Descendants of Bishop Samuel and Catherine, Née Cooke, Hallifax

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Descendants of Bishop Samuel and Catherine, Née Cooke, Hallifax Descendants of Bishop Samuel and Catherine, née Cooke, Hallifax Alternate generations are in Bold. (1) Rt Rev Samuel Hallifax LL.D., Bishop of Gloucester (18 Jan 1733 - 4 Mar 1790) . Reg. Prof. of Civil law. Bishop of Gloucester then St Asaph & Catherine Cooke ( - ca Jul 1824) m. 12 Oct 1775, St Mary’s, Lambeth palace, Middlesex | (2) Gertrude Hallifax (1776 - ) | (2) Rev Robert Fitzwilliam Hallifax (ca Jun 1778 - 16 Jul 1837) | . Rector of Richards Castle. | & Eliza Bourke Ricketts (5 Sep 1783 - 18 Apr 1814) | m. 29 Aug 1803, Ashford Bowdler, Salop | | (3) Brigadier Robert Dampier Hallifax (28 Jul 1804 - 1 Jun 1857) | | . 1st s. Captain 1836, Lt Col 1843, Col in 1854, all in 75th Foot (Stirlingshire regt). | | & Harriet Thomson (20 Jan 1812 - 22 Jan 1891) | | m. 10 Jul 1832, Wynberg, Cape Colony | | | (4) Gertrude Letitia Hallifax (1833 - 8 Sep 1898) | | | & Colonel Alexander Bagot (10 Jun 1822 - 20 Oct 1874) | | | m. 28 Oct 1852 | | | | (5) Charles Fitzroy Alexander Hallifax Bagot* (20 Oct 1853 - ca Aug 1901) | | | | . 1901: Consulting Engineer. | | | | & Emily Maynard P Oldfield ( - 1901) | | | | m. 17 Aug 1881, St Geo Han Sq district, London | | | | (5) Charles Fitzroy Alexander Hallifax Bagot* (20 Oct 1853 - ca Aug 1901) | | | | . 1901: Consulting Engineer. | | | | & Beatrice Laura Desanges (ca May 1864 - ca Aug 1922) | | | | m. 9 Feb 1891 | | | | | (6) Muriel Beryl Bagot (ca Nov 1892 - ca May 1894) | | | | | . d. inf. | | | | | (6) Alexandra Bagot (ca Feb 1895 - ca Aug 1982) | | | | | . m. G V Palmer of Queen's regt. | | | | | & Gerald Vivian Palmer (ca Nov 1898 - ca Nov 1984) | | | | | m. ca Nov 1924, Kensington district, London | | | | (5) Arthur Henry Lewis Bagot (5 Jun 1856 - 8 Apr 1906) | | | | . d. unm. Capt Som L.I., ADC to Govr of Madras 1878-87. | | | (4) Louisa Harriet Hallifax (1834 - 23 Feb 1895) | | | . 2nd dau. Possibly dsp. | | | & Lt Gen Edmond Wodehouse (3 Aug 1818 - 28 May 1898) | | | m. 9 Jan 1855, Bengal | | | (4) Augusta Lathom Hallifax (1836 - ca Nov 1917) | | | . 3rd dau. | | | & Colonel Hon Ernest George Curzon (22 Aug 1828 - 1885) | | | m. 14 Jan 1856 | | | | (5) Major Ernest Charles Penn Curzon (24 Nov 1856 - 12 Feb 1938) | | | | . 1st s. 3rd and 18th Hussars. | | | | & Edith Basset CBE (ca May 1862 - 30 Apr 1943) | | | | m. 18 Oct 1882, St Geo Han Sq district, London | | | | | (6) Charles Basset Curzon (ca 1886 - 23 Jun 1952) | | | | | . 1st s. Lt in RNR. Of Watermouth, Ilfracombe | | | | | & Geraldine Fosbery Mills ( - 15 Sep 1962) | | | | | m. ca Feb 1917, Kensington district, London | | | | | | (7) Lorna Geraldine Curzon (ca Nov 1917 - 30 Apr 1945) | | | | | | . 1st dau. d.unm. and sp. | | | | | | (7) Mary Eleanora Basset Curzon (19 Jun 1920 - 19 Oct 1999) | | | | | | . She had issue. | | | | | | & Major James Malcolm Hay ( - 1987) | | | | | | m. 19 Apr 1941 | | | | | | (7) James Quintin Penn Curzon (ca Nov 1923 - 1985) | | | | | | . Capt in Gordon Highlanders. In WW2 in KRRC. M. and had issue. | | | | | (6) Lorna Katherine Curzon (1890 - Feb 1961) | | | | | . Only child, probably dsp. | | | | | & Richard George Penn Curzon-Howe Earl Howe (28 Apr 1861 - 10 Jan 1929) | | | | | m. 4 Aug 1927, St Mark’s, North Audley St, London | | | | (5) Robert Lothian W Curzon (ca 1858 - 18 Nov 1899) | | | | . DL for Essex. d.unm. and sp. | | | | (5) Lt Col Fitzroy Edmund Penn Curzon (ca 1859 - 9 Sep 1916) | | | | . 3rd s. Lt Col of 6th Bn., Royal Irish Regiment. | | | | (5) Arthur Wardlaw Curzon (ca 1862 - ) | | | | . 2nd s. In Ulster Artillery. | | | | & Charlotte Gertrude Radcliffe | | | | m. 1894 | | | | | (6) Adelina Brudenell Curzon ( - 30 Oct 1939) | | | | | . d.unm. and sp. | | | | (5) Harriet Augusta Curzon (ca 1863 - ca Nov 1911) | | | | & Thomas George Lithgow (ca Nov 1853 - ca Nov 1935) | | | | m. ca May 1882, Farnham district, Surrey | | | | | (6) Ernest George Robert Lithgow (ca May 1883 - ) | | | | | . 1891: medical student. | | | | | & Doris Balfour | | | | | m. ca Nov 1917, Tetbury district, Glos | | | | | | (7) Hazel Lithgow (ca Aug 1918 - ) | | | | | | (7) Michael J Lithgow (ca Aug 1920 - ) | | | | | (6) Thomas Richardson O C Lithgow (ca Nov 1885 - ) | | | | | (6) Elizabeth Nia Constance M Lithgow* (ca Nov 1885 - ) | | | | | . Only dau. | | | | | & John Dauncey ( - ca 1907) | | | | | m. ca Nov 1905, Marylebone district, London | | | | | | (7) Nie Augusta M Dauncey (ca Nov 1906 - ) | | | | | | & Ralph N Syme | | | | | | m. ca Aug 1933, Farnham district, Surrey | | | | | | | (8) Heather C Syme (ca Aug 1934 - ) | | | | | | (7) Pearl Margaret Dauncey (ca Sep 1908 - ) | | | | | | & Edward G Lang | | | | | | m. ca Feb 1933, Farnham district, Surrey | | | | | | | (8) Nigel C D Lang (ca Feb 1936 - ) | | | | | | | (8) Charmian C T Lang (ca Feb 1938 - ) | | | | | (6) Elizabeth Nia Constance M Lithgow* (ca Nov 1885 - ) | | | | | . Only dau. | | | | | & Alan D Carden | | | | | m. ca Feb 1913, Marylebone district, London | | | | | | (7) Anne C B Carden (ca Aug 1922 - ) | | | | | (6) Arthur Brudenell Lithgow (ca Nov 1886 - ca Feb 1887) | | | | | (6) Arthur Fitzroy Lithgow (ca Aug 1888 - ) | | | | | (6) Robert Philip Augustus D Lithgow (ca Aug 1898 - ) | | | | (5) Mary Ellen Curzon (ca 1867 - ca 1940) | | | | & Rev Arthur Lewis Whitfeld (ca Sep 1862 - ca 1937) | | | | m. ca May 1888, Marylebone district, London | | | | | (6) Arthur Noel Whitfeld (ca Dec 1890 - 14 Oct 1914) | | | | | (6) Ernest Hamilton Whitfeld (ca Nov 1894 - ) | | | | | (6) Gerald Herbert P Whitfeld (ca May 1896 - ) | | | | | & Joan M H D’Aeth | | | | | m. ca May 1922, St Martin’s district, London | | | | | | (7) Angela M Whitfeld (ca 1927 - ) | | | (4) Lt Henry Fitzwilliam Hallifax (1837 - ca Aug 1860) | | | . Prob. d.unm. Lt in 1st Devon Militia, | | | (4) Georgina Marian Taylor Hallifax (1840 - 1 Jan 1932) | | | (4) Capt Albert Praed Hallifax (ca Feb 1841 - ca Jan 1909) | | | . Capt in 3rd Hussars. | | | & Isabella Aubrey Coker (ca Aug 1851 - ) | | | m. 25 Aug 1870, Ropley, Hants | | | | (5) Ethel Aubery Hallifax (ca Aug 1872 - ) | | | | & Ashley Anthony Froude (ca Aug 1863 - 17 Apr 1949) | | | | m. ca Feb 1897, Chelsea, London | | | | | (6) John Aubrey Froude (ca May 1898 - 22 Sep 1914) | | | | | . Naval cadet and Midshipman. | | | | (5) Gerald Aubrey Hays Hallifax (ca Nov 1874 - ca May 1912) | | | | . dsp. Of Halwell House, South Pool. | | | (4) Katharine Maria Hallifax (ca Feb 1843 - 3 Feb 1931) | | | (4) Anne Pauline Octavia Hallifax (ca May 1844 - 8 Mar 1910) | | | . d.unm. and sp. | | | (4) Rear Admiral John Salwey Hallifax (9 Mar 1846 - 11 Dec 1904) | | | . 8th child, 3rd s. RN: 1883: Commander, 1901: Captain, retd., 1904: Rear-Adml (retd). | | | & Charlotte Annie Hamilton (31 Aug 1858 - 8 Oct 1943) | | | m. 27 Apr 1882, St John's Church, Cheltenham, Glos | | | | (5) Muriel Hallifax (15 Apr 1883 - 19 Mar 1966) | | | | . 1st dau. Secretary of Newbury music festival for many years. | | | | & Guy Ferrand Ferrand (born BUSFEILD) (14 Jul 1881 - 7 Apr 1946) | | | | m. 8 Jan 1907, Compton parish church, Hants | | | | | (6) Daphne Muriel Ferrand (7 Nov 1907 - 1 Sep 1986) | | | | | . 1st dau. Nursing Sister | | | | | & Walter William Briscoe (27 Jan 1901 - ca Nov 1978) | | | | | m. 24 Jul 1935, St Cross chapel, Winchester | | | | | | (7) Christopher George Briscoe (25 Jan 1937 - ) | | | | | | . Architect | | | | | | & Jane Harrington (12 Oct - ) | | | | | | m. 12 Dec 1964, Swindon district, Wilts | | | | | | | (8) Rebecca Claire Briscoe (7 Oct 1965 - ) | | | | | | | . Teacher | | | | | | | & Charles Brindley (14 Jan - ) | | | | | | | m. 6 Aug 1998, Colaton Raleigh, Devon | | | | | | | | (9) Alice Elizabeth Brindley (ca Oct 1999 - ) | | | | | | | | (9) Peter Christopher Brindley (Jul 2001 - ) | | | | | | | (8) Lucy Sophia Briscoe (22 Oct 1967 - ) | | | | | | | & Major Johnathan Norris (18 Jan - ) | | | | | | | m. 4 Jul 1992, St Thomas a Becket, Bridford, Devon | | | | | | | | (9) Kizzy Ann B Norris (ca Mar 2003 - ) | | | | | | | | (9) Kieran Michael B Norris (ca Sep 2006 - ) | | | | | | | (8) Laura Caroline Briscoe (ca Aug 1977 - ) | | | | | | | & Adrian M Hannath | | | | | | | m. Sep 2005, Teignbridge district, Devon | | | | | | | | (9) Clara Rebecca Hannath (ca Sep 2004 - ) | | | | | | (7) Antony Hugh (Tony) Briscoe* (ca Aug 1942 - ) | | | | | | . Computer Consultant | | | | | | & Susan (Suki) Hoyle | | | | | | (7) Antony Hugh (Tony) Briscoe* (ca Aug 1942 - ) | | | | | | . Computer Consultant | | | | | | & Constance Indrani Lee | | | | | | m. abt 1978, Fordingbridge, Hants | | | | | | | (8) Gerard William Samuel Mahindra Briscoe (ca Aug 1979 - ) | | | | | | (7) April Patricia ('Trish') Briscoe (16 Apr 1944 - ca May 1992) | | | | | | & William Weston (abt 1950 - ) | | | | | | m. ca 1978, Fordingbridge, Hants | | | | | | | (8) Tania Ellie Weston (1979 - ) | | | | | | | (8) Cassandra Rose Weston (ca Dec 1983 - ) | | | | | (6) Hugo William John Ferrand (15 Jan 1909 - 1 Dec 1993) | | | | | . Chairman of Law Land Ltd | | | | | & Elizabeth Hilda Denise Stanley-Clark (28 Jul 1915 - 6 Nov 1998) | | | | | m. 25 Oct 1947, St Augustine’s, Queen’s Gate, Kensington | | | | | | (7) Emma Mary Ferrand (1 Oct 1948 - ) | | | | | | . Cellist. | | | | | | & Richard Deakin | | | | | | m. 6 Sep 1969, St John’s Church, Hartley Wintney, Hants | | | | | | | (8) Ben Deakin | | | | | | | (8) Oliver Deakin | | | | | | | (8) Jamie Deakin | | | | | | (7) Johnny Geoffrey Ferrand* (8 May 1950 - ) | | | | | | . Trout farmer, restauranteur, shot. | | | | | | & Diana (Dina) Jane Royalton-Kirsch (27 Mar 1948 - ) | | | | | | m. 18 Nov 1977, St Margaret’s Westminster
Recommended publications
  • A Brief History of Christ Church MEDIEVAL PERIOD
    A Brief History of Christ Church MEDIEVAL PERIOD Christ Church was founded in 1546, and there had been a college here since 1525, but prior to the Dissolution of the monasteries, the site was occupied by a priory dedicated to the memory of St Frideswide, the patron saint of both university and city. St Frideswide, a noble Saxon lady, founded a nunnery for herself as head and for twelve more noble virgin ladies sometime towards the end of the seventh century. She was, however, pursued by Algar, prince of Leicester, for her hand in marriage. She refused his frequent approaches which became more and more desperate. Frideswide and her ladies, forewarned miraculously of yet another attempt by Algar, fled up river to hide. She stayed away some years, settling at Binsey, where she performed healing miracles. On returning to Oxford, Frideswide found that Algar was as persistent as ever, laying siege to the town in order to capture his bride. Frideswide called down blindness on Algar who eventually repented of his ways, and left Frideswide to her devotions. Frideswide died in about 737, and was canonised in 1480. Long before this, though, pilgrims came to her shrine in the priory church which was now populated by Augustinian canons. Nothing remains of Frideswide’s nunnery, and little - just a few stones - of the Saxon church but the cathedral and the buildings around the cloister are the oldest on the site. Her story is pictured in cartoon form by Burne-Jones in one of the windows in the cathedral. One of the gifts made to the priory was the meadow between Christ Church and the Thames and Cherwell rivers; Lady Montacute gave the land to maintain her chantry which lay in the Lady Chapel close to St Frideswide’s shrine.
    [Show full text]
  • The Cathedral Church of Saint Asaph; a Description of the Building
    SAINT ASAPH THE CATHEDRAL AND SEE WITH PLAN AND ILLUSTRATIONS BELL'S CATHEDRAL SERIES College m of Arskiitecture Liorary Coraell U»iversity fyxmll Utttomitg JilratJg BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME FROM THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND THE GIFT OF Hettrg HI. Sage 1S91 A,'i..c.^.'^...vs> Vfe\p^.\.\:gr... 1357 NA 5460.53™"""'™""'"-"'"'^ The cathedral church of Saint Asaph; a de 3 1924 015 382 983 Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924015382983 BELL'S CATHEDRAL SERIES SAINT ASAPH 7^^n{M3' 7 ^H THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF SAINT ASAPH A DESCRIPTION OF THE BUILD- ING AND A SHORT HISTORY OF THE SEE BY PEARCE B. IRONSIDE BAX WITH XXX ILLUSTRATIONS LONDON GEORGE BELL & SONS 1904 A/A , " S4-fcO CHISWICK PRESS: CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO. TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON. ' PREFACE The author published a monograph on " St. Asaph Cathedral in 1896, which has formed the basis of the present handbook. The historical documents are few, and the surviving evidence of the past with regard to our smallest cathedral is scanty at the best. The chief books of reference have been Browne Willis's valuable "Survey of St. Asaph,'' published in 1720, also Edwards' edition of the same published at Wrexham in 1801, and the learned work by the Ven. Archdeacon Thomas, M.A., F.S.A., on " The Diocese of St. Asaph." " Storer's Cathedrals," pub- lished in i8ig, together with similar works, have also been consulted.
    [Show full text]
  • Norfolk. Bishopric. Sonmdn: Yarii'outh Lynn Tmn'rl'oimfl
    11 0RF0LK LISTS W 1 Q THE PRESENT TIME; ‘ . n uu lj, of wuum JRTRAITS BLISHED, vE L l s T 0 F ' V INCIAL HALFPENNIES ' - R N ORFOLK LIS TS FROM THE REFORMATION To THE PRESENT TIME ; COMPRIS ING Ll" OP L ORD LIEUTEN ANT BARONET S , S , HIG HERIFF H S S , E B ER O F P A R L IA EN T M M S M , 0 ! THE COUNTY of N ORFOLK ; BIS HOPS DEA S CHA CELLORS ARCHDEAC S , N , N , ON , PREBE DA I N R ES , MEMBERS F PARLIAME T O N , MAYORS SHERIFFS RECORDERS STEWARDS , , , , 0 ? THE CITY OF N ORWIC H ; MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT AND MAYORS 0 ? THE BOROUGHS OP MOUTH LYN N T T R YAR , , HE FO D, AN D C ASTL E RIS IN G f Persons connected with th e Coun Also a List o ty, of whom ENGRAVED PORTRAITS I HAV E B EEN PUBL SHED, A N D A D B S C R I P 'I‘ I V E L I S T O F TRADES MENS ’ TOKIBNS PROV INCIAL HA LFPENNIES ISS UED I” THE Y COUNT OF NORFOLK . + 9 NORWICH ‘ V ' PRINTED BY HATCHB IT, STE ENSON , AN D MATCHB", HARKBT PLACI. I NDEX . Lord Lieutenants ' High Sherifl s Members f or the County Nonw xcH o o o o o o o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Prebendaries Members f or th e City Ym ou'rn Mayors LYNN Members of Parliament Mayors Membersof Parliament CASTLERISING Members of Parliament Engraved Portraits ’ Tradesmans Tok ens ProvincialHalf pennles County and B orough Members elected in 1 837 L O RD L I EUT EN A N T S NORFOLK) “ ' L r Ratcli e Ea rl of us e h re d Hen y fl n S s x , e si ed at Attle borou h uc eded to th e Ea r d m1 1 g , s ce l o 542 , ch .
    [Show full text]
  • Coversheet for Thesis in Sussex Research Online
    A University of Sussex PhD thesis Available online via Sussex Research Online: http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/ This thesis is protected by copyright which belongs to the author. This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the Author The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the Author When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given Please visit Sussex Research Online for more information and further details ‘Providence and Political Economy’: Josiah Tucker’s Providential Argument for Free Trade Peter Xavier Price PhD Thesis in Intellectual History University of Sussex April 2016 2 University of Sussex Peter Xavier Price Submitted for the award of a PhD in Intellectual History ‘Providence and Political Economy’: Josiah Tucker’s Providential Argument for Free Trade Thesis Summary Josiah Tucker, who was the Anglican Dean of Gloucester from 1758 until his death in 1799, is best known as a political pamphleteer, controversialist and political economist. Regularly called upon by Britain’s leading statesmen, and most significantly the Younger Pitt, to advise them on the best course of British economic development, in a large variety of writings he speculated on the consequences of North American independence for the global economy and for international relations; upon the complicated relations between small and large states; and on the related issue of whether low wage costs in poor countries might always erode the competitive advantage of richer nations, thereby establishing perpetual cycles of rise and decline.
    [Show full text]
  • The Activity and Influence of the Established Church in England, C. 1800-1837
    The Activity and Influence of the Established Church in England, c. 1800-1837 Nicholas Andrew Dixon Pembroke College, Cambridge This dissertation is submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. November 2018 Declaration This dissertation is the result of my own work and includes nothing which is the outcome of work done in collaboration except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. It is not substantially the same as any that I have submitted, or, is being concurrently submitted for a degree or diploma or other qualification at the University of Cambridge or any other University or similar institution except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. I further state that no substantial part of my dissertation has already been submitted, or, is being concurrently submitted for any such degree, diploma or other qualification at the University of Cambridge or any other University or similar institution except as declared in the Preface and specified in the text. It does not exceed the prescribed word limit for the relevant Degree Committee. Nicholas Dixon November 2018 ii Thesis Summary The Activity and Influence of the Established Church in England, c. 1800-1837 Nicholas Andrew Dixon Pembroke College, Cambridge This thesis examines the various ways in which the Church of England engaged with English politics and society from c. 1800 to 1837. Assessments of the early nineteenth-century Church of England remain coloured by a critique originating in radical anti-clerical polemics of the period and reinforced by the writings of the Tractarians and Élie Halévy. It is often assumed that, in consequence of social and political change, the influence of a complacent and reactionary church was irreparably eroded by 1830.
    [Show full text]
  • Wings Almanac
    ' " Ολύμπια Δώματα OR , AN A L MA'NACK For the YEAR of Our LORD GOD , 1802 ; Being the Sixth after BISSEXTILE , or LEAP - YEAR , And the Second Year of the Nineteenth Century . And from the World's Creation , 5806 . Wherein are Contained the Lurations , Conjunctions , Aſpects , ánd Effects of the Planets ; the Increaſe , De creaſe , and Length of the Days and Nights ; with the Rifing , Southing , and Setting of the Planets and fixed Stars throughout the Year ; whereby may be known the exact Hour of the Night at all Times , when either the Moon or Stars are ſeen . Calculated according te Art , and referred to the Horizon of the ancient and renowned Borough Town of Stam ford ( formerly a famous Univerſity ) whoſe Latitude is 52 Deg : 20 Min . fitting all the middle agenties of ENGLAND , and , without ſenſibles Awhole Kingdom . Non eft é Terris mollis'ad Alizar By T I CH'O . WINPbilôniath . PRINTED for the COMPANY of STATIONERS , By M. Brown , St. John's- ſquare , Clerkenwell , And fold by G. GREENHILI , at their Hall , near Ludgate - Street . [ Price , ſtitched , SEVENTEEN - Pence . ] 7 WING . 2 1802 F EAST S. Common Notes and Moveable . Feb. 14 Letter C , Septuagefima Sund Dominical Feb. 28 Golden Number 17 Shrove Sunday 18 : 26 | Eaſter Day April Epact June 6 of the Sun 19. Whit - Sunday Cycle June 13 Roman Indiction 5 Trinity Sunday Advent Sunday Nov. 28 Number of Direction 28 ) Reverend , Right Reverer.d , A CATALOGUE of the Moſt , and Deans , exer and Reverend , the Archbithops , Bithops , 1802 . Eccleſiaſtical Juriſdiction in England Names .
    [Show full text]
  • A Brief History of Christ Church
    A Brief History of Christ Church MEDIEVAL PERIOD Christ Church was founded in 1546, and there had been a college here since 1525, but prior to the dissolution of the monasteries, the site was occupied by a priory dedicated to the memory of St Frideswide, the patron saint of both university and city. St Frideswide, a noble Saxon lady, founded a nunnery for herself as head and for twelve more noble virgin ladies sometime towards the end of the seventh century. She was, however, pursued by Algar, prince of Leicester, for her hand in marriage. She refused his frequent approaches which became more and more desperate. Frideswide and her ladies, forewarned miraculously of yet another attempt by Algar, fled up river to hide. She stayed away some years, settling at Binsey, where she performed healing miracles. On returning to Oxford, Frideswide found that Algar was as persistent as ever, laying siege to the town in order to capture his bride. Frideswide called down blindness on Algar who eventually repented of his ways, and left Frideswide to her devotions. Frideswide died in about 737, and was canonised in 1480. Long before this, though, pilgrims came to her shrine in the priory church which was now populated by Augustinian canons. Nothing remains of Frideswide’s nunnery, and little of the Saxon church - perhaps a few stones - but the cathedral and the buildings around the cloister are the oldest on the site. Her story is pictured in cartoon form by Burne-Jones in one of the windows in the cathedral. One of the gifts made to the priory was the meadow between Christ Church and the river; Lady Montacute gave the land to maintain her chantry which lay in the Lady Chapel close to St Frideswide’s shrine.
    [Show full text]
  • Jesus College
    CD LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. ClMS COLLEGE HISTORIES CAMBRIDGE JESUS COLLEGE m gantbitattp of COLLEGE HISTORIES JESUS COLLEGE BY AKTHUR GRAY, M.A. FELLOW AND TUTOR OF JESUS COLLEGE PRESIDENT OF THE CAMBRIDGE ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY LONDON F. E. ROBINSON & CO. 20 GREAT RUSSELL STREET, BLOOMSBURY 1902 CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I. THE NUNS OF SAINT RADEGUND - I II. THE FOUNDER AND HIS WORK - - 28 - III. THE REFORMATION 5 1 IV. ELIZABETH AND JAMES - ?O V. REBELLION AND COMMONWEALTH - - 98 VI. RESTORATION DAYS - - 122 VII. BETWEEN THE REVOLUTIONS - 141 VIII. THE JESUS UNITARIANS - 163 IX. THREE FRIENDS - 189 X. THE GOTHIC RENASCENCE - - 2O7 XI. WITHIN LIVING MEMORY - - 222 APPENDIX - -235 INDEX - - - - - - 242 120065 ILLUSTRATIONS PAGE - - I. VIEW BY LOGGAN (circa 1 688) Frontispiece - II. NORTH TRANSEPT OF THE CHAPEL Facing 24 III. ENTRANCE TO THE CLOISTERS 38 IV. THE HALL - - 92 V. A CORNER OF THE LIBRARY 134 VI. VIEW FROM THE FELLOWS' GARDEN l6o VII. THE CHAPEL, LOOKING WEST 2l8 VIII. ENTRANCE OF THE NUNNERY CHAPTER- HOUSE ... 234 INTRODUCTION THE writer of a College history must cut his coat accord- ing to the measure of his cloth. A knowledge of the conditions of his task should make the historian of Jesus take a modest view of its importance ; for, though the tree sprung from Alcock"s acorn has now grown to some size and not a little vigour, for the best part of its existence it was overshadowed by taller neighbours in the academic grove. In fact, except in some short periods of unwonted prosperity, Jesus was, until recent ' 1 times, emphatically a small college, low in revenues, and in numbers competing with Peterhouse and Magda- lene rather than with Caius or Christ's.
    [Show full text]
  • Chetwynds of Ingestre
    THE CHETWYNDS OF INGESTRE BEING A HISTORY OF TH.AT FAMILY FROM A VERY EARLY DATE BY H. E. C}tEftWYNJ)-STAPY~TON WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY THE AUTHOR LONDON LONGMAN S, GREEN, AND CO. AND NEW YORK : 15 EAST 16th STREET 1892 .All rights re,ert:ed LOKl>ON: B.BAl>BtTRY1 ~GNEW, & CO. LIKD., l'BtNTE:BS, WBITEFRI.a\BS -.•.:· I~ ···:·.. ··... •. C' 'j' J-::, T,' ~::--, •. \. _f I f-j_ /\. J , l , 188() PREFACE. THE CHETWYNDS OF lNGESTRE are descended from a Shropshire family now almost extinct in that county, who when surnames first came into use took their name from the manor or place in which they lived. Adam de Chetwynde is the first of whom we find any record, his name occurring in a Forest Roll of the year 1180. He is the common ancestor of every one who bears or ever bore the name of Chetwynd. From the reign of Henry II. to the present time, there have been twenty-three generations in the male line. The Princess Godiva, widow of Leofric King of ~Iercia, was Lady of_ the AI an or of Chetwynd in Saxon times, and of one other small manor in Shropshire. At the Norman Invasion Duke "\Villiam gave her lands, and a great part of the county besides, to Earl Roger de Montgomeri, who had been one of his lieutenants at the Battle of Hastings. At the· Domesday Survev one· Turold, a Norman, was the Earl's undertenant at " Chetwynd and in certain other manors ordinarily kno\vn as the Fee of Chetwynd, of which Chetwynd was the chief n1anor.
    [Show full text]
  • This Electronic Thesis Or Dissertation Has Been Downloaded from the King's Research Portal At
    This electronic thesis or dissertation has been downloaded from the King’s Research Portal at https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/ Eschatological prophecy in the English theological tradition c. 1700 - c. 1840. Oddy, John Arthur The copyright of this thesis rests with the author and no quotation from it or information derived from it may be published without proper acknowledgement. END USER LICENCE AGREEMENT Unless another licence is stated on the immediately following page this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International licence. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ You are free to copy, distribute and transmit the work Under the following conditions: Attribution: You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). Non Commercial: You may not use this work for commercial purposes. No Derivative Works - You may not alter, transform, or build upon this work. Any of these conditions can be waived if you receive permission from the author. Your fair dealings and other rights are in no way affected by the above. Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact [email protected] providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 10. Oct. 2021 1 ESCHATOLOGICAL PROPHECY IN THE ENGLISH THEOLOGICAL TRADITION c. 1700 - c. 1840 By John Arthur Od&y, B.A., N.Phil. King's College. Thesis submitted to the UniverBity of London for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
    [Show full text]
  • Lincoln's Inn Fields and the Localities Adjacent
    mcoQvsjif^ %# Sdf #*• %* : 4# «v# OT?2^ ^/r THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES r LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS AND ENVIRONS gl'jaiaka'iaaaioiHHtl LINCOLN'S INN HALL (NEW). : LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS THE LOCALITIES ADJACENT: THEIR HISTORICAL AND TOPOGRAPHICAL ASSOCIATIONS. CHARLES WILLIAM HECKETHORN, Al THOR OF * SrCHET SOCIETIES,' ' KOIIA D'iTALIA,' FTC. WITH ILLUSTRJTIOKS BT ALFRED BE.-H'ER AND OTHER JRTISTS. LONDON ELLIOr STOCK, 62, PATERNOSri-R ROW, E.C. 1896. — ^7 W^5 CHIEF AUTHORITIES CONSULTED. {T/'ose marked ' are in the Author's library.) *Allen, Thos. — 'History and Antiquities of London.' Illustrated. 5 vols., 1839, 8vo. Archer, John Wvkeham. —'Vestiges of Old London.' London, 1851, fol. '' Atl^eiireum. London. From commencement to present date, 1 830-1 893, /<?///>/, 410. •Bl.-^nch, W. H.—'Ye Parish of Camcrwcll.' Plates. London, 1877, 8vo. *Bi.oTT, W. —'A Chronicle of Blemundsbury.' London, 1S92, 410. •Bohn's 'Pictorial Handbook of London.' 1854, 8vo. "Braylev, Brewer and Nichtincale.—'A Topographical and Historical Description of London and Middlesex.'— Plates. 5 vols. London, 1815. 'Brayley, E. a. ' Londiniana.' Plates. 4 vols. London, 8vo. Bug, Sir George. — 'The Third Universitie of England.' London, 161 y 'Builder. London.— From commencement to present date. Passim. Clinch, George. ' Bloomsbury and St. Giles.' London, 1890. 'Cunningham, Peter. — 'Handbook of London.' London, 1850. Delaune, Thos. — 'The Present State of London.' London, 1681, Izmo. — Parish of St. Danes.' 2 vols. 1868 and 'DiPROSE, J. 'Some Account of the Clement 1876, small 4to. •DoBiE, R. 'History of the United Parishes of St. Gilcs-in-the-Fields and St. George, Blooms- bury.' London, 1829, Svo.
    [Show full text]
  • Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1908
    COLLECTIONS F O R A HISTORY Staffordshire OF STAFFORDSHIRE E D IT E D B V SampleCounty VOLUME XI. New SeriesStudies. “ And in this undertaking, the Reader may see what Furniture (though it lie disperst) our Publick Records will afford for History: and how plentifully our own may be supplied and improved, if pains were taken therein : for what is hitherto made publick, hath been collected, chiefly out of old Annals, and they filled with few things but such as were very obvious, nay the Annalists themselves (tor the most part residing in Monasteries) too oftened byassil with Interest, and Affection, to Times and Persons: But on the contrary, in our publick Records lye matter of Fact, in full Truth, and therewith the Chronological part, carried on, even to days of the Month. So that an industrious Searcher may thence collect considerable matter for new History, rectifie many mistakes in our old and in both gratifie the world with unshadowed verity.”— (A s h m o l e s History of the Garter.) LONDON: HARRISON AND SONS, ST. MARTIN’S LANE, 19 0 8. 1900. COUNCIL. StaffordshireNominated by the Trustees o f the William Salt Library, T h e R i g h t H o n . L o r d WROTTESLEY. T h e V e r y R e v e r e n d t il e DEAN OF ROCHESTER. S i r REGINALD HARDY, B a r t . M r . W . S. BROUGH . T h e R e v . F. J. WROTTESLEY. Elected by the Members o f the Society.
    [Show full text]