Canlyniadau chwilio

157 - 168 of 568 for "Charles Gresford Edmondes"

157 - 168 of 568 for "Charles Gresford Edmondes"

  • GOODMAN, GODFREY (1583 - 1656), bishop of Gloucester Born 28 February 1583, nephew of Gabriel Goodman. He was educated at Westminster and Trinity College, Cambridge (1592-1607). Through the favour of his uncle's friends, and of James I and his queen, he was presented to a number of livings in England and Wales. Appointed dean of Rochester in 1621, he became bishop of Gloucester in 1625. With the accession of Charles I in 1625 he found himself
  • GOULD MORGAN, Sir CHARLES (bu farw 1806), M.P. - gweler MORGAN
  • GOULD, Sir CHARLES (bu farw 1806), M.P. - gweler MORGAN
  • GREEN, CHARLES ALFRED HOWELL (1864 - 1944), second Archbishop of Wales
  • GREENLY, EDWARD (1861 - 1951), geologist Born 3 December 1861 in Bristol, the son of Charles H. Greenly and his wife Harriet. After attending Clifton College, Bristol, he spent some time as an articled clerk in the office of a London solicitor, but left so that he could study at University College London. He joined H.M. Geological Survey (Scotland) in 1889 but in 1895 he resigned and began his self-imposed and lifelong task, a new
  • teulu GRENFELL, Swansea industrialists ) married, as his 2nd wife, Georgina St. Leger, daughter of the 1st Viscount Doneraile (of the 2nd creation), in 1798. Charles Kingsley, another relation by marriage, first traced the connection. The family were already prosperous merchants and bankers in the eighteenth century. In 1803 Pascoe Grenfell entered into a contract with Owen Williams to trade in copper and developed a business in London
  • GREVILLE, CHARLES FRANCIS (1749 - 1809), founder of Milford Haven town, Pembrokeshire
  • teulu GRIFFITH PENRHYN, described as ' King's Servant ' and ' squire for the body,' and appointed chamberlain of North Wales; he continued to hold the office until his death, with the exception of a short break in 1509 when he made way for Charles Brandon, later duke of Suffolk. (Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1494-1509, 569; Davies, Conway and Menai Ferries, 57; L. and P. Henry VIII, vol. I, part i, 257, 78, and vol. IV, part i, 1941; D.N.B
  • teulu GRIFFITH Cefn Amwlch, Penllech, Llŷn Westminster for the fourth time in 1640, now as member for Beaumaris, Griffith appears to have left the House by the Autumn of 1642 to join king Charles at Oxford, and it was there that he died in July 1643, apparently of the plague. His younger brother, EDMUND GRIFFITH II, was a successful cloth merchant in London, and died before 1660 at Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire; while another brother, OWEN GRIFFITH
  • GRIFFITH, HUW WYNNE (1915 - 1993), minister (Presb) and a prominent ecumenical leader minister was in his pulpit and Charles Clements was at the organ. Huw Wynne Griffith had a likeable personality and he was very well liked in his community and in the activities of his denomination and the ecumenical scene. He influenced many by his thoughtful, contemporary preaching, by his articles in the Welsh-language press, in particular Y Goleuad, Y Traethodydd, Porfeydd, Ecwmene, Y Genhinen and
  • GRIFFITH, ROGER (bu farw 1708), Presbyterian minister and tutor, afterwards archdeacon He seems to have been born at Abergavenny. In 1690-2 he was being supported by the 'Common Fund' (Presbyterian and Congregational) at Bishop's Hall, Bethnal Green, where Charles Owen was a fellow-student. Griffith then (1693) went to Utrecht university, again at the charges of the fund. In or about 1695 he became minister at Abergavenny; and in 1697, on the death of Samuel Jones (1628 - 1697) of
  • GRIFFITH-WYNNE, CHARLES WYNNE (bu farw 1865), sheriff of Caernarfonshire and Denbighshire - gweler GRIFFITH