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  1. Marquess of Salisbury. Lord Edward Herbert Gascoyne-Cecil KCMG DSO (12 July 1867 – 13 December 1918), known as Lord Edward Cecil, was a distinguished and highly decorated English soldier. As colonial administrator in Egypt and advisor to the Liberal government, he helped to implement Army reforms.

  2. Edward Cecil, 1st Viscount Wimbledon (29 February 1572 – 16 November 1638) was an English military commander and a politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1601 and 1624.

  3. Edward Cecil, I vizconde de Wimbledon (29 de febrero de 1572 - 16 de noviembre de 1638) fue un noble inglés, militar y político.

  4. Edward Cecil, 1st Viscount Wimbledon (1572-1638) A Journall and relation of the action which by his Majesties commandement Edward Lord Cecil, Baron of Putney and Vicount of Wimbledon, Admirall and Lieutenant Generall of his Majesties forces, did undertake upon the coast of Spaine, 1625.

  5. Edward Cecil Guinness, 1st Earl of Iveagh, KP, GCVO, FRS (10 November 1847 – 7 October 1927) was an Anglo-Irish businessman and philanthropist. A member of the prominent Guinness family, he was the head of the family's eponymous brewing business, making him the richest man in Ireland.

  6. Edward Cecil, Viscount Wimbledon. (1572-1638), Naval and military commander. Sitter in 4 portraits. A military and naval commander, and the grandson of the great Elizabethan statesman, Lord Burghley, Wimbledon served under Elizabeth I, James I and Charles I.

  7. William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, was a principal adviser to England’s Queen Elizabeth I through most of her reign. Cecil was a master of Renaissance statecraft, whose talents as a diplomat, politician, and administrator won him high office and a peerage.