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  1. Edwin Lascelles, 1st Baron Harewood ( c. 1713 – 25 January 1795) was a Barbadian-born planter, military officer, politician and peer. Early life. Edwin Lascelles born c. 1713 in the British colony of Barbados, the elder son of Henry Lascelles and his wife Mary Carter.

  2. Edward Lascelles, 1st Earl of Harewood (7 January 1740 – 3 April 1820) was a British landowner, art collector, peer and, before which, member of parliament. [1] He was the son of Edward Lascelles, a senior customs official in Barbados, himself a son of Daniel Lascelles.

  3. Harewood: Coordenadas: Información general; Estilo: Palladianismo: Declaración: 30 de marzo de 1960 y 1 de diciembre de 1984: Construcción: 1771: Propietario: Edwin Lascelles, 1st Baron Harewood: Diseño y construcción; Arquitecto: John Carr y Robert Adam: https://harewood.org/

  4. Earl of Harewood ( / ˈhɑːrwʊd / ⓘ [3] ), in the County of York, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. [4] History. The title was created in 1812 for Edward Lascelles, 1st Baron Harewood, a wealthy sugar plantation owner and former Member of Parliament for Northallerton.

  5. House. Harewood House, built in the 1760s by Edwin Lascelles, is renowned for its magnificent Robert Adam interiors. It is also home to superb Thomas Chippendale furniture and a world class collection of paintings by, amongst others, JMW Turner, Joshua Reynolds, Tiziano Veccelli (Titian) and Domenikos Theotokopoulos (known as El Greco).

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  6. Edwin Lascelles to Robert Adam. When Edwin Lascelles started building Harewood House in 1759 he wanted nothing but the best for his new home. He employed the finest craftsmen of the time: York-born architect John Carr, fashionable interior designer Robert Adam, England’s greatest furniture maker Thomas Chippendale and visionary landscape ...

  7. Edwin used some of his immense wealth to build Harewood House in Yorkshire. The building took 11 years to complete, and was built, decorated and furnished by the best craftsmen in England. The Lascelles family involvement in the transatlantic slave trade continued until the Slavery Abolition Act was passed in 1833.