Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 13 de mar. de 2024 · He was the youngest son of Edward Radclyffe, 2nd Earl of Derwentwater and Lady Mary Tudor.[2] The Radclyffe family were ardent followers of the House of Stuart, James Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Derwentwater (1689-1716), being raised at the court of the Stuarts in France as companion to James Francis Edward Stuart, the Old Pretender.

  2. Likeness: James Radclyffe, 3rd earl of Derwentwater, engraving by George Vertue after Sir Godfrey Kneller, bt., 1716. James Radclyffe was the scion of a wealthy Catholic family in Northumberland which had received the earldom of Derwentwater in 1687 and which distinguished itself by its Jacobite opposition to the Revolution settlement.

  3. 27 de nov. de 2007 · Description: James Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Derwentwater: Date: 1845: Source: The Project Gutenberg EBook of Memoirs of the Jacobites of 1715 and 1745., Volume I, by Mrs. Thomson.

  4. James Bartholomew Radclyffe, 4th Earl of Newburgh and titular 6th Earl of Derwentwater (23 August 1725 – 2 January 1787) was a British nobleman, Earl of Newburgh in the Peerage of Scotland and titular Earl of Derwentwater in the Peerage of England . He was born on 23 August 1725, the son of Charles Radclyffe, titular 5th Earl of Derwentwater ...

  5. Charles’s eldest son James Bartholomew claimed the title of 6th Earl of Derwentwater and on his mother’s death in 1755 became 3rd Earl of Newburgh. James’s son Anthony James Radcliffe, Charles’s grandson, who resided at Slidon House in Sussex, died without heir in 1814 and so the title became extinct as well as de jure (by law).

  6. James Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Derwentwater (26 June 1689 – 24 February 1716) was an English peer who participated in the Jacobite rising of 1715 and was executed for treason. Life Radclyffe was the son of Edward Radclyffe, 2nd Earl of Derwentwater and Lady Mary Tudor , the natural daughter of Charles II by Moll Davis.

  7. Charles Radclyffe (3 September 1693 – 8 December 1746), titular 5th Earl of Derwentwater, was one of the few English participants in the Risings of 1715 and 1745. The Radclyffes were Catholics from Northumberland , with long-standing links to the exiled Stuarts ; sentenced to death in 1716, he escaped and spent the next 30 years in Europe.