Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 28Leslie Stephen Macmillan, 1891 |
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Page 7
... French in 1669 by Guy Miège , who accompanied him . Of three portraits in oil of Howard , one , painted probably when he was colonel of Cromwell's life- guards , is at Naworth ; another , of the time of Charles II , is at Castle Howard ...
... French in 1669 by Guy Miège , who accompanied him . Of three portraits in oil of Howard , one , painted probably when he was colonel of Cromwell's life- guards , is at Naworth ; another , of the time of Charles II , is at Castle Howard ...
Page 10
... French ( RYMER , xiii . 326 , 329 ) . By the middle of May the fleet was collected at Portsmouth , to the number of twenty large ships , and , going over to the coast of Brittany , ravaged the western extremity with fire and 1 sword ...
... French ( RYMER , xiii . 326 , 329 ) . By the middle of May the fleet was collected at Portsmouth , to the number of twenty large ships , and , going over to the coast of Brittany , ravaged the western extremity with fire and 1 sword ...
Page 11
... French , who lay in the roadstead within . Howard resolved to attack them there , but one of his ships , commanded by Arthur Plantagenet , in endeavouring to pass the Goulet , struck on a sunken rock and was totally lost . On this the ...
... French , who lay in the roadstead within . Howard resolved to attack them there , but one of his ships , commanded by Arthur Plantagenet , in endeavouring to pass the Goulet , struck on a sunken rock and was totally lost . On this the ...
Page 17
... French general Guerchy in the September following . In some accounts he is again con- fused with Sir Charles Howard , who was senior to Granby , and was not employed in Germany . He was made K.B. and transferred to the colonelcy 7th ...
... French general Guerchy in the September following . In some accounts he is again con- fused with Sir Charles Howard , who was senior to Granby , and was not employed in Germany . He was made K.B. and transferred to the colonelcy 7th ...
Page 23
... French court . Francis first entertained them at Chan- tilly , and in the spring of 1533 they travelled with him to the south . The king's sons were their constant companions , and Surrey im- borougl , to hav letters be ret Fo Geor ...
... French court . Francis first entertained them at Chan- tilly , and in the spring of 1533 they travelled with him to the south . The king's sons were their constant companions , and Surrey im- borougl , to hav letters be ret Fo Geor ...
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
The Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 28 Leslie Stephen,Sir Sidney Lee Aucun aperçu disponible - 1971 |
The Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 28 Leslie Stephen,Sir Sidney Lee Aucun aperçu disponible - 1971 |
The Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 28 Leslie Stephen,Sir Sidney Lee Aucun aperçu disponible - 1971 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
afterwards appointed April Arundel became bishop born Brit British brother Brut y Tywysogion buried Castle Castle Howard Cathedral Charles church Clarendon College command council court Covent Garden daugh daughter David Hume death Diary Dict died Dublin duke of Norfolk earl Edinburgh edition Edward eldest elected Elizabeth England English engraved father fleet France French Gent George graduated B.A. Henry Henry VIII Hist History House House of Lords Howard Howell Hughes Hume Hungerford Hunt Hunter Hussey Hutton Hyde Ireland James John July June king king's Lady land Leigh Hunt letter London Lord Magdalen College March marriage married Mary Memoirs ment Oxford Oxon Papers parliament poems portrait Prince printed published queen resigned returned Richard Robert Royal Scotland sent Sept sermons Society Suffolk Surrey Thomas tion took verse vols Welsh wife William Wiltshire wrote
Fréquemment cités
Page 234 - PRINCE, was a violator of his word, a libertine over head and ears in debt and disgrace, a despiser of domestic ties, the companion of gamblers and demireps, a man who has just closed half a century without one single claim on the gratitude of his country or the respect of posterity...
Page 258 - Transactions of a Society for the Improvement of Medical and Chirurgical Knowledge.
Page 2 - Their force is wonderful great and strong; and yet we pluck their feathers by little and little.
Page 113 - The Northern Heights of London ; or, Historical Associations of Hampstead, Highgate, Muswell Hill, Hornsey, and Islington. By WILLIAM HOWITT. With about 40 Woodcuts. Square crown 8vo.
Page 238 - Well, I call this an excellent good book, by far the best of the autobiographic kind I remember to have read in the English language ; and indeed, except it be Boswell's of Johnson, I do not know where we have such a picture drawn of a human life, as in these three volumes. " A pious, ingenious, altogether human and worthy book; imaging, with graceful honesty and free felicity, many interesting objects and persons on your life-path, and imaging throughout, what is best of all, a gifted, gentle, patient,...
Page 276 - Hardwicke) concerning the right of appeal from the vice-chancellor of Cambridge to the senate ; supported by a short historical account of the jurisdiction of the university ; in answer to a late pamphlet, intituled 'An Inquiry into the right of appeal from the vice-chancellor, &c.' By a fellow of a college,
Page 318 - I speak knowingly,) at that time, the king's resolution was to shelter himself wholly under the law ; to grant any thing, that by the law he was obliged to grant ; and to deny what by the law was in his own power, and which he found inconvenient to consent to...
Page 197 - To break my windows if I treat a friend. Warton has recorded that this actually happened when Lords Bathurst and Bolingbroke were one day dining with Pope at Twickenham. 1. 150. Turenne. See Essay on Man...
Page 332 - Religion and policy and the countenance and assistance each should give to the other. With a survey of the power and jurisdiction of the Pope in the dominions of other princes.
Page 196 - Hume been to the law of Scotland, neither wandering into fanciful and abstruse disquisitions, which are the more proper subject of the antiquary, nor satisfied with presenting to his pupils a dry and undigested detail of the laws in their present state, but combining the past state of our legal enactments with the present, and tracing clearly and judiciously the changes which took place, and the causes which led to them.