Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 22 de dic. de 2023 · Sir Winston Churchill’s grand-daughter, Arabella Churchill, preparing meels in her squatters’ restaurant in Bristol Gardens, Maida Vale. Arabella had started Children’s World International in 1979, taking play equipment and basic things like educational materials to the children of Kosovo and Albania, and then to post-tsunami Sri Lanka on an old doubledecker London bus.

  2. Arabella Churchill was born on 31 October 1949 in Westminster, London, England, UK. She was married to Ian (Haggis) McLeod and James (Jim) Jude Barton. She died on 20 December 2007 in Glastonbury, Somerset, England, UK.

  3. 20 de dic. de 2021 · Without Arabella Churchill there probably wouldn’t be a Glastonbury as we know and love it. The former debutante granddaughter of wartime prime minister Sir Winston Churchill, she ran away to ...

  4. Arabella Churchill was probably born at Ash, the family home of Arabella’s mother in Musbury, Devonshire, England on February 23, 1648, the eldest of the eleven children of Sir Winston Churchill and Elizabeth Drake. She was christened at St. Michael’s Church in Musbury on March 16, 1649.

  5. Learn about Arabella Churchill, one of James II's mistresses, and how she navigated love with a monarch. Discover the intriguing story of this royal mistress...

  6. Churchill, Arabella (1648–1714)English mistress of King James II of England. Born in 1648; died in 1714; eldest daughter of Sir Winston Churchill of Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire, and Elizabeth Drake; sister of John Churchill, duke of Marlborough (1650–1722); had long affair with James II, king of England (r. 1685–1688, deposed); children: (with James II) five, including Henrietta FitzJames (b.

  7. 28 de oct. de 2020 · Arabella Churchill was born in February 1648 to Sir Winston Churchill (from the same family line as the later Prime minister with the same name) and his wife, Elizabeth Drake. Arabella’s family, the Churchills, were devoted royalists who were rewarded for their services once King Charles II was restored to the throne in 1660.