Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. James Maitland Balfour (5 January 1820 – 23 February 1856) was a Scottish land-owner and businessman. He made a fortune in the 19th-century railway boom, and inherited a significant portion of his father's great wealth. He was a Conservative Member of Parliament in the 1840s, and was the father of Prime Minister Arthur Balfour, 1st ...

  2. The courtship and marriage of James Maitland Balfour and Lady Blanche Cecil. Letters held within the papers of the Balfour family (GD433), recently purchased by the National Records of...

  3. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 3 daughters. He lived in Whittingehame, Haddingtonshire, Scotland, United Kingdom in 1820. He died on 23 February 1856, in Funchal, Madeira, Portugal, at the age of 36, and was buried in Garvaldkirk, Garvald and Bara, East Lothian, Scotland, United Kingdom. More.

    • Male
    • Blanche Mary Harriet Gascoyne-Cecil
  4. 5 de ene. de 2023 · James Maitland Balfour (5 January 1820 – 23 February 1856) was a Scottish land-owner and businessman. He made a fortune in the 19th-century railway boom, and inherited a significant portion of his father's great wealth.

  5. The Maitland tomb, St Mary's Church, Haddington. James Maitland, 8th Earl of Lauderdale, KT, PC (26 January 1759 – 10 September 1839) was Keeper of the Great Seal of Scotland and a Scottish representative peer in the House of Lords. [1]

  6. Arthur Balfour nación en Whittingehame, Escocia, siendo el hijo mayor de James Maitland Balfour (1820-1856) y Blanche Gascoyne-Cecil (1825-1872). Su padre fue un parlamentario escocés; su madre, miembro de la familia Cecyl, hija del segundo Marqués de Salisbury y hermana del tercer marqués de Salisbury , futuro primer ministro.

  7. 29 de jun. de 2010 · Published: 2010-06-29. During the 1870s and early 1880s, the British morphologist Francis Maitland Balfour contributed in important ways to the budding field of evolutionary embryology, especially through his comparative embryological approach to uncovering ancestral relationships between groups.