Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. In Vere Family. …known as the “fighting Veres”; Sir Francis (1560–1609) commanded the English troops in the Netherlands that fought against Spain in the service of the United Provinces, while his younger brother Sir Horace (1565–1635) fought in Germany during the Thirty Years’ War. Edward (1550–1604), the 17th Earl of Oxford, was ...

  2. Francis Meres was born in 1565 at Kirton Meres in the parish of Kirton, Lincolnshire. He was educated at Pembroke College, Cambridge, where he received a BA in 1587 and an MA in 1591. [1] Two years later he was incorporated an MA of Oxford. His relative, John Meres, was high sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1596, and apparently helped him in the ...

  3. Sir Francis Vere (1560-1609) & his younger brother Horace (1565-1635) are buried in the chapel of St John the Evangelist in Westminster Abbey. Francis has a large monument of alabaster and black marble showing him lying on a carved rush mattress in civilian dress under a slab on which is laid out his suit of armour.

  4. "The Fighting Veres.": Lives of Sir Francis Vere, General of the Queen's Forces in the Low Countries, Governor of the Brill and of Portsmouth, and of Sir Horace Vere, General of the English Forces in the Low Countries, Governor of the Brill, Master-general of Ordnance, and Baron Vere of Tilbury: Author: Sir Clements Robert Markham: Publisher

  5. Semantic Scholar extracted view of "Sir Francis Vere in the Netherlands, 1589-1603: a re-evaluation of his career as Sergeant Major General of Elizabeth I's troops" by Tracy Borman

  6. 5 de ago. de 2012 · The commentaries of Sr Francis Vere giving an account of divers remarkable sieges, fights, and other eminent services, both at sea and land, performed by him for the Dutch, in the Low-Countreys, in which may easily be discerned to what greatness they have been raised by the English arms, under the conduct of our valiant heroes

  7. 15 de mar. de 2022 · Nacido en el pueblo de Gando, Burkina Faso, en 1965, Diébédo Francis Kéré es el hijo mayor del jefe de su pueblo. El pueblo no tenía acceso a agua pública ni electricidad, y la tasa de alfabetización estaba por debajo del promedio nacional del 25%. 2. Francis fue el primero en su comunidad en asistir a la escuela.