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Hugh and Montgomerie
The canal was first proposed by Hugh Montgomerie, 12th Earl of Eglinton in 1791.
Immediately after the Norman Conquest, King William of England installed three of his most trusted confidants, Hugh d ' Avranches, Roger de Montgomerie, and William FitzOsbern, as Earls of Chester, Shrewsbury and Hereford respectively, with responsibilities for containing and subduing the Welsh.
Eglinton was born in Palermo, Sicily, the son of Major-General Archibald Montgomerie, Lord Montgomerie ( 30 July 1773 – 4 January 1814 ), the eldest son of Hugh Montgomerie, 12th Earl of Eglinton.
* Hugh Montgomerie, 2nd Lord Montgomerie ( c. 1460 – 1545 ) ( created Earl of Eglinton in 1508 )
* Hugh Montgomerie, 1st Earl of Eglinton ( c. 1460 – 1545 )
* Hugh Montgomerie, 2nd Earl of Eglinton ( d. 1546 )
* Hugh Montgomerie, 3rd Earl of Eglinton ( d. 1585 )
* Hugh Montgomerie, 4th Earl of Eglinton ( 1563 – 1586 )
* Hugh Montgomerie, 5th Earl of Eglinton ( d. 1612 )
* Hugh Montgomerie, 7th Earl of Eglinton ( 1613 – 1669 )
** Hugh Montgomerie, Master of Montgomerie ( 1680 – 1696 )
* Hugh Montgomerie, 12th Earl of Eglinton ( 1739 – 1819 )
The heir apparent is the present holder's son Hugh Archibald William Montgomerie, Lord Montgomerie ( b. 1966 )
* November 5 – Hugh Montgomerie, 12th Earl of Eglinton, politician and composer ( died 1819 )
William Allingham-Alexander Anderson-Matthew Arnold-Alfred Austin-W. E. Aytoun-Jane Barlow-William Barnes-Thomas Lovell Beddoes-Hilaire Belloc-A. C. Benson-L. S. Bevington-Laurence Binyon-Samuel Laman Blanchard-Mathilde Blinde-Robert Bridges-Anne Brontë-Charlotte Brontë-Shirley Brooks-T. E. Brown-Elizabeth Barrett Browning-Caerleon-C. S. Calverley-William Canton-Lewis Carroll-Elizabeth Charles-John Clare-Arthur Hugh Clough-Hartley Coleridge-Mary E. Coleridge-Mortimer Collins-Eliza Cook-Thomas Cooper-William Johnson Cory-John Davidson-Richard Watson Dixon-Sydney Thompson Dobell-Digby Mackworth Dolben-Alfred Domett-Edward Dowden-Ernest Dowson-R. E. Egerton-Warburton-George Eliot-Ebenezer Elliott-Anne Evans-Sebastian Evans-Michael Field-Edward Fitzgerald-David Gray-John Gray-Dora Greenwell-Thomas Gordon Hake-John Hanmer-Thomas Hardy-Frances Ridley Havergal-Robert Stephen Hawker-W. E. Henley-James Henry-Thomas Hood-Gerard Manley Hopkins-A. E. Housman-Mary Howitt-Leigh Hunt-Jean Ingelow-Lionel Johnson-Ebenezer Jones-Ernest Jones-May Kendall-Harriet Eleanor Hamilton King-Charles Kingsley-Rudyard Kipling-Mary Montgomerie Lamb-Letitia Elizabeth Landon-Walter Savage Landor-William Larminie-Edward Lear-Eugene Lee-Hamilton-Robert Leighton-Amy Levy-Caroline Lindsay-Frederick Locker-Lampson-Alfred Comyns Lyall-Edward Robert Bulwer Lytton-James Clarence Mangan-Philip Bourke Marston-George Meredith-Alice Meynell-Thomas Miller-F. B. Money-Coutts-Cosmo Monkhouse-William Morris-Arthur Munby-Robert Fuller Murray-Constance Naden-Edith Nesbit-Henry Newbolt-Eliza Ogilvy-George Outram-Coventry Patmore-Emily Pfeiffer-Stephen Phillips-Victor Plarr-May Probyn-Adelaide Anne Procter-Bryan Waller Procter-Dollie Radford-William Brighty Rands-William Renton-James Logie Robertson-Mary.
Montgomerie was a younger son of the Ayrshire laird Hugh Montgomerie of Hessilheid ( d. 1558 ) and so was related to the Earl of Eglinton and a distant relation of James VI.
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.

Hugh and 12th
From the 12th century Abbot Hugh of Semur ( died 1109 ), Peter Abelard ( died 1142 ), and Geoffrey of Vendome ( died 1132 ) all referred to Mary Magdalene as the sinner who merited the title apostolarum apostola, with the title becoming commonplace during the 12th and 13th centuries.
It was used by St. Augustine ( 4th and 5th centuries ), in his De Ordine, applying the terms rhythmic ( percussion and strings ), organic ( winds ), and adding harmonic ( the human voice ); Isodore of Seville ( 6th to 7th centuries AD ); Hugh of St. Victor ( 12th century ), also adding the voice ; Magister Lambertus ( 13th century ), adding the human voice as well ; and Michael Pretorius ( 17th century )( Kartomi, 1990, pp. 119 – 21, 147 ).
After the Normans conquered Dublin and its hinterland in the 12th century, Hugh Tyrell, 1st Baron of Castleknock, granted a large area of land, including what now comprises the Phoenix Park, to the Knights Hospitaller.
* Hugh of Jabala, 12th century bishop of Jabala, Syria
The forest was the subject of Gateshead's first charter, granted in the 12th century by Hugh du Puiset, Bishop of Durham.
In the 12th century it passed to the family of Lusignan, sometime also counts of Angoulême counts of Limousin, until the death of the childless Count Hugh in 1303, when it was seized by King Philip IV.
# Mark Hugh Russell ( b. 1960 ), only son of Lord Hugh Hastings Russell, second and youngest son of the 12th Duke
Irvine was the site of Scotland's 12th century Military Capital and former headquarters of the Lord High Constable of Scotland, Hugh de Morville.
After the Norman invasion of the 12th century, Annaly was granted to Hugh de Lacy as part of the Liberty of Meath.
The abeyance of 1692 was terminated in 1721 in favour of Hugh Fortescue ( d. 1751 ), fourteenth Baron Clinton, the grandson of Lady Margaret Clinton ( d. 1688 ), the eldest daughter of Theophilus de Clinton, 4th Earl of Lincoln and 12th Baron Clinton ( d. 1667 ).
* Lewis Joseph Hugh Clifford, 12th Baron Clifford of Chudleigh ( 1889 – 1964 )
* John James Hugh Henry Stewart-Murray, 7th Duke of Atholl, 12th Baron Strange ( 1840 – 1917 )
* Hugh Sempill, 12th Lord Sempill ( 1688 – 1746 )
* Hugh Yates Aylmer, 12th Baron Aylmer ( 1907 – 1982 )
At the end of the 12th century Hugh de Lacy was granted the whole of Meath and under the Normans the religious establishments at Kells flourished.
One of their daughters, Anne married Sir Ralph Bigod, descendant of Hugh Bigod ( Justiciar ) and his wife Joan de Stuteville ( daughter of Dervorguilla I of Galloway, daughter of Lochlann of Galloway ), and became ancestress of George Gascoigne, poet, and Zachary Taylor, 12th president of the U. S. A.
Historians ( in particular Hugh Kennedy ) have argued that the concentric defence arose as a response to advances in siege technology in the crusader states from the 12th to the 13th century.
Rudhraighe married Lady Bridget FitzGerald, daughter of Henry FitzGerald, 12th Earl of Kildare, by whom he had three children: Elizabeth, Hugh ( Aodh ) and Mary.

Hugh and Earl
* 1598 – Nine Years ' War: Battle of the Yellow Ford – Irish forces under Hugh O ' Neill, Earl of Tyrone, defeat an English expeditionary force under Henry Bagenal.
Between 1594 and 1603, Elizabeth faced her most severe test in Ireland during the Nine Years ' War, a revolt that took place at the height of hostilities with Spain, who backed the rebel leader, Hugh O ' Neill, Earl of Tyrone.
The Ashbourne portrait of William Shakespeare, which hangs in the Folger Shakespeare Library was analysed by Charles Wisner Barrell, director of Photography at Bell, who concluded it was an overpainting of the Earl of Oxford, though more recent research identifies it as a portrait of Hugh Hamersley.
The painting, long claimed to be one of the portraits of Shakespeare, but considered by Barrell to be an overpaint of a portrait of the Earl of Oxford, turned out to represent neither, but rather depicted Hugh Hamersley.
The brothers had supporters in England, ready to rise up ; led by Robert de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of Leicester, the rebellion in England from Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk, Hugh de Kevelioc, 5th Earl of Chester, and William I of Scotland.
) He appointed as regents Hugh de Puiset, Bishop of Durham, and William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex — who soon died and was replaced by Richard's chancellor William Longchamp.
Gladstone's role in the decision to invade was described as relatively hands-off, and that the decision to invade was made by certain members of his cabinet such as Spencer Cavendish, Secretary of State for India, Thomas Baring, 1st Earl of Northbrook, First Lord of the Admiralty, Hugh Childers, Secretary of State for War, and Granville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Earl Granville, the Foreign Secretary.
* 27 October – Hugh le Despenser, 1st Earl of Winchester ( executed ; b. 1262 )
* March 31 – The Nine Years War ( Ireland ) is ended by the submission of Hugh O ' Neill, Earl of Tyrone, to the English Crown and the signing of the Treaty of Mellifont.
** Nine Years ' War: In Ireland, Hugh O ' Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone and Hugh Roe O ' Donnell form an alliance to try to overthrow English domination.
* Ulster chieftains, with the lead of Hugh O ' Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone, resist the English reconquest of Ireland.
* September 14 – Flight of the Earls: Hugh O ' Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone, and Rory O ' Donnell, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell, flee Ireland for Spain with ninety followers to avoid capture by the English crown, never to return.
* July 20 – Hugh O ' Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone, dies in Rome, thus concluding the Flight of the Earls from Ireland.
** Hugh O ' Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone, Irish soldier ( b. 1540 )
** Hugh O ' Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone, Irish rebel ( d. 1616 )
* Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk
* Hugh de Kevelioc, 3rd Earl of Chester ( d. 1181 )

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