L I S T of the LORDS Spiritual and Temporal: a True
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Cavendish Square
DRAFT CHAPTER 7 Cavendish Square Peering over the railings and through the black trees into the garden of the Square, you see a few miserable governesses with wan-faced pupils wandering round and round it, and round the dreary grass-plot in the centre of which rises the statue of Lord Gaunt, who fought at Minden, in a three- tailed wig, and otherwise habited like a Roman Emperor. Gaunt House occupies nearly a side of the Square. The remaining three sides are composed of mansions that have passed away into dowagerism; – tall, dark houses, with window-frames of stone, or picked out of a lighter red. Little light seems to be behind those lean, comfortless casements now: and hospitality to have passed away from those doors as much as the laced lacqueys and link-boys of old times, who used to put out their torches in the blank iron extinguishers that still flank the lamps over the steps. Brass plates have penetrated into the square – Doctors, the Diddlesex Bank Western Branch – the English and European Reunion, &c. – it has a dreary look. Thackeray made little attempt to disguise Cavendish Square in Vanity Fair (1847–8). Dreariness could not be further from what had been intended by those who, more than a century earlier, had conceived the square as an enclave of private palaces and patrician grandeur. Nor, another century and more after Thackeray, is it likely to come to mind in what, braced between department stores and doctors’ consulting rooms, has become an oasis of smart offices, sleek subterranean parking and occasional lunch-hour sunbathing. -
F .T . DIC. KINSON, " HENRY ST. JOHN and the STRUGGLE FOR
f .T . DIC.KINSON, " HENRY ST. JOHN AND THE STRUGGLE FOR THE LEADERSHIP OF THE TORY PAR'.i'Y 1702-14" Volume Two. Chapter Eight. The Emerging Rival to Harley. The supreme political skill and management of Harley had engineered. the ministerial revolution of 1710, but he had not been able to prevent a large and potentially unruly Tory majority in the Commons. Though Harley had the support, if not the absolute allegiance, of many Tory leaders, including Bromley, Rochester, St. John, and Harcourt, there were already those who opposed his trimming policy. The most important of these was the earl of Nottingham, whose integrity and high Church principles commanded widespread respect in the Tory ranks. Kept out of the ministry he appeared a potential rallying point for those Tories disgruntled with Harley's. moderate policy. As early as 28 October 1710 his lieutenant, John Ward, was trying to recruit a party for him and was 1 hoping to enlist Sir Thomas Harmer. The duke of Shrewsbury warned Harley that many other peers, besides Nottingham, were dissatisfied and he listed Argyll, Rivera, Peterborough, Jersey, Fitzwalter, 2 Guernsey, and Haversham. There were soon reports that the 1 Leicester Record Office. Finch bliss. Box vi, bundle 23. Ward to Nottingham, 28 Oct. 1710. 2 H. N. C. Bath Mss. 1,199.20 Oct. 1710. , , - 435 - 3 ministers would fall out among themselves. Despite all these manifestations of early trouble Harley pressed on with his plans to reduce faction at home and secure peace abroad. The essential prerequisite was to restore financial confidence, a task more 4 difficult than the Tory backbenchers ever realised. -
SAHS Transactions XXXVIII
Staffordshire SampleCounty Studies STAFFORDSHIRE ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SOCIETY Staffordshire TRANSACTIONS FOR 1996-97 SampleCounty VOLUME XXXVIII Studies Stafford 1999 CONTENTS A RING-MARKED STONE AT RAMSOR FARM, RAMSHORN 1 StaffordshireGRAEME GUILBERT, DARYL GARTON, an d DAVID WALTERS ECSTATIC CELEBRANTS: BACCHIC METALWORK FROM THE ROMAN MIDLANDS 6 LYNNE BEVAN GREENSFORGE: INVESTIGATIONS IN THE ROMANO-BRITISH CIVILIAN SETTLEMENT, 1994 12 ALEX JONES Samian ware STEVE WILLIS Coarse ware and mortaria JANE EVANS Charred plant remains LISA MOFFETT TWO MEDIEVAL HOUSES IN EAST STAFFORDSHIRE 32 MALCOLM HISLOP SampleCounty CRUCK BUILDINGS IN THE STAFFORDSHIRE MOORLANDS: DISTRIBUTION AND SURVIVAL PATTERNS IN THE MEDIEVAL PARISH OF LEEK 49 FAITH CLEVERDON THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE IRON INDUSTRY IN SOUTH STAFFORDSHIRE IN THE 17TH CENTURY: HISTORY ANStudiesD MYTH 59 P. W. KING OFFICERS, 1996-97 PROGRAMME, 1996-97 LIST OF FIGURES, TABLES, AND PLATES Page RING-MARKED STONE StaffordshireFig. 1 Decorated face of ring-marked stone at Ramsor Farm 2 Plate 1 Ring-marked stone at Ramsor Farm 3 ECSTATIC CELEBRANTS Fig. 1 Patera handle from Brompton, Shropshire 6 Fig. 2 Patera handle from Rocester, Staffordshire 7 Fig. 3 Jug handle from Rocester, Staffordshire 9 GREENSFORGE INVESTIGATIONS Fig. 1A Greensforge, other Roman military sites in the West Midlands, and the Roman road network 12 Fig. IB Greensforge and the surrounding area 12 Fig. 2 Greensforge: the main crop-marked features, and areas investigated by geophysical survey and trial-trenching 13 Fig. 3 Greensforge: plan of settlement area 16 Fig. 4 Trial-trenches 5,Sample 8, and 10: plans anCountyd sections 18 Fig. 5 Pottery 20 Fig. 6 Summary of assemblage by fabric 23 Fig. -
English Heritage Properties 1600-1830 and Slavery Connections
English Heritage Properties 1600-1830 and Slavery Connections A Report Undertaken to Mark the Bicentenary of the Abolition of the British Atlantic Slave Trade Volume One: Report and Appendix 1 Miranda Kaufmann 2007 Report prepared by: Miranda Kaufmann Christ Church Oxford 2007 Commissioned by: Dr Susie West English Heritage Documented in registry file 200199/21 We are grateful for the advice and encouragement of Madge Dresser, University of West of England, and Jim Walvin, University of York Nick Draper generously made his parliamentary compensation database available 2 Contents List of properties and their codes Properties with no discovered links to the slave trade 1 Introduction 2 Property Family Histories 3 Family History Bibliography 4 Tables showing Property links to slavery 5 Links to Slavery Bibliography Appendices 1 List of persons mentioned in Family Histories with entries in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 2 NRA Listings (separate volume) 3 Photocopies and printouts of relevant material (separate volume) 3 List of properties and their codes Appuldurcombe House, Isle of Wight [APD] Apsley House, London [APS] Audley End House and Gardens [AE] Battle Abbey House [BA] Bayham Old Abbey House, Kent [BOA] Belsay Hall, Castle and Gardens [BH] Bessie Surtees House, Newcastle [BSH] Bolsover Castle, Derbyshire [BC] Brodsworth Hall and Gardens [BRD] Burton Agnes Manor House [BAMH] Chiswick House, London [CH] De Grey Mausoleum, Flitton, Bedfordshire [DGM] Derwentcote Steel Furnace [DSF] Great Yarmouth Row Houses [GYRH] Hardwick -
Mark Burden, Academical Learning in the Dissenters' Private Academies
1 ACADEMICAL LEARNING IN THE DISSENTERS’ PRIVATE ACADEMIES, 1660-1720 A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Mark Burden English Department Queen Mary, University of London 2012 2 Abstract Previous assessments of the early academies of Protestant dissenters in England and Wales (1660-1720) have celebrated their tutors’ achievements in defying the Act of Uniformity and the Test Acts, and have argued that they pioneered a modern curriculum. Despite these views, there has been little scholarly investigation into the academies. This thesis evaluates the available sources for the first time, examining the political, philosophical, and theological controversies in which the academies were involved, as well as examining the lives and careers of their tutors and students in greater detail than has hitherto been possible. The introduction explores the reception of the academies from the late seventeenth century until the present day, exposing the paucity of evidence and the abundance of polemic which have characterised previous accounts. Chapter 1 provides a detailed examination of academies operated by nonconformists prior to the Toleration Act, reassessing the contribution of ejected university tutors, surveying attempted prosecutions, and highlighting political controversies. The second chapter extends the narrative to academies run by Protestant dissenters from the Toleration Act (1689) to the repeal of the Schism Act (1719); it contains the first-ever detailed analysis of the minutes of the London-based denominational Fund Boards, and a survey of the careers of former academy students. Chapter 3 re-evaluates the teaching of philosophy in the dissenters’ earliest academies, using newly-identified manuscript works by tutors and students to explore the study of logic, natural philosophy, and ethics. -
Descendants of Edward Ashe (1609-1656), M.P. for Heytesbury
Descendants of Edward Ashe (1609-1656), M.P. for Heytesbury Edward ASHE M.P. for Elizabeth WOODWARD Heytesbury b: 1620 in Lambeth, Surrey b: 1609 in Heytesbury, d: 24 Jun 1698 Wiltshire d: 31 Oct 1656 in All Hallows, Staining, London Elizabeth ASHE Thomas FOLEY William ASHE I (of Anne POPHAM Mary RIVETT Edward ASHE Katherine Katherine ASHE Anne ASHE Edward ERNLE b: 1645 in Heytesbury, b: 1643 in Whitley Court, Heytesbury) b: 1649 d: 1721 b: 1654 b: 17 Oct 1649 Wiltshire Worcestershire b: 17 Nov 1647 d: 30 Apr 1684 m: May 1694 d: 7 Dec 1731 in The Friary, d: 21 Jun 1675 d: 6 Jan 1686 d: 1701 d: 22 Oct 1713 in Heytesbury, m: 6 Jul 1670 in Chelton, St. James, London m: 25 Jun 1670 in Hackney, Wiltshire Wiltshire Middlesex Elizabeth FOLEY Robert HARLEY 1st Earl of 1st Baron Thomas FOLEY Mary STRODE Edward FOLEY Richard FOLEY John FOLEY Anne FOLEY Salway WINNINGTON Sarah FOLEY Edward HARLEY Mary FOLEY Sir Blundel CHARLTON Sir Edward ASHE MP for Frances LUTTRELL William ASHE II Jane ALLEN Alexander ASHE John ASHE Elizabeth ASHE Pierce À COURT Laetitia ASHE Thomas PENRUDDOCK b: 1668 Oxford (of Kidderminster) d: 1735 d: 27 Mar 1732 d: 1710 d: 6 Nov 1736 Heytesbury b: 1675 b: 1675 d: 1749 b: 1677 b: 1 Jan 1682 b: 1682 b: Cir 1677 in Ivychurch b: 1682 in Heytesbury House, b: 1678 in Burke d: 30 Nov 1691 b: 1661 d: 1733 b: 1673 d: 30 Mar 1743 d: Sep 1742 m: 1710 d: 21 Aug 1682 d: 6 Sep 1768 in Rodden, d: 7 Mar 1725 in Ivychurch Heytesbury, Wiltshire d: Jul 1741 d: 1724 d: 22 May 1748 in Heytesbury, m: 17 Aug 1710 Somerset m: 27 Nov 1705 in St. -
The Visitation of the County of Worcester, Begun by Thomas May
BSatCElEY e rs/ f J ^ICcu-c^ Iv-tl^- L£. /^^>^- f^^ Sfje Cits of TOorcestct. Conimon Seal. StatiitelMerchant Seal. Wife Compans of TOeabcrs, 3Ealfters, anli Clothiers of Worcester. Common Seal. Coimter-Seal. To face Title. tCIje Wisimion OF THE Countj> of Mcirce0ter. BEGUN BY THOMAS MAY, CHESTER, and GREGORY KING, ROUGE DRAGON, In Ertnitu Facaron, 1682, AND FINISHED BY HENRY DETHTCK, RICHMOND, and the said ROUGE DRAGON, PURSUIVANT, M Erinitg Facacon, 1683, BY VIRTUE OF SEVERAL DBPUTACOXS FROM SIR HENRY ST. GEORGE, Glarenceux Kinge of Ai^ea. With Additions by the Late SIR THOMAS PHILLIPPS, Bart. KIHTED BY WALTER 0. METCALFE, F.S.A. EXETER : Privately printed for the Editor l/i/ WILLIAM POIILAKD, NORTH STREET, 1883. lOAM STACK ^ (2 5.^37 PKEFACE, of the latest Visitation of The original, and a copy, this, of Arms another is in Worcestershire are at the College ; copy the extensive and valuable collection of MSS. formed by the late Sir Thomas Phillipps, Bart, No other copy is known to exist elsewhere. Additions by Sir Thomas are given in italics; a few notes are given in parentheses. For information regarding Corporation Seals, the Editor is in- debted to Messrs. Samuel Southall, Thomas Cox, James Morton and Richard Hemingway, the Town Clerks of Worcester, Evesham, Kidderminster and Bewdley, and to Mr. John H. Hooper, late High Master of The Fraternity of the Weavers, Walkers and Clothiers of Worcester; in those instances in which the originals are forthcoming, woodcuts are given from impressions kindly supplied by those gentlemen. 147 CONTENTS, PAGE Pedigrees, alphabetically an-anged ... 1 — 110 Kefbhexces to Cobpouations : — City of Worcester 111 Woodcuts ijf the Coiumou Seal and Statute Merchant Seal Fadnq Title Woodcuts of the Mayor's Seal Facing page 112 Company of Weavers, Walkebs and Clothibrs 111 Womlcuts of the Common Seal Facing Title Borough of Evesham .. -
Elmley Lovett the Moules of Sneads Green
ELMLEY LOVETT AND THE MOULES OF SNEADS GREEN. BY HORACE MONROE, CANON OF SOUTHWARK. LONDON: MITCHELL HUGHES AND CLARKE, II BRJi:AM 1S BUILDINGS, CHANCERY LANE, E.C. 4. FOREWORD. THE Prime Minister of to-day has taught us to love England and all that in her is which makes its appeal to our sense of sound, of sight and of smell.* The sound of the hammer on the anvil and of the scythe against the whetstone, the sight of a plough team coming over the brow of the hill and of the last load at night of hay being drawn down a lane as the twilight comes on, the smell of wood smoke coming up in the autumn evening, that smoke that our ancestors must have caught on the air when they were coming home with the results of the day's forage. He has in particular taught us to love Worcestershire; he who came out of the red soil and who will return to it tells us that there is no soil like it in this country. He has made us love the rock from which he was hewn, the pit from which he was digged; and in the hope of inspiring that love in the hearts of my own kith and kin, I offer the story of Worcestershire folk to whom we owe our origin and from whose simple contentment we have much to learn. HORACE MONROE. Wimbledon, 1927. * "On England.'' Stanley Baldwin. , , / . ', t , 'j.~~' .._, ~t<Jr :ila:: ... ,,., . .~. .s~c,.. ~ihf,w,'11, • J,ff\. 4,. -
Download Complete Issue
EDITORIAL UR Annual Meeting was held at the Memorial Hall on May 10th, 1922 ; in the absence of Dr. Nightingale the chair O was taken by Rev. W. Pierce. The retiring officers were re-appointed; but the Editorial Secretary intimated his desire to be relieved of his responsibilities at an early date after the next issue of "Transactions." The appointlllent of his successor was referred to the Autumn Meeting. * * * * An instructive paper on "The Morisonian Controversy" was read by Rev. M. D. Kirkpatrick : to whom a hearty vote of thanks was accorded, with a request that the paper might be published in our forthcoming "Transactions." * * * Since the commencement of the year our society has suffered the loss by death of both its former presidents. On January 16th, Rev. John Brown, D.D., formerly of Bedford, departed this life at the venerable age of ninety-two. His pastoral labours alone would have entitled him to honourable mention, but it is by the fruits of his Historical research that he will be best and longest remembered. His Life of Bunyan can never be superseded, and his History of The Pilgrim Fathers of New England has long been recognized as a standard work on both sides of the Atlantic. His Yale Lectures on Puritan Preaching in England, and his Congre gational Lectures on Apostolic Succession, are of permanent value; and several minor works deserve respectful recognition. His interest in our Society was deep and lasting, and he rarely missed one of our meetings until he was disabled by infirmity. * * * * Sir John D. McClure, LL.D., Mus.D., presided at the earlieist meetings of our society, but gave place to Dr. -
Descendants of James Ashe (1535-1615), of Westcombe and Batcombe
Descendants of James Ashe (1535-1615), of Westcombe and Batcombe James ASHE (of Westcombe Anne WALDRON (of Bovey) & Batcombe) b: 1538 in Bovey, Devon, U.K. b: 1535 in Sowton, Devon, m: 1558 in Westcombe, England Devon, England d: 1615 John ASHE (of Westcombe) Anne STRODE William ASHE (of South Mary FORD (of Devon) d: 1600 b: 1530 in Shepton Mallet, Petherton, Somerset) Somerset d: 1615 m: Cir 1553 in Westcombe James ASHE (MP of Grace PITT Alice ASHE John PITT Margaret ASHE John MANSEL James ASHE Elizabeth MARTYN Westcombe) b: 1556 in Melcombe Regis, b: Melcombe Regis, Dorchester b: Weymouth d: 5 May 1626 b: 1602 b: 1554 in Freshford, Somerset Dorchester d: 21 May 1677 d: Cir 1642 d: Cir 1647 m: 1623 John ASHE (MP for Elizabeth DAVISON Edward ASHE M.P. for Elizabeth WOODWARD Sir Joseph ASHE 1st Baronet Mary WILSON Jonathan ASHE Rebecca LEAVER Samuel ASHE (of Langley Ann PLAYDELL Anne ASHE James MANN Alice ASHE Edward HARRIS Grace ASHE William ASHE Ann WESTON Elizabeth ASHE Freshford and Westbury) b: 1600 Heytesbury b: 1620 in Lambeth, Surrey of Twickenham b: 1631 b: 1618 in London b: 1620 in London Burrell) m: 8 Jul 1622 in Dunston b: 1623 d: 5 Jul 1696 b: 1597 d: 1673 b: 1609 in Heytesbury, d: 24 Jun 1698 b: 1618 d: 28 Nov 1705 d: 1665 m: Cir 1643 in London d: 1708 d: 1677 d: 1658 m: 1621 Wiltshire d: 15 Apr 1686 m: Cir 1650 d: 31 Oct 1656 in All Hallows, Staining, London James ASHE (of Fifield, Margery HARRINGTON John ASHE (of Teffent, Elizabeth FORSBROOKE Edward ASHE (of Mary CHAPPELL Samuel ASHE (of Challots, Joseph ASHE (of Longstreet, -
Durham E-Theses
Durham E-Theses 1659 - 1660: A study in the inter-action of political and religious forces in the period between the fall of Richard Cromwell and the restoration of Charles II Nightingale, J. Leslie How to cite: Nightingale, J. Leslie (1936) 1659 - 1660: A study in the inter-action of political and religious forces in the period between the fall of Richard Cromwell and the restoration of Charles II, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/10369/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 1659 •- 1660. A study in the inter-action of political and religious forces in the period between the fall of Richard Cromwell and the Restoration of Charles II. They who when Saul was dead,without a blow Made foolish Ish-bosheth the crown forego; Who "banished David did from Hebron bring, And with a general shout proclaimed him King. -
Worcester Cathedral Muniments B Class Leases and Charters CLASS
Worcester Cathedral Muniments B Class leases and charters CLASS YEAR DESCRIPTION B1a 1631 JUDGEMENT in a case between the Abbot and Convent of Gloucester and Walter, prior of Ewyas, on the one part, and Thomas de Bergham, rector, over the great and little tithes from the demesne lands of the Manor of Alynton near Allecanyngis, deciding in the favour of the former. (The document sets forth a letter from Innocent VI to the Official of Wells, dated Avignon 4 Nones. B1b 1668 CONSTAT from Office of First Fruits and Tenths of an entry of payment of tenths made by the Dean and Chapter of Worcester on 4 Nov 1668 in respect of the livings of Wharton, co. York, Old Radnor, co. Radnor, Wimbleton, cp. Surrey and Deane, co. Beds, due on 22 Dec 1667 B2 1275s GIFT of one half virgate of Land in the Manor of Thodintona and 6d annual rent received from Walter for another one half virgate of Land in the same. B3 1250s QUITCLAIM of one hide of land in Alaston [Alston] which William de Alaston once held. B4 1318 QUITCLAIM of one Messuage and one ¼ virgate of land which Thomas Hacun once held in Alvythechurche together with a piece of land which Gilbert acquired from Lord Godfrey, one acre of land at Sandene which John the Smith once held in Alvythechurche, and one ½ virgate of land with the entire meadow which Gervase Tony held in the same. B5 1341 GIFT of two fields in Pinintone in the Manor of Alvethechurche, one called Crotefeld, lying in length between Cursefordes Grof, and fields called Godiholdesfelf, and Hakonesfeld, and in width between Cokeresfeld and Pinintonesfeld, and the other called Hakonesfeld, lying in length between the King's road and Crotefeld and in width between the Messuage of Adam and the King's road on one side and the land of Robert Valle on the oher.