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  1. Lucius Cary, 7th Viscount Falkland. Lucius Charles Cary, 7th Viscount Falkland (c. 1707 – 27 February 1785) was a Scottish peer. Cary was the son of Lucius Cary, 6th Viscount Falkland and his first wife, Dorothy. He succeeded to the peerage in 1730 when his father, a loyal Jacobite (and an earl in the Jacobite peerage) died in Paris.

  2. Lucius Bentinck Cary, 10th Viscount of Falkland was born on 5 November 1803. He was the son of Captain Charles John Cary, 9th Viscount of Falkland and Christiana Anton. He married, firstly, Lady Amelia Fitz-Clarence, daughter of William IV Hanover, King of the United Kingdom and Dorothea Bland, on 27 December 1830.

  3. Cary, Lucius, second Viscount Falkland ( 1609/10–1643 ), politician and author, was born at Burford Priory in Oxfordshire, the son of Henry Cary, first Viscount Falkland (c. 1575–1633), and Elizabeth Cary (née Tanfield) (1585–1639). The poet Patrick Cary (c. 1624–1657) was one of his younger brothers; Anne Cary was one of four sisters who converted to Catholicism and became ...

  4. Lucius Cary, Viscount Falkland, was killed fighting in the English Civil War on 20 September 1643. Explanations for his death range from suicide to an accident of curiosity. But perhaps more interesting to consider is how his fatality would be contested in print. As secretary of state to King Charles I, Falkland was a high-profile casualty and yet his death was largely ignored at the time ...

  5. Photograph of a full length portrait of Lucius Bentinck Cary, 10th Viscount Falkland (1803-84) standing, facing slightly towards the left. He turns his head and looks towards the camera.

  6. 14 de mar. de 2023 · Genealogy for Lucius Edward William Plantagenet Cary, 15th Viscount Falkland family tree on Geni, with over 260 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

  7. Quick Reference. (1610–43). Falkland was educated in Ireland, where his father was viceroy, but settled at Great Tew, outside Oxford. This became, in the words of Clarendon, ‘a university bound in a lesser volume’. Elected to Parliament in 1640, Falkland condemned arbitrary rule, but opposed radical change. In January 1642 he accepted ...