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de and Juliana
During his stay in Maracaibo, Venezuela, in the late 1930s, he wrote waltzes with a local flavour ( Luna de Maracaibo ) and introduced a touch of jazz in some of them ( i. e. Juliana ).
He was the son of Frederick IV and of Louise Juliana of Nassau, the daughter of William the Silent and Charlotte de Bourbon-Monpensier.
His father, Frederick IV was the ruler of Electoral Palatinate ; his mother was Louise Juliana of Nassau, the daughter of William I of Orange and Charlotte de Bourbon-Monpensier.
Roger Bigod ( – 1221 ) was the son of Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk and his first wife, Juliana de Vere.
Juliana also petitioned the learned Dominican Hugh of St-Cher, Jacques Pantaléon ( Archdeacon of Liège who later became Pope Urban IV ) and Robert de Thorete, Bishop of Liège.
The celebration of Corpus Christi became widespread only after both St. Juliana and Bishop Robert de Thorete had died.
Mayer de Rothschild and his wife Juliana ( née Cohen ) had one child, a daughter, Hannah, later Countess of Rosebery.
It formed part of the dowry of Juliana de Vere when she married Hugh Bigod in the mid-12th century, and the sub-tenancy passed to the Bigod earls of Norfolk who held it as one knight's fee of the Veres.
Born the son of Hugh de Fellenberg Montgomery, a landowner and Ulster Unionist politician, and Mary Sophia Juliana May Montgomery ( née Maude ) and educated at Charterhouse School and at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, Archibald Armar Montgomery was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Royal Field artillery on 4 November 1891.
Their daughter Juliana de Sandwich was born in 1245 and resided at Preston in Kent ( died 1327 ); she married William Leybourne ( Leyburn ), Lord Leyburn.
He then married his daughter, Juliana de Sousa Mascarenhas, having with her two children: Ana and Alexandre.
de and Hatfield
Nearby Radlett was the base for Handley Page Aircraft Company, while Hatfield became home to de Havilland.
From the 1930s when de Havilland opened a factory until the 1990s when British Aerospace closed, Hatfield was associated with aircraft design and manufacture, which employed more people than any other industry.
During the night 29 – 30 January 1943, Chapman with MI5 officers faked a sabotage attack on his target, the de Havilland aircraft factory in Hatfield, Hertfordshire, where the Mosquito was being manufactured.
A statue of de Havilland was erected in July 1997 near the entrance to the College Lane campus of the University of Hertfordshire in Hatfield.
He was in effect a benefactor of the university, as in 1951 the de Havilland company had given land adjoining the A1 to Hertfordshire County Council for educational use in perpetuity ; the Hatfield Technical College then founded was a precursor of today's university.
In 1951, the de Havilland company gave land in Hatfield adjoining the A1 to Hertfordshire County Council for educational use in perpetuity.
* January 9-The de Havilland DH121 Trident makes its maiden flight from Hatfield in Hertfordshire in the United Kingdom.
The first written record of Woodsetts is in a 13th century quitclaim ( dated 1220 ) held at the Derbyshire Record Office ( Hatfield de Rodes papers ) where a bovate of land ' in the territory of Lyndrick, in Wudsetes ' is mentioned.
But, Chief Hatfield was later gunned down in broad daylight on the steps of the McDowell County Courthouse in Welch, with Lively stepping up to deliver the coup de grâce.
In 1378 Thomas Hatfield Bishop of Durham, granted John de Neville a licence to fortify his property at Raby.
* Comet, Hatfield: In the 1950s the pub sign depicted the de Havilland DH. 88 wooden monoplane racer named " Grosvenor House ", famous for its winning of the 1934 McRobertson Cup air race from England to Australia and for its distinctive Post Box red colour.
0.181 seconds.