Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 1st Baron Truro, lawyer, judge and politician. He was Lord Chancellor of Great Britain between 1850 and 1852. He was educated at St Paul's School and was admitted an attorney in 1805. Truro subsequently entered the Inner Temple and was called to the bar in 1817, having practised for two years before as a special...

  2. Thomas Wilde, 1st Baron Truro by Thomas Youngman Gooderson (active 1846–1868), from National Portrait Gallery, London

  3. She was married on August 13, 1845, as his second wife, to Sir Thomas Wilde, 1st Baron Truro (7 July 1782 – 11 November 1858), who served as Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain between 1850 and 1852. They had no children together. Her burial place, the Dunmore Mausoleum, found within St. Laurence Churchyard, is considered at risk.

  4. Thomas Wilde, 1st Baron Truro. by Sir George Hayter pencil, pen and wash, 1820 5 1/2 in. x 4 1/2 in. (140 mm x 114 mm) Purchased, 1913 Primary Collection

  5. London, England. Nationality: British. Alma Mater: Trinity College, Cambridge. James Plaisted Wilde, 1st Baron Penzance, (12 July 1816 – 9 December 1899) was a noted British judge and rose breeder who was also a proponent of the Baconian theory that the works usually attributed to William Shakespeare were in fact written by Francis Bacon.

  6. Surname meaning for Wilde, 1st Baron Truro of Bowes. English (northern): habitational name from Bowes (formerly in North Yorkshire now in County Durham) or from some other place so called the placename being derived from the plural of Old English boga ‘bow’ here referring to bends in a river. . . .

  7. Thomas Wilde, 1st Baron Truro PC (7 July 1782 – 11 November 1855), was a British lawyer, judge and politician. He was Lord Chancellor of Great Britain between 1850 and 1852. Background and education. Born in London, Truro was the second son of Thomas Wilde, an attorney and founder of Wilde Sapte, by his wife Mary Anne