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  1. George Capel-Coningsby, 5th Earl of Essex FSA (13 November 1757 – 23 April 1839) was an English aristocrat and politician, and styled Viscount Malden until 1799. His surname was Capell until 1781.

  2. 7 de dic. de 2023 · On 4 March 1799 Capel-Coningsby succeeded his father as 5th Earl of Essex. He served as Recorder and High Steward of Leominster in 1802, and as Lord Lieutenant of Herefordshire from 1802 to 1817. He became a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1801, and received an honorary D.C.L. from Oxford University in 1810.

  3. George Capel-Coningsby 5th Earl of Essex FSA 13 November 1757 23 April 1839 was an English aristocrat and politician and styled Viscount Malden until.

  4. Lady Frances Coningsby, younger daughter of the first Earl by his second marriage, married Sir Charles Hanbury Williams. Their daughter Frances Williams married William Capel, 4th Earl of Essex . Their son George Capel-Coningsby, 5th Earl of Essex , assumed the additional surname of Coningsby on succeeding to the estates of his great-aunt, the Countess Coningsby.

  5. George Capell-Coningsby, 5th Earl of Essex (1757-1839), Lord-Lieutenant of Hereford. Regency Portraits Catalogue Entry. Sitter in 7 portraits Essex owned Landseer's The Cat's Claw (1824), a violent picture of a monkey burning a cat on a stove. Despite this patronage, Landseer does not hesitate to mock

  6. George Capel Coningsby (1757–1839), 5th Earl of Essex by Thomas Lawrence (1769–1830) (follower of), 1839, from Watford Museum