Notices and remains of the family of Tyrwhitt [signed R.P.T.]. Corrected and repr. Repr. with corrections |
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Side 3
... described as living 1 See Psalm xlix . , v . 11 ; also , as to the city of Enoch , so named after the son of Cain ( Genesis , ch . iv . , v . 17 ) ; also the land called after Caleb ( 1 Samuel , ch . xxx . , v . 14 ) ; ( Stanley's ...
... described as living 1 See Psalm xlix . , v . 11 ; also , as to the city of Enoch , so named after the son of Cain ( Genesis , ch . iv . , v . 17 ) ; also the land called after Caleb ( 1 Samuel , ch . xxx . , v . 14 ) ; ( Stanley's ...
Side 5
... described as of Tyrwhitt , ' though we have seen the Harl . MS . described Sir Oliver Tyrwhitt as of " Tyrwhitt . " " This place is in Coquetdale , in Northumberland , near Rothbury , and is now spelt Trewhitt , consisting of High and ...
... described as of Tyrwhitt , ' though we have seen the Harl . MS . described Sir Oliver Tyrwhitt as of " Tyrwhitt . " " This place is in Coquetdale , in Northumberland , near Rothbury , and is now spelt Trewhitt , consisting of High and ...
Side 6
... described as " of Ketilby " ( now spelt Kettleby ) . Kettleby and Kettleby Thorp are within a short mile of each other , four miles north of Glanford Brigg , or Brigg , in Lincolnshire , and are now parts of Bigby parish . This Sir ...
... described as " of Ketilby " ( now spelt Kettleby ) . Kettleby and Kettleby Thorp are within a short mile of each other , four miles north of Glanford Brigg , or Brigg , in Lincolnshire , and are now parts of Bigby parish . This Sir ...
Side 21
... described as " the Younger . " The third son of Sir Robert and Maud Taylboys , his wife , was Philip Tyrwhitt of Barton - on - Humber , co . Lincoln , Esq . , ancestor of the Tyrwhitts of Stainfield . Of these gentlemen a further ...
... described as " the Younger . " The third son of Sir Robert and Maud Taylboys , his wife , was Philip Tyrwhitt of Barton - on - Humber , co . Lincoln , Esq . , ancestor of the Tyrwhitts of Stainfield . Of these gentlemen a further ...
Side 26
... described by Anthony - à - Wood as having belonged to Queen Elizabeth ; and Nichols , in his ' Progresses of the Court of Elizabeth , ' traces its various possessors from 1603 to 1788.1 The collection of prayers which is placed second ...
... described by Anthony - à - Wood as having belonged to Queen Elizabeth ; and Nichols , in his ' Progresses of the Court of Elizabeth , ' traces its various possessors from 1603 to 1788.1 The collection of prayers which is placed second ...
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Notices And Remains Of The Family Of Tyrwhitt [signed R.p.t.]. Corrected And ... Robert Philip Tyrwhitt Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2018 |
Notices and Remains of the Family of Tyrwhitt [Signed R.P.T.]. Corrected and ... Robert Philip Tyrwhitt Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2015 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
acres afterwards aged ancestor ancient Appendix arms August Bannerett baronet Bart Barton-on-Humber Bigby Bishop Booth born Bridgnorth brother Burgh buried Cameringham Castle Catherine Chapel Charles Church College of Arms Court daughter of Sir death December Denbighshire descended died Duke Earl edit Edward eldest England epitaph father forsayd Frances George Gibson Groval gules Harl heir Henry VI Henry VIII Humber inscription January John Tyrwhitt July June Ketilby Kettleby King King's Knight Lady lands lapwings late Lincoln Lincolnshire London Lord the Roos manor Marmaduke marriage married Sir Mary memory Monson Nantyr Netherclay Obiit Oxford parish Parliament Philip Tyrwhitt Queen rectory reign remains Richard Tyrwhitt sayd Scotter Shrewsbury Shropshire Sir John Sir Philip Sir Robert Tyrwhitt Sir William Tyrwhitt Skipwith Stainfield Stanley Hall Taylboys Thomas Tyrwhitt Thornton Abbey Tirwhit Tyrwhitt Jones Tyrwhitt of Kettleby widow wife Windsor Wingerworth Wrawby Yorkshire
Populære passager
Side 131 - The Lord gave the word; great was the company of those that published it. 12 Kings of armies did flee apace; and she that tarried at home divided the spoil. 13 Though ye have lien among the pots, yet shall ye be as the wings of a dove covered with silver, and her feathers with yellow gold.
Side 90 - As of the green leaves on a thick tree, some fall, and some grow; so is the generation of flesh and blood, one cometh to an end, and another is born.
Side 124 - I care little. I am old and worn out in the service of the crown ; but I am mortified to find that your Majesty thinks me capable of giving a judgment which none but an ignorant or a dishonest man could five." "I am determined," said the King, "to have twelve udges who will be all of my mind as to this matter.
Side 68 - Durham, when in his ninetieth year erected an urn in the midst of their shade, to the memory of two of his friends ; inscribing thereon the following classical fragment : In this once favored walk, beneath these Elms, Where thickened foliage, to the solar ray Impervious, sheds a venerable gloom. Oft in instructive converse we beguiled The fervid time, which each returning year To friendship's call devoted. Such things were ; But are, alas! no more.
Side 64 - Nights, for you will want to know what happened one day. Sir Robert was at dinner with Lady Sundon, who hated the Bishop of London, as much as she loved the Church. " Well," said she to Sir R. " how does your Pope do ?" — " Madam," replied he, "he is my Pope, and shall be my Pope ; every body has some Pope or other ; don't you know that you are one? They call you Pope Joan.
Side 124 - Judges gave him to understand that they could not, on this occasion, serve his purpose ; and it is remarkable that all the four were violent Tories, and that among them were men who had accompanied Jeffreys on the Bloody Circuit, and who had been consenting to the death of Cornish and of Elizabeth Gaunt.
Side 124 - April 29, 1686, being the first of the term, a great change was made among the judges in Westminster Hall. There was a new chief justice of the Common Pleas, and another new judge of the same bench; there was a new chief baron ; in fine, four new judges of the several Courts. This made a considerable noise, as the gentlemen now displaced were of great learning and loyalty, and whose only crime had been, they would not give their opinions as several of their brethren had done, that the king by...
Side 31 - I HAVE no hopes," the duke he says, and dies; " In sure and certain hopes," the prelate cries: Of these two learned peers, I prithee, say, man, Who is the lying knave, the priest or layman ? The duke he stands an infidel confest, " He's our dear brother,
Side 102 - Ten years after the battle of Hastings, he obtained from his royal master a grant of the valley of Redesdale, in Northumberland, with all its castles, woods, and franchises, to hold of him and his heirs for ever by the service of defending that part of the country from wolves and the king's enemies by "the sword which the said King William wore at his side when he entered Northumberland, and which he gave to the said Robert.
Side 124 - The next day I was informed by Mr. Jones, son to the chief justice of that name lately turned out, that his father, upon his dismission, observed to the king, that he was by no means sorry that he was laid aside, old and worn out as he was in his service ; but concerned that his majesty should expect such a construction of the law from him as he could not honestly give; and that none but indigent, ignorant, or ambitious men would give their judgment as he expected; and that to this his majesty made...