Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. William Douglas was the son of William Longleg, Lord of Douglas and it is supposed by his possible second wife, Constance Battail of Fawdon. [1] He first is recorded at an Assize at Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1256, when his father made over a Carucate of land at Warndon, Northumberland to him. Douglas' father William Longleg was Lord of Fawdon, and ...

  2. 14 de feb. de 2008 · Sir James Douglas. Sir James Douglas, governor of Vancouver Island (1851–64) and British Columbia (1858–64), fur trader (born 15 August 1803 in Demerara [Guyana]; died 2 August 1877 in Victoria, BC). Remembered as “the Father of British Columbia,” Sir James Douglas helped establish colonial settlement, trade and industry on the West Coast.

  3. He was Deputy Chief Secretary, Tanganyika from 1927–28; Chief Secretary to Government, Tanganyika, 1928–34; and acting Governor, Tanganyika, in 1929, 1931, 1933 and 1934. In 1929, 1930 and 1931, Douglas was also the accredited representative of H.M. Government to the Permanent Mandates Commission at Geneva. He was appointed CMG in 1932.

  4. James Douglas (boxeador) James «Buster» Douglas ( Columbus, Ohio, 7 de abril de 1960) es un ex boxeador estadounidense. Es sobre todo conocido por haber derrotado a Mike Tyson en el torneo por el título mundial en Tokio en 1990, fecha por la que Tyson era reconocido como un boxeador temible y casi imbatible.

  5. Colonel Walter Douglas (1670–1739) was Captain-General and Governor-General of the Leeward Islands . Walter Douglas was one of seven sons of William Douglas of Baads (d. 1705) and his wife, Joan, daughter of James Mason of Park, Blantyre. One of his brothers was the surgeon John Douglas (d. 1759), another James Douglas, (1675-1742), FRS, a ...

  6. James Douglas, 1st Lord Mordington. Sir James Douglas, 1st Lord Mordington (died 11 February 1656) was the second son of William Douglas, 10th Earl of Angus by his spouse Elizabeth, daughter of Laurence Oliphant, 4th Lord Oliphant. He was created, by King Charles I, a Lord of Parliament on 14 November 1641 as Lord Mordington.

  7. 10 A Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for deletion