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Sir and Timothy
* March 1 – Sir Timothy Laurence, second husband of Anne, Princess Royal
* VAdm Sir Timothy Laurence ( The Princess Royal's second and current husband )
As a husband of a princess of the blood royal, he was listed as an immediate member of the Royal Family in the same way as it is today with The Princess Royal's current husband, Sir Timothy Laurence.
Shelley had been forbidden by her father-in-law, Sir Timothy Shelley, from publishing a biography of her husband, so she memorialized him, amongst others, in The Last Man.
* The original nine League or founder members who formed the party on August 2, 1792: Sir Andrew Ffoulkes ( second in command ), Lord Anthony Dewhurst, Lord Timothy Hastings, Lord John Bathurst, Lord Stowmarries, Sir Edward Mackenzie, Sir Philip Glynde, Lord Saint Denys, Sir Richard Galveston
However, during his tenure as Chief of the General Staff ( 1985 – 89 ) General Sir Nigel Bagnall directed that British Military Doctrine was to be prepared, and tasked Colonel ( later General ) Timothy Granville-Chapman ( an artillery officer who had been his Military Assistant in Headquarters 1st British Corps ) to prepare it.
Sir Timothy Bartel Smit KBE ( born 1954 ) is a Dutch-born British businessman, famous for his work on the Lost Gardens of Heligan and the Eden Project, both in Cornwall, Britain.
Thus, in the United Kingdom, The Princess Royal, is styled Her Royal Highness ( HRH ), her husband, Sir Timothy Laurence, bears no courtesy style merely by virtue of being her husband ( although his mother-in-law The Queen has since knighted him ).
* Sir Dunbar Plunket Barton, P. C., Timothy Healy: Memories and Anecdotes.
RADA has a number of notable associate members including Jane Asher, Sir Michael Gambon, Robert Bourne, Kenneth Branagh, Jon Cryer, Richard Digby Day, Trevor Eve, Ralph Fiennes, Edward Fox, Iain Glen, Gerald Harper, Sir Ian Holm, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Sir Derek Jacobi, Patricia Kneale, Paul McGann, Dame Helen Mirren, Sir Trevor Nunn, Peter O ' Toole, Dame Diana Rigg, Sir Evelyn de Rothschild, Lord Snowdon, Shelley Thompson, Alan Rickman, Timothy Dalton and Sir Roger Moore.
Sir Timothy Miles Bindon " Tim " Rice ( born 10 November 1944 ) is a
Whittingham was survived by two sons, Sir Timothy and Daniel, and four daughters.
* Timothy Bateson as Sir Oliver Martext
Sir George Martin, Michael Parkinson, Don Black, Timothy Dalton and others also contributed to the celebration of his life and work.
2011: Sir John Gilbert: Art and Imagination in the Victorian Age by Spike Bucklow and Sally Woodcock with contributions by Mark Bills, Nicola Bown, Spike Bucklow, Kathleen Froyen, Paul Goldman, Vivien Knight, Caroline Oliver, Neil Rhind, Libby Sheldon, Timothy Wilcox and Sally Woodcock ( Lund Humphries ) 978-1-84822-079-9
Those currently holding this appointment are Field Marshal HRH The Duke of Kent ; Admiral of the Fleet HRH The Prince of Wales ; Captain Mark Phillips, 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards ; Rear Admiral HRH The Duke of York ; Second Lieutenant HRH The Earl of Wessex and Vice Admiral Sir Timothy Laurence.

Sir and Colman
The residences are named after Horatio Nelson, John Constable, Benjamin Britten, Jeremiah Colman, Horatio Nelson's ship HMS Victory, Robert Kett, Sir Thomas Browne and the Paston family who wrote the Paston Letters.
He accused Sir George Wakeman, the Queen's physician, and Edward Colman, the secretary to Mary of Modena who was the Duchess of York, of planning to assassinate Charles.
In 1907 Gillette was caricatured in Vanity Fair by Sir Leslie Ward ( who signed his work " Spy ") ( see above ), and later became the subject of such famous American caricaturists as Pamela Colman Smith, Ralph Barton and Al Freuh.
:: The present clubhouse was built in 1921 by Sir William Francis Reckitt-a member of the Reckitt and Colman Mustard dynasty.
He accused Sir George Wakeman, the Queen's physician, and Edward Colman, the secretary to the Duchess of York ( Mary of Modena ), of planning the assassination.
* 16 December 1868: Sir Colman Michael O ' Loghlen
Sir Timothy James Alan Colman KG ( born 19 September 1929 ) is a British businessman and a previous Lord Lieutenant of Norfolk .< ref >
From 1896 Sir Jeremiah Colman became Chairman: in 1903, under his leadership, the firm took over rival mustard maker Keen Robinson & Company ( makers of Keen's Mustard ), through which it also acquired the Robinsons Lemon Barley Water brand and baby food business.
* Sir Timothy Colman 30 March 1978 – 19 September 2004
* Sir Timothy Colman ( born 1929 ), British knight

Sir and robes
In this branch of art, the " Sir Walter Gilbey " may fairly be called the painter's masterpiece, although the sumptuous full-length of the Scottish provost, in his robes, runs it closely.
John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough in the robes of the Order of the Garter by Sir Godfrey Kneller, c. 1704
In January 1964, Hardy Amies designed the university's academic robes and temporary teaching huts had to be erected close to Wivenhoe House, while in March Sir John Ruggles-Brise was appointed the first Pro-Chancellor and Alderman Leatherland the first Treasurer of the University.
Sir Harbottle Grimston in the robes of the Master of the Rolls
Sir Antony Acland in the robes of a Knight Companion of the Order of the Garter
In 1901 Sir John Logan Campbell was elected Mayor of Auckland for the royal visit that year ( photo in mayoral robes ), as David Goldie a temperance advocate did not want to toast the visiting Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York with alcohol.
At the centre of the capital, on a plinth, is a bronze statue of the duke dressed in the robes of the Knights of the Garter, by Sir Richard Westmacott.
In William Shakespeare's Henry IV Part I, Sir John Falstaff alludes to the story while insulting his friend Bardolph about his face, comparing it to a memento mori: " I never see thy face ," he says " but I think upon hell-fire and Dives that lived in purple ; for there he is in his robes, burning, burning " ( III, 3, 30-33 ).
He also painted Sir Robert Walpole, whose portrait by van Loo in his robes as chancellor of the exchequer is in the National Portrait Gallery, London, and the prince and princess of Wales.

Sir and Knight
* In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Gawain returns from his battle with the Green Knight wearing the green girdle " obliquely, like a baldric, bound at his side ,/ below his left shoulder, laced in a knot, in betokening the blame he had borne for his fault.
One exception is Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, which locates Arthur's court at " Camelot "; however, in Britain, Arthur's court was generally located at Caerleon, or at Carlisle, which is usually identified with the " Carduel " of the French romances.
Arthur ( top centre ) in an illustration to the Middle English poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, late 14th century
While chivalric romances abound, particularly notable literary portrayals of knighthood include Geoffrey Chaucer's The Knight's Tale, Baldassare Castiglione's The Book of the Courtier, and Miguel de Cervantes ' Don Quixote, as well as Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte d ' Arthur and other Arthurian tales ( Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae, the Pearl Poet's Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, etc.
The British musician Elton John, for example, is a Knight Bachelor, thus entitled to be called Sir Elton.
For example, His Eminence Sir Norman Cardinal Gilroy did receive the accolade on his appointment as Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in 1969.
A famous example of this situation was The Revd Sir Derek Pattinson, who was ordained just a year after he was appointed Knight Bachelor, apparently somewhat to the consternation of officials at Buckingham Palace.
* Knight of Kerry or Green Knight ( FitzGerald of Kerry ) — the current holder is Sir Adrian FitzGerald, 6th Baronet of Valencia, 24th Knight of Kerry.
The Tempest is considered by most Shakespearean scholars to have been written in 1610 – 11 and inspired by published and unpublished contemporary descriptions of the 1609 Sea Venture shipwreck on the island of Bermuda, and most especially William Strachey's eyewitness report, A True Reportory of the Wracke and Redemption of Sir Thomas Gates, Knight because of certain verbal, plot and thematic similarities.
The category of Knight of the order had been created only on 24 May, and the Chancellor and Principal Knight of the Order, the Governor-General Sir John Kerr, became the first appointee, ex officio.
Gordon published a scholarly edition of the Middle English text of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight ; a revised edition of this text was prepared by Norman Davis and published in 1967.
The poem has been adapted to film twice, on both occasions by writer-director Stephen Weeks: first as Gawain and the Green Knight in 1973 and again in 1984 as Sword of the Valiant: The Legend of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, featuring Miles O ' Keeffe as Gawain and Sean Connery as the Green Knight.
There have been at least two television adaptations, Gawain and the Green Knight in 1991 and the animated Sir Gawain and the Green Knight in 2002.
The Tyneside Theatre company presented a stage version of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight at the University Theatre, Newcastle at Christmas 1971.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight was first adapted as an opera in 1978 by the composer Richard Blackford on commission from the village of Blewbury, Oxfordshire.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight was adapted into an opera called Gawain by Harrison Birtwistle, first performed in 1991.
* Sir Gawain and the Green Knight at Archive. org

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