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1662 and she
As such, she was the Queen consort of England, Scotland and Ireland from 1662 to 1685.
In 1662 she fled to Ghent and Mechelen, after the magistrate investigated how the orphanage was controlled after at least one of the girls had succumbed to the harsh regime.
After the Stuart Restoration, she traveled from Lancashire to London to petition King Charles II and his parliament in 1660 and 1662 for freedom of conscience in religious matters.
In 1662 he was appointed vicar of Leek Wootton near Warwick and he married Elizabeth Green, but she died shortly afterwards.
She died in 1662, and in 1670 he married Flower, widow of William Bishop and Sir William Backhouse, and daughter of William Backhouse, gaining the manor and house of Swallowfield Park, Berkshire ; later she was first lady of the bedchamber to Queen Anne.
After her husband's early death in 1662, she retained a prominent position at the Russian court.

1662 and went
The younger John was educated at St Paul's School, and on 5 July 1662 entered Jesus College, Cambridge ; he went on from there to Catharine Hall, where he graduated B. A.
Early in 1662 Ellwood was attacked by smallpox, and on his recovery went to London to study.
Webb also went on to design the enlargement of the Queen's House in 1662.
In 1662 Dronfield was granted a market by Charles II, but in the 18th century, due to the nearness of Sheffield and Chesterfield, the market went into decline and ceased to exist.
It is unclear, given the overlap with his governance in Acadia, when he actually went to England, but he served in this capacity until 1662.
He retired to his country house in Northamptonshire till 1662, when he left England and went to Basel, Switzerland and afterwards to Augsburg, Germany.
He went to America in or before 1662 and originally settled in Warwick Square, Nansemond County, Virginia.
In 1662 he went to Italy and stayed in Rome until 1667.

1662 and Dublin
On the restoration of Charles II of England, his Viceroy in Dublin, the Duke of Ormonde, established a Royal Hunting Park on the land in 1662.
In 1654 he was sent by his uncle to Trinity College, Dublin, where he subsequently became a scholar and fellow, receiving the Bachelor of Arts ( 1662 ) and Master of Arts ( 1663 ).
The Act of Settlement 1662 was passed by the Irish Parliament in Dublin.
Accordingly, the Parliament of Ireland ( in Dublin ) passed a new Act of Settlement in 1662 which ordered that the Cromwellian settlers give up a portion of their allotted land to " Old English " and " innocent Catholics ", as would be determined by Commissioners.

1662 and her
Mary II ( 30 April 1662 – 28 December 1694 ) was joint Sovereign of England, Scotland, and Ireland with her husband and first cousin, William III and II, from 1689 until her death.
It includes: Henrietta Maria of France ( died 1669 ), exiled Queen of England ; Philippe I, Duke of Orléans, founder of the House of Orléans ; his first wife Henrietta Anne Stuart | Princess Henriette ( died 1670 ); the couples first daughter Marie Louise d ' Orléans ( 1662 – 1689 ) | Marie Louise d ' Orléans ( later Queen of Spain ); Anne of Austria ( died 1666 ); the Orléans daughters of Gaston, Duke of Orléans | Gaston de France ; Louis XIV ; the Dauphin of France with his wife Maria Theresa of Spain with her third daughter Princess Marie-Thérèse of France ( 1667 – 1672 ) | Marie-Thérèse de France, called Madame Royale ( died 1672 ) and her second son Philippe-Charles de France, duc d ' Anjou ( d1671 ).
Cavendish also published collections of letters, such as Sociable Letters and Philosophical Letters ( 1664 ), orations, as in her collection entitled Orations ( 1662 ), and plays, many of which are printed in Plays Never Before Published ( 1668 ).
His second wife died in 1662, and was buried in Worcester Cathedral, where there is a monument to her memory.
Seven children followed: Mary ( 1662 – 1694 ), James ( 1663 – 1667 ), Anne ( 1665 – 1714 ), Charles ( 1666 – 1667 ), Edgar ( 1667 – 1671 ) and two daughters, Henrietta ( 1669 – 1669 ) and Catherine ( 1671 – 1671 ); all of her sons and two of her daughters died in infancy.
Andros served as a courtier to Elizabeth of Bohemia from 1660 until her death in 1662.
* Mary II of England ( 1662 – 1694 ), co-ruler of England and Scotland with her husband William III from 1689 until her death
When Tradescant died in 1662, his widow, Hester, contested the deed, claiming her husband had signed it when drunk without knowing its contents, but the matter was settled in Chancery in Ashmole's favour two years later.
The two separated in 1662, following the birth of her first son.
He was Lord Chamberlain to Catherine of Braganza ( 1662 – 1665 ) and a member of her Council ( 1670 ).
On 25 February 1660 Barbara, gave birth to a daughter named Lady Anne Palmer, whom Palmer believed was his own daughter and the diary of Samuel Pepys on 23 August 1662 said: " But that which pleased me best was that my Lady Castlemayne stood over against us upon a piece of White-hall-where I glutted myself with looking on her.
* Camilla Faà di Bruno, ( c. 1599 – 1662 ), a society beauty who was married secretly, briefly and morganatically to Ferdinando I the Gonzaga Duke of Mantua and Monferrato ; her memoirs have been described as the first prose autobiography written by an Italian woman.
Since the death of her husband Léopold-Frédéric of Württemberg-Montbéliard in 1662 the Duchess lived in Héricourt ( near Montbéliard, then territory of the house of Württemberg ; now département Doubs ), and Froberger became her music teacher at around the same time ( this indicates that Froberger must have maintained a link with the ducal family of Württemberg since his Stuttgart years ).
She was married with her cousin ( the son of Johan de Witt ) Johan de Witt Jr. ( 1662 – 1701 ), secretary of Dordrecht.
After 1662, Anne Marie Louise d ' Orléans, Duchess of Montpensier, who was originally called Mademoiselle as the eldest daughter of Gaston duc d ' Orléans, became known as la Grande Mademoiselle at court, in order to distinguish her from her younger cousin, Marie Louise d ' Orléans, now also called Mademoiselle, as the daughter of Anne's first cousin, the new Monsieur.
The church of the Monastery of Pažaislis, commissioned in 1662, was one of the first to be consecrated in her honor.
In 1662 the Crown granted letters patent placing the estate in trust, and upon Lady Katherine's death in 1675 it passed to her and Sir James ' eldest son Sir Edmund Harington, 4th Baronet.
Parish records from the village of Aldenham relate that in 1662 a woman suspected of having been a witch was buried with a piece of it laid on top of her coffin to prevent her from escaping after burial.

1662 and claim
During his exile and prison term, others claimed his technique as their own, but in 1662 Parliament recognized his claim to the invention as valid.
Some accounts claim that Massasoit died as early as 1660 ; others contend that he died as late as 1662.

1662 and certain
:" Mr. Colfe directed also, by his will, that a certain sum of money should be laid out in building five alms-houses, ( to be begun in the month of April 1662 ,) for poor, godly householders of this parish, 60 years of age or upwards, and able to say the Creed, the Lord's Prayer, and the Ten Commandments.
The 1662 ceremonial specified that the original melodies had to be clearly audible in certain versets, and in cases when Missa cunctipotens was used, organists generally complied.

1662 and Irish
An Irish translation of the revised prayer book of 1662 was effected by John Richardson ( 1664 – 1747 ) and published in 1712.
In 1662, the noted Irish physicist and chemist Robert Boyle performed a series of experiments employing a J-shaped glass tube, which was sealed on one end.
An Irish translation of the revised prayer book of 1662 was effected by John Richardson ( 1664 – 1747 ) and published in 1712.
An Irish translation of the revised prayer book of 1662 was published in 1712.
In 1662 he was called to the Irish House of Lords under a writ of acceleration as Earl of Ossory.
The first Irish creation came in 1662 when Lord Richard Butler, younger son of James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde, was created Baron Butler of Cloughgrenan, Viscount Tullough and Earl of Arran.
The Baronetcy, of Newtown in the County of Mayo, was created in the Baronetage of Ireland in 1662 for Major Arthur Gore, who represented County Mayo in the Irish House of Commons.
* An Answer to a Scandalous Letter ... A Full Discovery of the Treachery of the Irish Rebels ( 1662 ), printed with the letter itself in his State Letters ( 1742 )
In 1662, the eldest son of James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde was called to the Irish House of Lords on a writ of acceleration and became known as Thomas Butler, 6th Earl of Ossory.
It was begun in 1722 by William " Speaker " Conolly ( 1662 – 1729 ), Speaker of the Irish House of Commons, who came under the influence of the New Junta for Architecture, whose adherents included Alessandro Galilei believed to have designed the main house and Edward Lovett Pearce believed to have designed the entrancehall and the long gallery in its original form, as well as the colonnades and wings.
* 1662 raised on the Irish Establishment
1616 ) was Clerk of the Irish House of Commons from 1662 to 1697.
* William O ' Brien, 3rd Earl of Inchiquin ( 1662 – 1719 ), Irish peer
A battle was fought near Antrim between the English and Irish in the reign of Edward III ; and in 1642 a naval engagement took place on Lough Neagh, for Viscount Massereene and Ferrard ( who founded Antrim Castle in 1662 ) had a right to maintain a fighting fleet on the lough.
Richard became the 2nd Viscount Lumley ( in the Irish peerage ) on his grandfather's death in 1661 / 1662, his father having died in 1658.
The ejection of Irish nonconformists was carried out by episcopal activity, some time before the passing of the English Act of Uniformity of 1662.
His son Christopher ( 1628-1687 ), made a baronet in 1662, was the father of Sir Christopher Wandesford ( died 1707 ), who was created an Irish peer as Viscount Castlecomer in 1707, Castlecomer in Kilkenny having been acquired by his grandfather when in Ireland.
Only a " favoured minority " of Irish Catholic Royalists were returned the land confiscated from them by the Parliamentarians under the Act of Settlement 1662 and the public practice of Catholicism remained illegal.

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