Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Earls Court" ¶ 46
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Pembroke and pub
Whilst mourning the loss of Woolworth's and the local bookstore in recent years, the Pembroke pub and Café Nero opened in the past few years.
The Coleherne pub ( now The Pembroke ), located at 261 Old Brompton Road, has become infamous for being the stalking grounds for three separate serial killers, Dennis Nilsen, Michael Lupo and Colin Ireland.

Pembroke and formerly
* University of North Carolina at Pembroke, formerly known as Pembroke State College
* Pembroke, Ontario, formerly known as Miramichi, Canada West ( ca.
Medical School preclinical classes were formerly held in the adjacent Bio-Med Center, Multidisciplinary Laboratories, and Smith-Buonano Hall of the Pembroke Campus.
Many of the directors and staff of GPA subsequently went on to found or work for other aircraft lessors, such as GECAS, Genesis Lease, CIT, ILFC, Pembroke Capital, AerCap ( formerly debisAirFinance ), International Aircraft Management Group ( now RBS Aviation Capital ), Babcock & Brown ( now Fly Leasing ) and Aircastle.
Holdenby House was built by Sir Christopher Hatton, privy councillor to Queen Elizabeth, and Yardley Hastings was named from the Hastings, formerly earls of Pembroke.

Pembroke and dates
The first creation dates from 1138, when the Earldom of Pembroke was conferred by King Stephen on Gilbert de Clare ( d. 1148 ), son of Gilbert Fitz-Richard, who possessed the Lordship of Strigul ( Estrighoiel, in Domesday Book ), the modern Chepstow.

Pembroke and from
There were four from St. John's and four from Christ's, three from Pembroke, and two from each of the colleges, Jesus, Peterhouse, Queens', and Trinity, with Caius, Clare, King's, Magdalene, and Sidney supplying one each in the ordo senioritatis.
Ferry connections between Britain and Ireland via the Irish Sea include the routes from Fishguard and Pembroke to Rosslare, Holyhead to Dún Laoghaire, Stranraer to Belfast and Larne, and Cairnryan to Larne ; the Swansea to Cork route has closed.
Cambridge University, Pembroke College from Trumpington Street, with Wren's chapel to the right
He linked his two buildings with an arched stone screen, Caröe Bridge, along Pembroke Street in a late Baroque style, the principal function of which was to act as a bridge by which undergraduates might cross the Master's forecourt at first-floor level from Pitt Building to New Court without leaving the College or trespassing in what was then the Fellows ' Garden.
Living in Pembroke or King ’ s Colleges, students choose three courses from the around forty-five on offer, including courses in the arts, social sciences, business and management, humanities and sciences.
( 1501 – 19 May 1536 ) was Queen of England from 1533 to 1536 as the second wife of Henry VIII of England and Marquess of Pembroke in her own right.
In the 1992 general election the party added a fourth MP, Cynog Dafis, when he gained Ceredigion and Pembroke North from the Liberal Democrats.
Next, Forster published The Longest Journey ( 1907 ), an inverted bildungsroman following the lame Rickie Elliott from Cambridge to a career as a struggling writer and then to a post as a schoolmaster, married to the unappealing Agnes Pembroke.
File: ShieldOfWilliamDeValence. jpg | Diaper on the Heraldic shield of William de Valence, 1st Earl of Pembroke ( d. 1296 ) from his tomb in Westminster Abbey.
Some of the more biologically important wetland areas include ( going downsteam from Pembroke ), the Westmeath sand dune / wetland complex, Mississippi Snye, Breckenridge Nature Reserve, Shirleys Bay, Ottawa Beach / Andrew Haydon Park, Petrie Island, the Duck Islands and Greens Creek.
The title, which is associated with Pembroke, Pembrokeshire in West Wales, has been recreated ten times from its original inception.
Marshal's eldest son, William Marshal ( d. 1231 ), 2nd Earl of Pembroke of this line, passed some years in warfare in Wales and Ireland, where he was justiciar from 1224 to 1226 ; he also served Henry III in France.
He escaped from Devizes Castle and joined the rebellion of Richard Marshal, 3rd Earl of Pembroke in 1233.
When Jane's accession failed due to a lack of popular support, Henry's father, the Earl of Pembroke, sought to distance himself from the Grey family by separating his son from Catherine and seeking the annulment of the marriage.
The Bryan County seat was voted to be moved from Clyde to Pembroke in 1935, with the first County Commissioners session in Pembroke taking place on February 15, 1937.
Pembroke industries included brickmaking, with bricks manufactured from clay along the Merrimack River.
The school today is public and takes students from Pembroke and from the neighboring towns of Allenstown, Epsom, Chichester, and historically, Deerfield.
The chronicles tell of how Gaveston gave mocking nicknames to other earls, calling Lincoln ' burst-belly ', Pembroke ' Joseph the Jew ', Lancaster ' the fiddler ' and Warwick ' the black dog of Arden ' ( from the forest of Arden in Warwickshire ).

Pembroke and 1880s
Pembroke Lodge in the 1880s

Pembroke and had
The younger men, Vere, and Pembroke, who was also Edward's cousin and whose Lusignan blood gave him the swarthy complexion that caused Edward of Carnarvon's irreverent friend, Piers Gaveston, to nickname him `` Joseph the Jew '', were relatively new to the game of diplomacy, but Pontissara had been on missions to Rome before, and Hotham, a man of great learning, `` jocund in speech, agreeable to meet, of honest religion, and pleasing in the eyes of all '', and an archbishop to boot, was as reliable and experienced as Othon himself.
Richard also had two acknowledged illegitimate children: John of Gloucester, also known as " John of Pontefract ", and a daughter Katherine who married William Herbert, 2nd Earl of Pembroke in 1484.
The Pembroke lands and the title of Earl of Pembroke had been held by Henry's great-uncle, and Henry performed the investiture himself.
ITV Digital had call centres located in Pembroke Dock, Plymouth and used outsourced BT call centres in Cork, Republic of Ireland and Belfast, Northern Ireland.
He assumed the crown under the regency of the popular William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke, but the England he inherited had undergone several drastic changes in the reign of his father.
She had a younger brother, William, later 1st Marquess of Northampton, and a sister, Anne, later Countess of Pembroke.
William Marshal had died in 1231, and his brother Richard had succeeded him as Earl of Pembroke.
Eleanor had previously been married to William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, and she swore a vow of perpetual chastity upon his death, when she was sixteen, which she broke by marrying de Montfort.
# Eleanor ( 1215 – 1275 ), who would marry firstly William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke ; and secondly Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, by whom she had issue.
Holder had been a Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford.
Her father had been Earl of Pembroke, and Marshal acquired large estates and claims in England, Wales, Normandy and Ireland.
Marshal did not obtain Pembroke and the title of earl, which his father-in-law had enjoyed, until 1199, as it had been taken into the king's hand in 1154.
# Gilbert Marshal, 4th Earl of Pembroke ( 1197 – 27 June 1241 ), married ( 1 ) Marjorie of Scotland, youngest daughter of King William I of Scotland ; by an unknown mistress he had one illegitimate daughter:
This honour was in recognition of the king's great-uncle Jasper Tudor, who had been the Earl of Pembroke in the 15th century, and his own father, Henry VII who was born at Pembroke Castle in January 1457.
Although he had previously served Richard's father, Henry II, against Richard's rebellions, Richard confirmed the old King's licence for his marriage with the heiress of Strigul and Pembroke.
Pembroke, whose honour had been affronted, appealed for justice both to Gaveston's brother-in-law Gloucester and to the University of Oxford, but to no avail.
At the same time, the barons ' extralegal action had alienated many of their former associates ; the Earl of Pembroke in particular became strongly tied to the king's cause after the affront to his honour.
By 1138 King Stephen had given Pembroke Castle to Gilbert de Clare who used it as an important base in the Norman invasion of Ireland.
A mentally disturbed man had escaped from the local Concord asylum and, brandishing a club, entered the Pembroke schoolyard terrifying pupils who ran shrieking into the schoolhouse.
As of 2009, Pembroke had an estimated financial endowment of £ 44. 9 million.
Although he had been an undergraduate at Exeter College, J. R. R. Tolkien was a Fellow of Pembroke from 1925 to 1945, and wrote The Hobbit and the first two books of The Lord of the Rings during his time there.

0.492 seconds.