la Zouche, 11th Baron Zouche, he was elected Member of Parliament for Hythe.
It is considered that both these crowns date from the 11th century and the crown described as that of Alfred the Great is, in fact, the Crown of St Edward the Confessor and was renamed thus following the Reformation.
The Oireachtas, whilst accepting the abdication of King Edward VIII on December 11th, 1936, nevertheless did not proclaim his successor.
The earldom was inherited by his distant relative Sir Edward Stanley, 5th Baronet, of Bickerstaffe, a descendant of a younger brother of the second Earl, who became the 11th Earl of Derby ( see below for earlier history of the Baronetcy ).
* Edward Stanley, 11th Earl of Derby ( 1689 – 1776 ) of the Stanley Baronets, of Bickerstaffe ( 1627 )
* Sir Edward Stanley, 5th Baronet ( 1689 – 1776 ) ( succeeded as 11th Earl of Derby in 1736 )
Standing in the precincts of Westminster Abbey in central London, and with a history stretching back to the 11th century, the school's notable alumni include Ben Jonson, Robert Hooke, Christopher Wren, John Locke, Jeremy Bentham, Edward Gibbon, Henry Mayhew, A.
Edward Richard Woodham of the 11th Hussars became Chairman of the organising committee for the 21st Anniversary dinner held at Alexandra Palace on 25 October 1875 by the survivors of the Charge.
Between the 7th century and the 11th century, the town of Buckingham regularly changed hands between the Saxons and the Danes, in particular, in 914 King Edward the Elder and a Saxon army encamped in Buckingham for four weeks forcing local Danish Viking leaders to surrender.
* Edward St Maur, 11th Duke of Somerset
His record in matches was equally impressive: at Berlin in 1890 he drew a short play-off match against his brother Berthold ; and won all his other matches from 1889 to 1893, mostly against top-class opponents: Curt von Bardeleben ( 1889 ; ranked 9th best player in the world by Chessmetrics at that time ), Jacques Mieses ( 1889 ; ranked 11th ), Henry Edward Bird ( 1890 ; then 60 years old ; ranked 29th ), Berthold Englisch ( 1890 ; ranked 18th ), Joseph Henry Blackburne ( 1892, without losing a game ; Blackburne was aged 51 then, but still 9th in the world ), Jackson Showalter ( 1892 – 1893 ; 22nd ) and Celso Golmayo Zúpide ( 1893 ; 29th ).
* John Edward Hollister Montagu, 11th Earl of Sandwich ( b. 1943 )
This was possibly Baron Chandos, who may have been visiting Edward la Zouche, 11th Baron Zouche, or Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford over the holidays.
In 1283 the English, led by Prince Edward, with the biggest army brought together in England since the 11th century, conquered the remainder of Wales, then organised as the Principality of Wales, which was united with the English crown by the Statute of Rhuddlan in 1284.
Historically, Mont Saint-Michel was the Norman counterpart of St Michael's Mount in Cornwall, UK when it was given to the Benedictines, religious order of Mont Saint-Michel, by Edward the Confessor in the 11th century.
Historically, St Michael's Mount was a Cornish counterpart of Mont Saint-Michel in Normandy, France ( which shares the same tidal island characteristics and the same conical shape ), when it was given to the Benedictines, religious order of Mont Saint-Michel, by Edward the Confessor in the 11th century.
It may have been the site of a monastery in the 8th-early 11th centuries and Edward the Confessor gave it to the Norman abbey of Mont Saint-Michel.
The first documents to mention the surplice date from the 11th century: a canon of the Synod of Coyaca in Spain ( 1050 ); and an ordinance of King Edward the Confessor.
Frances ( d 1859 ) married Samuel Holland, precentor of Chichester and rector of Poynings, Sussex ( a grandson of Frances and Samuel was Thomas Erskine Holland the jurist ); Elizabeth ( d 1800 ) married her cousin Captain ( later Sir ) David Erskine, the illegitimate son of the 11th earl of Buchan ; Mary ( d 1804 ) married lawyer Edward Morris.
After studying law at the Middle Temple, Nicholas became secretary to Edward la Zouche, 11th Baron Zouche, warden, and admiral of the Cinque Ports, in 1618.

Edward and Viscount
* 1862 – Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon, English politician ( d. 1933 )
* Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon 1923 – 1924
The papers formed the basis of his first book, Edward Pellew, Viscount Exmouth, Admiral of the Red.
* January 23 – Edward Pellew, 1st Viscount Exmouth, British admiral ( b. 1757 )
* March 3 – Arthur Plantagenet, 1st Viscount Lisle, illegitimate son of King Edward IV of England
* April 9 – Edward Pellew, 1st Viscount Exmouth, British admiral ( d. 1833 )
** Edward Chichester, 1st Viscount Chichester ( d. 1648 )
At one point, her four grandsons Prince Charles, Prince Andrew, Prince Edward and Viscount Linley mounted the guard as a mark of respect known as the Vigil of the Princes — an honour only bestowed once before, at King George V's lying in state.
* Edward Cecil, 1st Viscount Wimbledon ( 1572 – 1638 )
Elizabeth Lucy was probably the mother of Edward IV's bastard son, Arthur Plantagenet, 1st Viscount Lisle.
* Edward Seymour, Viscount Beauchamp of Hache ( 12 October 1537 – 1539 )
Upon her death, her heirs normally would have been her cousins William, Viscount Berkeley and John, Lord Howard, but by an act of Parliament in January 1483 the rights were given to her husband Richard, with reversion to his descendants, and, failing that, to the descendants of his father Edward IV.
The first provincial grant in 1754 named the town " Hereford ", in honor of Edward Devereaux, Viscount Hereford.
Until then The Prince Edward will be Earl of Wessex and Viscount Severn, the latter title reflecting his bride's Welsh origins.
However, T. Lindsay Buick in his landmark 1914 book ' The Treaty of Waitangi: or how New Zealand became a British Colony ', clearly reproduces written instructions drafted by Edward Cardwell of the Colonial Office ( Cardwell later became Viscount Cardwell and was most noted for his reforms of the British Army after the disaster of the Crimean War ).
In contrast, when Sophie Rhys-Jones married Prince Edward, she became HRH The Princess Edward, Countess of Wessex (& c .) and automatically acquired an HRH, by virtue of her marriage to a royal prince who was the son of the British monarch ; as only those males in the Royal Line of Succession receive Royal titles and styles unless there is special dispensation from the Monarch for special courtesy titles i. e. that of Viscount Severn for HRH The Earl of Wessex's son, Prince James ; as the British Monarchy operates on the basis of a male primogeniture ; i. e. one whereby males have preference over females in succeeding to the peerage or title.
John Dudley was the eldest of three sons of Edmund Dudley, a councillor of King Henry VII, and his second wife Elizabeth Grey, daughter of Edward Grey, 4th Viscount Lisle.
In 1658, through the kind offices of his friend John Evelyn, Taylor was offered a lectureship in Lisburn, Co. Antrim, by Edward Conway, 2nd Viscount Conway.
Younger was the eldest of the three sons of Edward Younger, 3rd Viscount Younger of Leckie.
The Right Reverend Lord William Gascoyne-Cecil, Bishop of Exeter, Robert Cecil, 1st Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, Lord Edward Cecil and Hugh Cecil, 1st Baron Quickswood, were all younger sons of the third Marquess.
The heir apparent is the present holder's elder son Robert Edward William Gascoyne-Cecil, Viscount Cranborne ( b. 1970 ).
* Edward Conway, 1st Viscount Conway ( 14 December 1628 – 3 January 1631 )
He was the only son of Lieutenant-Colonel Thomas William Arnold Anson, Viscount Anson ( 1913 – 1958 ), the eldest son and heir apparent of Thomas Edward Anson, 4th Earl of Lichfield ( 1883 – 1960 ).
* Major General Evelyn Edward Thomas Boscawen, 7th Viscount Falmouth, 1915 – 1918

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