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  1. Thomas Grenville, Thornville, master, was in Bombay harbour when she burnt on 2 June 1843 in a suspicious fire. She was preparing to sail to China with a cargo of cotton and opium. [7] [8] A steamer towed the burnt-out hull up the harbour where it was later sold. The ship and her cargo were reportedly worth £10,000.

  2. 13 de nov. de 2021 · Isabella Grenville formerly Gilbert. Born about 1455 in Compton, Devon, England. Ancestors. Daughter of Otes Gilbert and Elizabeth (Hill) Gilbert. Sister of Robert Gilbert, John Gilbert, Thomas Gilbert, William Gilbert, Otys Gilbert and Geoffrey Gilbert. Wife of Thomas Grenville — married 1473 in Stow, Cornwall, England.

  3. Brief Life History of Thomas Grenville Horatio. Thomas Grenville Horatio Skewes was born in 1904, in Ararat, Victoria, Australia. He married Ilma Elizabeth Dodd about 1934, in Victoria, Australia. He died in 1973, at the age of 69.

  4. George Grenville (14 October 1712 – 13 November 1770) was a British Whig statesman who rose to the position of Prime Minister of Great Britain. Grenville was born into an influential political family and first entered Parliament in 1741 as an MP for Buckingham. He emerged as one of Cobham's Cubs, a group of young members of Parliament ...

  5. When Sir Thomas Grenville was born before 21 January 1432, in Cornwall, England, his father, Sir William Grenville, was 53 and his mother, Lady Philippa Bonville, was 17. He married Anne Courtenay on 7 September 1447, in Atherington, Surrey, England. He died in March 1483, in Cornwall, England, and was buried in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England.

  6. When Sir Thomas Grenville II was born about 1453, in Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England, his father, Sir Thomas Grenville, was 11451 and his mother, Jane Elizabeth Gorges, was 16. He married Isabella Gilbert about 1469. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 9 daughters.

  7. In 1827, the Duke’s personal librarian, Thomas Pettigrew (1791-1865) crafted a two-volume Bibliotheca Sussexiana, a partial catalogue with notes on the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin Bibles, which he followed up with a second volume in 1839, covering the Bibles in other languages including not only English, German, French, and Italian but also Coptic, Arabic, Slavonic, and so forth.