Canlyniadau chwilio

409 - 420 of 476 for "court"

409 - 420 of 476 for "court"

  • THOMAS, MANSEL TREHARNE (1909 - 1986), cyfansoddwr, arweinydd, Pennaeth Cerdd BBC Cymru y sielydd Gymreig Megan Lloyd yn 1939 ac fe anwyd iddynt ddwy ferch, Grace a Siân. Bu farw yng Nghartref Nyrsio Glaslyn Court, Gilwern, ger Y Fenni ar 8 Ionawr 1986 yn 76 oed, ac fe'i claddwyd yn Eglwys y Santes Fair Forwyn, Magwyr, sir Fynwy ar 11 Ionawr. Gadawodd Mansel Thomas waddol sylweddol a thra gwerthfawr o gyfansoddiadau ac mae'r cyfan bron o'r rhai anghyhoeddedig bellach yn cael eu
  • THOMAS, MANSEL TREHARNE (1909 - 1986), composer, conductor, BBC Wales Head of Music wrote little else of significance thereafter. He married Megan Lloyd, the Welsh cellist, in 1939 and they had two daughters, Grace and Siân. He died at Glaslyn Court Nursing Home, Gilwern, near Abergavenny on 8 January 1986 aged 76, and was buried at St Mary the Virgin Church, Magor, Monmouthshire on 11 January. Mansel Thomas left an enormous and invaluable legacy of compositions and almost all of
  • THOMAS, NATHANIEL (1818 - 1888), Baptist minister prison and helped unfortunate women, etc. Because she gave shelter in her home overnight to a young Jewess who wished to become a Christian, Laura Thomas and her husband were involved in litigation initiated by the Jewess's father and although the High Court decided in their favour the expenses incurred by the two defendants amounted to about £800.
  • THOMAS, SIDNEY GILCHRIST (1850 - 1885), metallurgist and inventor article cited in the bibliography below. Educated at Dulwich College which, however, he had to leave at the age of 17 because of the death of his father, he began to earn his livelihood as teacher in an Essex school and afterwards (from 1867) as clerk at Marlborough Street (London) Police Court; a little later he was transferred to the Thames Police Court. This clerkship he continued to hold for many
  • THOMAS, SIDNEY GILCHRIST (1850 - 1885), arbenigwr yn astudiaeth dur, a dyfeisydd pan oedd y mab yn 17 oed, bu raid iddo adael Dulwich College lle yr oedd ar y pryd ac felly fethu mynd i brifysgol. Bu'n athro ysgol am ychydig fisoedd ac wedi hynny (o 1867) yn glerc yn llys ynad Marlborough Street, Llundain, a throsglwyddo o'r fan honno i swydd gyffelyb yn y Thames Police Court. Cadwodd ei swydd fel clerc am flynyddoedd lawer, eithr âi i ddosbarthiadau mewn gwyddoniaeth a gynhelid
  • TREGONING, WILLIAM EDWARD CECIL (1871 - 1957), industrialist 1950 as J.P. for over 36 years, having been an outstanding chairman of the Llanelli magistrates court for many years. In October 1901 he married Nancy, daughter of J. Beavan Phillips, and they had four sons and two daughters. He lived at Portiscliff, Ferryside, St. Ishmael, Carmarthenshire, and died 9 March 1957.
  • teulu TREVOR Trevalun, Plas Têg, Glynde, engaged in renewed Star Chamber suits with his neighbours (c. 1610) and in replying in absentia to charges in the High Commission Court (dismissed by Laud as ' of noe such moment') connected with his monument to his wife in Gresford church (1634-5). He also took out small allotments in the Ulster plantation (1609-11), but seems to have spent little, if any, time there till at nearly 80 he went out as
  • teulu TREVOR Brynkynallt, the independent command granted to lord Herbert, later earl of Glamorgan. In July 1643 he was one of the signatories of the declaration drawn up by a council of war at Shrewsbury, imposing an oath of loyalty on the North Wales counties in face of the impending invasion by Sir T. Myddelton. Later in the year he became paid agent at the court to Ormonde, lord-lieutenant of Ireland, and by February
  • TREVOR, JOHN (bu farw 1357), bishop of St Asaph Very little is known about him, and the principal object of this note is to warn the reader against a tendency to mix him up with John Trevor (II). It is quite obvious that he was a 'climber.' We first hear of him in 1343 in the papal court at Avignon where he was given permission to hold a canonry at S. Asaph simultaneously with one at Bangor - in addition to which he was, in 1344, made a
  • TROY, BLANCHE HERBERT (Y FONESIG TROY), (bu farw tua 1557), gofalwraig magwraeth Elisabeth I, Edward VI a'r Frenhines Mari i chwaer hynaf Blanche Parry, yn ei yrfa pan oedd yn Facwy'r Siambr i Harri VIII yn 1533 ac yn Ddistain erbyn 1538. Gwelir fod y Fonesig Troy yn y Tŷ yr adeg honno gan adroddiad diweddarach dienw (sy'n trafod gweithredoedd bradwrus Iarll Essex a Roger Vaughan yn 1601) sy'n agor, 'My mother was chosen and brought to the Court by my Lady Herbert of Troy, to have been her Majesty's (y Frenhines
  • TROY, BLANCHE HERBERT (LADY TROY), (bu farw c. 1557), Lady Mistress of Elizabeth I, Edward VI and Queen Mary she was in her youth.She knew in a fitting mannerThe accomplishments of the ladies of the court,(And she was the) guardian, before she passed away,Of Henry VIII's household and his children yonder.To King Edward she was a true(And) wise lady of dignity,In charge of his fosterage (she was pre-eminent),(And) she waited upon his Grace. (She, whom) they buried, the Lady of the palace of Troy,And her
  • TUDOR, OWEN DAVIES (1818 - 1887), legal writer registrar of the District Bankruptcy Court at Birmingham; he retired in 1872. He was prominent as a legal writer, being the author of A Treatise on the Law of Charitable Trusts, Leading Cases in the Law of Real Property and Conveyancing, and Leading Cases in Mercantile and Maritime Law. His wife, whom he married in September 1849, was Sarah Maria, daughter of David James, vicar of Llanwnog