Canlyniadau chwilio

469 - 476 of 476 for "court"

469 - 476 of 476 for "court"

  • WYNDHAM-QUIN, WINDHAM HENRY (5th EARL DUNRAVEN and MOUNT-EARL), (1857 - 1952), soldier and politician Sheriff for county Kilkenny in 1914 and commandant of the Lines of Communication in 1915. He was also one of the directors of the Great Western Railway Co. In June 1926 he succeeded his cousin Windham Thomas Wyndham-Quin (see Supplement below) as Earl of Dunraven. He also became a well-liked and popular character in south Wales. He was a member of the Court of Governors of the National Museum, and was
  • WYNNE, JOHN (1650 - 1714), industrial pioneer court to rename it 'Newmarket' - 'as the old name appears in a dozen or more different ways,' says the petition (Thomas, A History of the Diocese of St. Asaph, i, 408-10). However, the works did not materialise, and all that remains of Wynne's dream is the name 'Newmarket' [now in its turn discontinued]. Again, Wynne was a Nonconformist (there is a suggestion that he was connected with Wrexham), and
  • WYNNE, JOHN (1667 - 1743), esgob Llanelwy a phennaeth Coleg Iesu, Rhydychen . Arbenigai yn y gyfraith eglwysig, a bu'n ddadleuydd o flaen y ' Court of Arches ' o 1757 hyd 1788, pan benodwyd ef yn ' Dean of Arches ' ac yn farnwr yn 'Prerogative Court' yr archesgob, swyddau a ddaliodd hyd 1809. Dewiswyd ef yn aelod o'r Cyfrin Gyngor yn 1789, ac yn un o ' arglwyddi'r Trysorlys ' yn 1790 - yr oedd wedi ei urddo'n farchog yn 1788. Etifeddwyd Sychdyn gan ferch i'r esgob, a briododd â
  • WYNNE, JOHN (1667 - 1743), bishop of St Asaph and principal of Jesus College, Oxford ), barrister, was a Bencher of the Middle Temple. The other was Sir WILLIAM WYNNE (1729 - 1815), also a barrister; he went to Trinity Hall, Cambridge, in 1746, graduated in law in 1751 (LL.D. 1757), was a Fellow of the college from 1755 to 1803, and Master from 1803 until his death. He specialised in ecclesiastical law, and was a pleader in the Court of Arches from 1757 to 1788, when he was appointed Dean of
  • WYNNE, OWEN (1652 - ?), civil servant Mint (to 1690) and secretary to the commissioners for prizes (January 1693). He kept his North Wales acquaintances, especially Sir Robert Owen, of Porkington and Clenennau (see Owen, Sir John), posted with the latest court news in James II's day. WILLIAM WYNNE (1693 - 1765), lawyer and author Law Literature and Writing Eldest son of Owen Wynne. He followed his father to Jesus College (matriculated 23
  • WYNNE, ROBERT (bu farw 1720), cleric and poet Lloyd, bishop of St Asaph, in 1681, involved him in the consequences of the latter's determined attempt to regain the patronage of which the Price family of Plas Iolyn had deprived the bishops of St Asaph. There followed a series of court actions in Merioneth, Shropshire, and at the Exchequer Bar. Thomas Price, son of Peter Price of Cynllwyd, after incurring in the course of this litigation the
  • teulu YALE Plas yn Iâl, Plas Gronw, archesgobol Caergaint (1559) - mewn pryd i gymryd rhan flaenllaw yn y trefniadau cyfreithiol ynglyn ag apwyntiad Matthew Parker yn archesgob Caergaint. Gwnaeth, Parker ddefnydd pur helaeth ohono, gan ei wneuthur yn ganghellor, yn 'vicar-general,' yn farnwr y 'court of audience,' ac edrych arno fel gwr ei ddeheulaw, a'i anfon amryw droeon ar ymweliadau esgobol, yn cynnwys dau ymweliad ag esgobaeth Bangor
  • teulu YALE Plâs yn Iâl, Plas Grono, career by becoming LL.D. (1557) and advocate of the court of Canterbury (1559) - in time to take a prominent part in legal arrangements for the appointment to Canterbury of Matthew Parker, who made him his chancellor, vicar-general, and judge of the court of audience, and used him as his right-hand man, sending him on many visitations, including two of Bangor (1566 and 1576) - the latter with Nicholas