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  1. CANTERBURY, CHARLES MANNERS-SUTTON, 1st Viscount (1780–1845), speaker of the House of Commons, was the elder son of Charles Manners-Sutton (q.v.), afterwards archbishop of Canterbury, and was born on the 29th of January 1780. Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge, he graduated B.A. in 1802

  2. Charles Manners-Sutton, 1st Viscount Canterbury. Viscount Canterbury, of the City of Canterbury, was a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created in 1835 for the Tory politician Sir Charles Manners-Sutton, who had previously served as Speaker of the House of Commons. He was created Baron Bottesford, of Bottesford in the County ...

  3. Charles Manners-Sutton, född den 17 februari 1755, död den 21 juli 1828, var biskop av Norwich och därefter ärkebiskop av Canterbury. Manners-Sutton utbildades vid Charterhouse och Cambridge . Han döpte Viktoria I av Storbritannien .

  4. On 1 Aug. he proposed to give Manners Sutton a pension of £4,000 a year (to be reduced by half if he later took an office of equivalent value) and his eldest male heir, Charles John Manners Sutton (1812-69), one of £3,000, which was to cease when he came into his reversion to the ‘valuable sinecure office’ of registrar of wills (worth an estimated £10,000 a year), currently held by the ...

  5. Charles Manners Sutton, - (1755–1828), archbishop of Canterbury, was born Charles Manners on 14 February 1755, the fourth son of Lord George Manners (1723–1783) and his wife, Diana (d. 1767), daughter of Thomas Chaplin of Blankney, Lincolnshire; he was grandson of John, third duke of Rutland.

  6. For his son, the Speaker of the House of Commons, see Charles Manners-Sutton, 1st Viscount Canterbury.The Most Reverend and Right HonourableCharles Manners-Sutto ...