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  1. Sir William Sidney (c. 1482 –1554) was an English courtier under Henry VIII and Edward VI. Life. Sidney was eldest son of Nicholas Sidney, by Anne, sister of Sir William Brandon.

  2. This chapter traces the interconnections among piety, politics, and poetry in the life and work of Philip Sidney and Mary Sidney-Herbert: the siblings whose partnership arguably launched the English literary Renaissance as we know it.

  3. Admiral Sir William Sidney Smith GCB GCTE KmstkSO FRS (21 June 1764 – 26 May 1840) was a British naval and intelligence officer. Serving in the American and French revolutionary wars and Napoleonic Wars, he rose to the rank of Admiral.

  4. 2 de feb. de 2007 · by. Smith, William Sidney, Sir, 1764-1840; Barrow, John, 1808-1898. Publication date. 1848. Topics. Great Britain -- History, Naval. Publisher. London : R. Bentley. Collection.

  5. Set in relation to the biographical record of Sir William Sidney and other aspects of its original context, they demonstrate Jonson's mas-terful control of imitation and allusion and his tactful balance of cele-bration and exhortation. The subject of Jonson's poem, the eldest son of Sir Robert Sidney, was born in 1590.

  6. Sir Philip Sidney. 1554–1586. Photo by Hulton-Deutsch/Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis via Getty Images. The grandson of the Duke of Northumberland and heir presumptive to the earls of Leicester and Warwick, Sir Philip Sidney was not himself a nobleman.

  7. 21 de feb. de 2024 · In the ensuing autumn, Sir W. Sidney Smith fell in with l’Assemblee Nationale, of 22 guns, which endeavoured to elude his pursuit in the labyrinth of rocks before Treguier; but the attempt proved fatal to her, for she struck on the Roenna, and soon after filling, fell over.