Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Peyton Randolph" ¶ 8
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

nephew and Edmund
Other acts of Edward are inconsistent with his having made such a promise, such as his efforts to return his nephew Edward the Exile, son of king Edmund Ironside, from Hungary in 1057.
In 1057 the childless king of England, Edmund Ironside's half-brother Edward the Confessor, who had only recently become aware that his nephew was still alive, summoned Edward back to England with his family to take up his place at court as heir to the throne.
In May 1094, Donald's nephew Duncan ( Donnchad mac Maíl Coluim ), son of Malcolm and his first wife Ingibiorg Finnsdottir, invaded at the head of an army of Anglo-Normans and Northumbrians, aided by his half-brother Edmund and his father-in-law Gospatric, Earl of Northumbria.
William of Malmesbury says that Edmund bargained " for half the kingdom ", suggesting that Donald granted his nephew an appanage to rule.
Sir Thomas Benger succeeded Cawarden, and Edmund Tylney followed him ( 1579 – 1610 ); it was the appointment of the latter's nephew, Sir George Buck, as deputy-master, with the reversion to the mastership, which led to so much repining on the part of the dramatist, John Lyly, who was himself a candidate.
Soon after arriving in Virginia, Latrobe became friends with Bushrod Washington, nephew of President George Washington, along with Edmund Randolph and other notable figures.
Stratford Canning was a Whig and would introduce his nephew in the 1780s to prominent Whigs such as Charles James Fox, Edmund Burke, and Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
In the play, Edmund resigns his position as an adviser to his nephew, Richard II, but is reluctant to betray the king.
The title Earl of Rutland fell in to disuse upon his death at the Battle of Agincourt, and was assumed by other members of the House of York including first earl's nephew Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York, the father of King Edward IV, and his second son Edmund.
The late King's nephew, Richard, Duke of York ( played by Brian Blessed ) who is Lord Edmund Plantagenet's father, is then crowned as Richard IV.
* Lady Sarah McCorquodale ( 19 March 1955 ), who married Neil Edmund McCorquodale, a nephew of Raine, Countess Spencer
* 1697 Edmund Boulter ( 1635-1709 ) nephew of Sir John Cutler on the death of Elizabeth ( Cutler ) Robartes without heir
He was the nephew of Edmund Beckett, 1st Baron Grimthorpe and great nephew of Sir John Beckett, 2nd Baronet.
He died without surviving issue and was succeeded by his nephew, Edmund, the eighth / ninth Baronet.
Gough, VC, GCB, nephew of General Sir Hugh H. Gough, VC, and brother of Brigadier General Sir John Edmund Gough, VC ( the only family to ever win the Victoria Cross, the highest award for bravery, three times ).
In 1385 Edmund was made Duke of York as a reward for his support for his nephew, Richard II of England.
In this version of history, Richard III, King of England, is supported in the battle against Henry Tudor by his nephew Richard, Duke of York, along with the latter's sons Harry, Earl of March and Edmund, Duke of Edinburgh.
His nephew, Charles Holland ( 1768 – 1849 ) was also an actor, who played with Sarah Siddons and Edmund Kean.
Sir Edmund Elton, 8th Baronet, nephew and son-in-law of Sir Arthur, inherited the estate and title in 1883.
She was elevated to sainthood on the initiative of her brother Ethelred and her cause was supported by her nephew, Edmund Ironside.
He was a nephew of Richard Edmund Meredith and a cousin of Monk Gibbon, Judge James Creed Meredith and Ralph Creed Meredith.

nephew and Randolph
He was a nephew of Lord Randolph Churchill and a first cousin of Winston Churchill, with whom he had a close and lifelong friendship.
He was the grand nephew of both Richard Bland and Peyton Randolph, the two pillars of the First Continental Congress, the nephew of Congressman Theodorick Bland and step-nephew of Thomas Tudor Tucker, a half brother of Henry St. George Tucker, Sr. and Nathaniel Beverley Tucker, and a cousin of Thomas Jefferson as Jefferson's mother was the daughter of Isham Randolph.
Long active in management of the San Francisco Examiner, he eventually became chairman of the Hearst board from 1973 to 1996, at which time he retired in favor of his nephew, George Randolph Hearst, Jr.
*< font color =" green "></ font > 1878: Bill Staton ( nephew of Randolph McCoy ), as revenge for testifying on behalf of Floyd Hatfield in his trial for stealing a McCoy hog.
His father was a nephew of John Randolph of Roanoke and his mother was Flora Beverly, whom he later described as a woman of mixed English, French, German, Native American and Malagasy ancestry.
Soames was born in Croydon and is a grandson of British wartime Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill, the son of Lord and Lady Soames, a nephew of the former Defence Secretary Duncan Sandys, Diana Churchill, the journalist Randolph Churchill and the actress and dancer Sarah Churchill and a great-nephew of the founders of the Scout movement, Robert Baden-Powell and Olave Baden-Powell.
In the aftermath of Óengus's army's defeat at the Battle of Stracathro, Moray was taken under royal control ; independence from it would not be restored until 1312 when Robert the Bruce granted the earldom of Moray to his nephew, Thomas Randolph.
There was no dominant potentate in Moray during the 12th and 13th centuries and the bishops ruled their territories with a great deal of independence, but this ended when King Robert I of Scotland elevated his nephew Thomas Randolph to the Earldom of Moray sometime between 12 April and 29 October 1312.
In 1992, Peter L. Richardson, a nephew of R. Randolph Richardson, assumed the presidency of the Foundation, while Heather Higgins, the daughter of R. Randolph Richardson, became president of the Randolph Foundation.
Randolph was the daughter of Thomas Randolph, 1st Earl of Moray, nephew and companion-in-arms of Robert the Bruce, and Moray's wife, Isabel Stewart.
However this is probably not true ; it was probably put forward as an explanation of why Thomas Randolph was described as a nephew of Robert the Bruce.

nephew and became
Shirkuh became vizier, although he himself died in March, and was succeeded by his nephew Saladin.
The composer himself claimed that he inherited the talent for music from his mother, whose nephew Joachim Friedrich was Kantor at Verden ( Telemann would later publish a treatise by Joachim Friedrich's son, who became an organist ).
The next year Henry's ally Władysław III Spindleshanks succeeded Leszek I as High Duke ; however as he was still contested by his nephew in Greater Poland, he made Henry his governor at Kraków, whereby the Silesian duke once again became entangled into the dispute over the Seniorate Province.
He was attended by Ahaziah, the king of Judah, who was also his nephew ( f ) Jehu slew Jehoram and became king himself.
The latter's nephew Pier Francesco, who had renounced to the succession in favour to his brother Domenico to became a Dominican, was later elected pope with the name of Benedict XIII.
" Benedict VII visited the city of Orvieto with his nephew Filippo Alberici, who later settled there and became Consul of the city state in 1016.
At the end of the century the situation had changed, and Uppsala became a bastion of Lutheranism, which Duke Charles, the third of the sons of Gustavus Vasa to eventually become king ( as Charles IX ) used to consolidate his power and eventually oust his nephew Sigismund from the throne.
David Jardine, another nephew of Jardine, became taipan after Sir Alexander Matheson.
No other member of the Matheson family became active in the firm after Percival, though another nephew, Donald Matheson, served as director.
' The young eunuch eventually became a trusted adviser of the Prince of Yan, and assisted the prince in his insurrection against his nephew the Jianwen Emperor.
In 1475 pope Sixtus IV raised the diocese of Avignon to the rank of an archbishopric, in favour of his nephew Giuliano della Rovere, who later became Pope Julius II.
He was the nephew of Cyrus McCormick, founder of the agricultural machinery company that became International Harvester.
In the religious sphere, St. Paphnutius of Borovsk was the grandson of a Mongol baskak, or tax collector, while a nephew of khan Bergai of the Golden Horde converted to Christianity and became known as the monk St. Peter Tsarevich of the Horde
In Sri Lanka and Tibet, the ownership of a monastery often became vested in a single monk, who would often keep the property within the family by passing it on to a nephew who ordained as a monk.
Nikephoros was murdered in 969 by his nephew John I Tzimisces, who then became emperor and reigned for seven years.
In 1894, her brother-in-law Alexander III of Russia died and her nephew Nicholas II of Russia became Tsar.
His nephew Azzo d ' Este VI ( 1170 – 1212 ) became podestà of Mantua and Verona.
On 8 July 1788 he became colonel of the 2nd Regiment of Life Guards and on 30 August 1788 he was created Baron Amherst of Montreal with a special provision that would allow this title to pass to his nephew ( as Amherst was childless, the Holmesdale title became extinct upon his death ).
After 1848, when his nephew, Louis Napoleon, became President of the French Republic, he served in several official roles, being created 1st Prince of Montfort.
When his nephew, Prince Louis Napoleon, became President of the French Republic in 1848, Jérôme was made governor of Les Invalides, Paris, the burial place of Napoleon I.
As a result of the antagonism, Hunt founded the Anthropological Society and became its president, a position that would be taken up by his nephew almost sixty years later.
In 1220 Snorri Sturluson became a vassal of Haakon IV of Norway ; his nephew Sturla Sighvatsson also became a vassal in 1235.

1.749 seconds.