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1704 and Robert
Robert Dodsley ( 13 February 1704 – 23 September 1764 ) was an English bookseller and miscellaneous writer.
* Robert Harley: 18 May 1704 – 13 February 1708
For example, Robert Harley served simultaneously as Speaker and as a Secretary of State between 1704 and 1705.
** Robert Bertie, Lord Willoughby de Eresby ( 1684 – 1704 )
The Enlightenment-era British social theoretician John Locke ( 1632 – 1704 ) said that political legitimacy derives from popular explicit and implicit consent of the governed: “ The argument of the Treatise is that the government is not legitimate unless it is carried on with the consent of the governed .” The German political philosopher Dolf Sternberger said, “ Legitimacy is the foundation of such governmental power as is exercised, both with a consciousness on the government ’ s part that it has a right to govern, and with some recognition by the governed of that right .” The American political sociologist Seymour Martin Lipset said that legitimacy also “ involves the capacity of a political system to engender and maintain the belief that existing political institutions are the most appropriate and proper ones for the society .” The American political theorist Robert A. Dahl explained legitimacy as a reservoir ; so long as the water is at a given level, political stability is maintained, if it falls below the required level, political legitimacy is endangered.
* Sir Robert Bacon, 5th Baronet ( died 1704 )
Among their most senior ministers were Sir Charles Hedges ( Tory ), Lord Nottingham ( Tory ), Sir Robert Harley ( a Whig who would rise to power in 1704 ), and Lord Sunderland ( Whig ).
Henry Sydney ( or Sidney ), 1st Earl of Romney ( 8 April 1641 – 8 April 1704 ) was born in Paris, a son of Robert Sidney, 2nd Earl of Leicester, of Penshurst Place in Kent, England, and his wife, born Lady Dorothy Percy, a daughter of Henry Percy, 9th Earl of Northumberland and sister of Algernon Percy, 10th Earl of Northumberland.
Woolton Hall, Woolton, England is a former country house built in 1704 and extensively remodelled in 1772 by the influential architect Robert Adam.
Robert Gillow ( 2 August 1704 – 1772 ) was an English furniture manufacturer.
The firm of Gillow's of Lancaster can be traced back to the luxury furniture and furnishings firm founded by Robert Gillow ( 1704 – 72 ) in 1730.
In 1704 the Rector, Robert South, founded a trust for apprenticing two children from the parish each year, and in 1709 he enlarged and endowed the trust to create a school for the poor boys of the parish.
* Robert Carter II ( 1704 – 1734 ) married Priscilla Churchill.
By marriage its owner became Robert Wroth the MP for Guildford in 1704, 1707 and 1714 who died in 1720.

1704 and Browne
Moses Browne ( 1704 – 1787 ) Church of England priest and poet
Those holding this view include: 1600s: Sussex Baptists d. 1612: Edward Wightman 1627: Samuel Gardner 1628: Samuel Przypkowski 1636: George Wither 1637: Joachim Stegmann 1624: Richard Overton 1654: John Biddle ( Unitarian ) 1655: Matthew Caffyn 1658: Samuel Richardson 1608 – 1674: John Milton 1588 – 1670: Thomas Hobbes 1605 – 1682: Thomas Browne 1622 – 1705: Henry Layton 1702: William Coward 1632 – 1704: John Locke 1643 – 1727: Isaac Newton 1676 – 1748: Pietro Giannone 1751: William Kenrick 1755: Edmund Law 1759: Samuel Bourn 1723 – 1791: Richard Price 1718 – 1797: Peter Peckard 1733 – 1804: Joseph Priestley Francis Blackburne ( 1765 ) ( 1765 ).
Moses Browne ( 1704 – 1787 ) Church of England priest and poet

1704 and built
In 1704, the University ’ s first astronomical observatory was built on top of the gatehouse.
The first modern orrery was built circa 1704 by George Graham and Thomas Tompion.
He built the grist mill in 1704, and it still stands to this day.
In 1704, his son Nathaniel ( 1663 – 1729 ) and his wife Mary built a water-powered gristmill along the West Branch of Chester Creek.
One of the more successful was the system built by Isaac de la Chaumette starting in 1704.
The present building, named Calke Abbey in 1808, was never actually an abbey, but is a Baroque mansion built between 1701 and 1704.
In 1704, Thomas LeFebvre from Quebec bought a large tract of land along the Weskeag River on which he built a gristmill, with a house on the shoreline at what is now South Thomaston.
St Clement, Eastcheap: the interior looking westwards, August 2007The present organ's oak case is the same one made to enclose the organ that was built for St Clement's in 1696, probably by Renatus Harris who maintained the instrument until 1704.
The house was built in 1704 by Sir Brook Bridges, 1st Baronet, of Goodneston.
Vauban built numerous fortifications on the island, which Ferry completed in 1704.
On School Road is the Church of the Ascension, formerly the Job Marston Chapel, which was built in 1704 and is believed to have been designed by Sir William Wilson.
A new church building was built in 1704 and the oldest surviving church records date to this time with the first record on February 2, 1704 being the baptism of a child born to Cadillac.
The Commissioner's House ( 1704 ), was built for Captain George St Lo who found the previous house unsuitable.
The main architects involved in the construction and refurbishment of the site were Johann Friedrich Nette ( from 1704 to 1714 ), Donato Giuseppe Frisoni ( from 1714 to 1733 ), Philippe de La Guêpière ( 1757 – 1758 ), who built the Palace Theatre and refurbished the corps de logis in Rococo style, and Friedrich Thouret.
The first, built soon after Peter's founding of the city, was consecrated by Archbishop Iov of Novgorod the Great in April 1704.
In 1704 a dam was built to connect the Dagebüll polder to the Old Christian Albrechts Polder.
In 1704 monks from Athos built the Evangelistria monastery which played a part on the Greek War of Independence as a hide-out for Greek rebels.
In 1704, an outer fortification, the Linienwall, was built around the Vorstädte.
The original part of the house was built in 1704 for the Molyneux family, on an estate of 400 acres that Richard Molyneux purchased in 1700.
The first astronomical observatory at the University of Cambridge was built at the top of Trinity College gatehouse in 1704.
The main hall was built by Kapitan Chan Ki Lock in 1704 and was rebuilt in 1801 by Kapitan China Chua Su Cheong, who contributed to the aesthetic and magnificent structural additions of the building.
The Church at the Citadel was built in 1704 in heavy Baroque style during the reign of King Frederik IV.

1704 and Court
He was appointed to the Court of Session in 1704 with the judicial title Lord Cessnock, and served there until 1714.

1704 and vicinity
On 13 August 1704, the Battle of Blenheim () was fought in the vicinity of the village, having decisive importance on the War of Spanish Succession.

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