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Halsbury and married
Halsbury married secondly Wilhelmina, daughter of Henry Woodfall, in 1874.
In 1884 Lucy married James Stuart Wallace, with whom she had a child, Esme ( 1885 – 1973 ) ( later wife of the 2nd Earl of Halsbury and mother of Anthony, 3rd Earl of Halsbury ).

Halsbury and daughter
Born in London, Halsbury was the third son of Stanley Lees Giffard, editor of the Standard newspaper, by his wife Susanna, daughter of Francis Moran.
A faded grey silk kimono with typical Fortuny style black cord edging, for some time thought to have been worn by Lucile as she escaped the Titanic, is now understood to have belonged to her daughter Esme, Countess of Halsbury.

Halsbury and William
Other subjects included two Lord Chancellors ( the Earl of Selborne in 1882 and the Earl of Halsbury ) in 1897 ; The Speaker of the House of Commons, William Gully, ( 1897 ); senior legal figures the Lord Chief Justice Lord Alverstone ( 1912 ) and the Master of the Rolls Sir George Jessel ( 1881 ).

Halsbury and .
Eventually, Lord Halsbury and others removed any acceleration by introducing the " three-brother " approach.
For example, the masonry arch symbolises Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the compass and cogwheel symbolise technology, the ermine lozenge is an allusion to the Arms of Lord Halsbury, the first Chancellor of the University and the crest of the swan symbolises Uxbridge.
Bond tracked down the Earl of Halsbury on holiday in Nice to invite him to be the Editor-in-Chief of The Laws of England.
The Editor-in-Chief was the said Earl of Halsbury.
The second and subsequent editions of the encyclopaedia took the name of the said Earl of Halsbury.
2007 was the first year of the Halsbury Awards, in association with the British and Irish Association of Law Librarians.
Hardinge Stanley Giffard, 1st Earl of Halsbury PC, QC ( 3 September 1823-11 December 1921 ) was a leading barrister, politician and government minister.
Halsbury joined the North Wales and Chester circuit.
He was then created Baron Halsbury, of Halsbury in the County of Devon, and appointed Lord Chancellor, thus forming a remarkable exception to the rule that no criminal lawyer could ever reach the woolsack.
In 1898 he was created Earl of Halsbury and Viscount Tiverton, of Tiverton in the County of Devon.
During the crisis over the Parliament Act 1911, Halsbury was one of the principal leaders of the rebel faction of Tory peers — labelled the " Ditchers "— that resolved on all out opposition to the government's bill whatever happened.
As Halsbury left the meeting a reporter asked him what was going to happen.
Halsbury was also President of the Royal Society of Literature, Grand Warden of English Freemasons, and High Steward of the University of Oxford.
The Countess of Halsbury died in December 1927.
pl: Hardinge Giffard, 1. hrabia Halsbury
Earl of Halsbury, in the County of Devon, was a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.
Halsbury is a manor long held by the Giffard family ( also of Brightley, Chittlehampton ) about 3 / 4 mile NW of Buckland Brewer, Bideford.
It was created in 1898 for the lawyer and Conservative politician Hardinge Giffard, 1st Baron Halsbury.
Giffard had already been created Baron Halsbury, of Halsbury in the County of Devon, in 1885, and was made Viscount Tiverton, of Tiverton in the County of Devon, at the same time he was given the earldom.
Finally, in 1960, a report prepared jointly by the British Association for the Advancement of Science and the Association of British Chambers of Commerce, followed by the success of decimalisation in South Africa, prompted the Government to set up the Committee of the Inquiry on Decimal Currency ( Halsbury Committee ) in 1961, which reported in 1963.

married and firstly
# Héloise / Helvis of Lusignan ( c. 1190 – 1216 – 1219, 1216 / 1219 or c. 1217 ), married firstly c. 1205 Eudes de Dampierre sur Salon, Lord of Chargey-le-Grey, div.
He married firstly at the Dolmabahçe Palace in Constantinople in 1856 to Georgian HH Dürrünev Kadın Efendi ( Batumi, 15 March 1835 – Constantinople, Üsküdar, Çamlıca Palace, 3 December 1892 ), and had three children.
In Turin on 29 September 1781 ( by proxy ) and again in Dresden on 24 October 1781 ( in person ), Anton married firstly with the Princess Caroline of Savoy ( Maria Carolina Antonietta Adelaida ), daughter of the King Victor Amadeus III of Sardinia and Maria Antonietta of Spain.
# Katharina ( b. Meissen, 24 July 1468 – d. Göttingen, 10 February 1524 ), married firstly on 24 February 1484 in Innsbruck to Duke Sigismund of Austria, and secondly on 1497 to Duke Eric I of Brunswick-Calenberg.
1016 ), perhaps married firstly with Eric the Victorious, King of Sweden, and later wife of Sweyn Forkbeard, King of Denmark, by whom she is said to have been mother of Canute the Great, King of Denmark, Norway and England.
Aberdeen married firstly Lady Catherine Elizabeth ( 1784 – 1812 ), daughter of John Hamilton, 1st Marquess of Abercorn, and assumed by Royal license the additional surname of Hamilton in 1818.
In Vienna on 26 September 1819 ( by proxy ) and again in Dresden on 7 October 1819 ( in person ), Frederick Augustus married firstly with the Archduchess Maria Caroline of Austria ( Maria Karoline Ferdinande Theresia Josephine Demetria ), daughter of Emperor Francis I of Austria.
She married firstly Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor, and secondly, Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou, having issue by the second.
Henry Bruce married firstly Annabella, daughter of Richard Beadon, in 1846.
# Philip III ( 1 May 1245 – 5 October 1285 ), married firstly to Isabella of Aragon in 1262 and secondly to Maria of Brabant in 1274
** Marie ( 119815 August 1238 ); married firstly Philip I of Namur, had no issue.
He married firstly before the year 40 a woman named Petronia, daughter of Publius or Gaius Petronius Pontius Nigrinus, by whom he had a son Aulus Vitellius Petronianus, the universal heir of his mother and grandfather.
1170 ), married firstly in 1183 Robert III de Brus ( died ca.
* Vilhelmina of Denmark ( born 18 January 1808 ), daughter of Frederick VI of Denmark and Marie Sophie of Hesse-Kassel ( ultimately she married firstly Frederick VII of Denmark and secondly Karl, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg )
In 1308 he married firstly to Beatrix of Świdnica.
Around March 1280, Henry IV married firstly with the daughter of Duke Władysław of Opole ( b. ca.
* Judith ( 844 – 870 ), married firstly with Ethelwulf of Wessex, secondly with Ethelbald of Wessex ( her stepson ) and thirdly with Baldwin I of Flanders
* Rothild ( 871 – 929 ), married firstly to Hugues, Count of Bourges and secondly to Roger, Count of Maine
* Thomas Grey, Earl of Huntingdon, Marquess of Dorset and Lord Ferrers de Groby ( 1457 – 20 September 1501 ), married firstly Anne Holland, but she died young without issue ; he married secondly on 18 July 1474, Cecily Bonville, suo jure Baroness Harington and Bonville, by whom he had fourteen children.
* Helen ferch Llywelyn ( before 1230-after 16 Feb 1295 ) who married firstly Máel Coluim II, Earl of Fife, son of Duncan Macduff of Fife & his wife Alice Corbet.
Married firstly before 1244 Maurice IV, seigneur de Craon ( 1224 – 1250 ), by whom she had issue ; she married secondly, Geoffrey de Rancon.
Pliny the Younger married three times, firstly when he was very young, about eighteen, to a stepdaughter of Veccius Proculus, of whom he became a widower at age 37, secondly to the daughter of Pompeia Celerina, at an unknown date and thirdly to Calpurnia, daughter of Calpurnius and granddaughter of Calpurnus Fabatus of Comum.
* Archduke Ferdinand II of Austria, ruler of the Tirol married firstly Philippine Welser, a bourgeois girl though very wealthy ; their children were given a separate title and the issue of Ferdinand's second ( and equal ) marriage were preferred.
** Margaret Stewart ( born around 1497 ), married firstly John Gordon, Lord Gordon and secondly Sir John Drummond.

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