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  1. 17 de jun. de 2020 · Richard Grenville vit le jour à Bideford, dans le Devon, en Angleterre, en 1542. Il était le fils de Roger Grenville, un membre de la noblesse locale. Les liens de Richard avec la mer commencèrent avec la mort de son père, noyé dans le tristement célèbre naufrage du Mary Rose , le navire amiral d' Henri VIII d'Angleterre (r. de 1509 à 1547).

  2. Sir Richard Grenville (avec diverses transcriptions, parmi lesquelles Greynvile, Greeneville, Greenfield, etc. ; prononcer à la française [grɑ̃vil], le nom étant d'origine anglo-normande), né le 6 juin 1542 au château de Clifton House, dans le Devon, dans le sud-ouest de l' Angleterre – mort au combat le 10 septembre 1591 était un ...

  3. Sir Richard Grenville. A naval commander and cousin of Walter Ralegh, Grenville was put in charge of Ralegh's plan to colonise north America, and took the first settlers to Roanoke. In 1591 he took command of the queen's ship the Revenge on a raiding expedition to the Azores, but died from wounds received fighting fifteen Spanish ships for ...

  4. 21 de feb. de 2013 · Sir Richard Grenville (1542-1591), English sea captain and explorer, became a legendary figure in the resistance to the Spanish Armada, dying as a result of wounds sustained at the helm of the galleon Revenge in the Battle of Flores: a fight in which he struggled against overwhelming odds.

  5. Richard Grenville Dunstall Obituary. It is with great sadness that we announce the death of Richard Grenville Dunstall (Victoria, British Columbia), who passed away on November 10, 2023, at the age of 78, leaving to mourn family and friends.

  6. 15 de jun. de 2020 · World History Encyclopedia, 15 Jun 2020. Web. 13 May 2024. A c. 1571 CE portrait of Sir Richard Grenville (1542-1591 CE), an Elizabethan sailor and adventurer. (National Portrait Gallery, London)

  7. Grenville at once published a pamphlet entitled ‘Sir Richard Grenville's Single Defence against all aspersions (in the power or aim) of all malignant persons, and to satisfy the contrary,’ containing an autobiographical account of his life, services, and sufferings (reprinted in Lansdowne's ‘Works,’ i. 544-56).