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  1. HMS Duchess of York (1898), a paddle steamer built by Barclay, Curle & Co. Ltd., Glasgow, used as a First World War minesweeper. Later renamed Duchess of Cornwall to allow for a new ship to take its name. [2] SS Duchess of York (1928), a steam turbine ocean liner built by John Brown & Co Ltd., Clydebank for Canadian Pacific Steamships.

  2. Mary joined the Department of Sociology in September 2022, as a Lecturer in Sociology. Before this she worked at Northumbria University as a Senior Lecturer in Criminology for 12 years. Mary is a collaborative and interdisciplinary researcher focusing on sex work and the sex industry, she researches non-heteronormative and queer sex work, sex ...

  3. October: The Conference of York. Elizabeth wanted proof Mary was innocent of Darnley’s murder before agreeing to a meeting. The Conference of York failed to find such proof and in February 1569 Mary was taken to Tutbury Castle in Staffordshire, a residence of the Earl of Shrewsbury, who became her jailer for most of the next fifteen years.

  4. Mary Garrison is a member of the advisory board of the Oxford Boethius Commentary Project. She is also part of an international team of collaborators on the Martianus Capella gloss project run by Mariken Teuuwen at the Huygens Institute in the Hague.

  5. 25 de may. de 2017 · Charles the Bold died in battle in 1477, and Mary of Burgundy, wife of the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, died due to complications from a riding accident in 1482. Margaret of York and her stepson-in-law, Maximilian I, sought to care for Mary’s children, Philip and Maria, but the Estates General of Flanders refused to assist Margaret.

  6. 7 de jul. de 2021 · ATLANTA, July 7, 2021 – York Public Relations, a global fintech PR firm, today announced its CEO Mary York was named by PROGRESS in Lending as a “Most Powerful Woman in Fintech.” In today’s hyper-connected world, organizations must constantly evolve to offer quick, convenient and reliable service.

  7. 15 de nov. de 2020 · On this day in Tudor history, 15th November 1527, Katherine of York, Countess of Devon and daughter of King Edward IV, died at Tiverton Castle in Devon. She was aged forty-nine. She was buried at St Peter's Church, Tiverton, in funeral ceremonies on 2nd and 3rd December. Let me tell you a bit more about the woman who signed herself “the ...