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  1. Sir John Seymour, of Wolf-hall, Wiltshire, and Margaret Wentworth, daughter of Sir John Wentworth, of Nettlestead, in Suffolk. The Seymours were a family of country gentry who, like most holders of manorial rights, traced their ancestry to a Norman origin.

  2. Francis Seymour-Conway, 1st Baron Conway (1679–1732) third son of Sir Edward Seymour of Berry Pomeroy, 4th Baronet. Francis succeeded to the estates of his mother’s relative Edward Conway, 1st Earl of Conway, and assumed the same year by Royal license the additional surname of Conway.

  3. Pages in category "Seymour family". The following 119 pages are in this category, out of 119 total. This list may not reflect recent changes . House of Seymour.

  4. The Seymours were a family of country gentry who, like most holders of manorial rights, traced their ancestry to a Norman origin. One or two had been knighted in the wars of France, but their names had never emerged from the herald's visitation-rolls into historical celebrity.

  5. The Seymour family is an English aristocratic family in which several titles of nobility have from time to time been created, and of which the Duke of Somerset is the head.

  6. Seymour Glass: El primogénito de la familia, es un poeta influido por el budismo y el taoísmo y el más brillante de todos los hermanos, para quienes es un referente. Es extremadamente sensible y su salud mental y su sexualidad han sido cuestionadas varias veces por la familia de su esposa Muriel, que ven en él a una persona ...

  7. The date of Edward’s birth is unknown, but he was either the eldest or second son of Sir John Seymour of Wolf Hall, and Margaret, or Margery, Wentworth. The Seymour family had been solid country gentry for centuries, whilst Margery was a descendant of Edward III, and niece of the Countess of Surrey.