Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The entry in the Register at Dunedin states: “Alexander Ro (a)naldson Macdonell, Gentleman, died 2nd June 1862, aged twenty-eight years. Cause of death rheumatic fever.”. He had no friends in Dunedin, but his cousin Alexander Charles Forbes, though too late to see him alive, attended his funeral.

  2. 31 de oct. de 2022 · This portrait of Alasdair Ranaldson MacDonell (1771–1828), 15th Chief of Glengarry was painted in Rome while he was on the Grand Tour. Glengarry embodied the romanticised notions of the Highlands that prevailed throughout the nineteenth century. Considering himself to be the last true example of a traditional Highland Chief, Glengarry ...

  3. Brief Life History of Alexander Ranaldson. When Alexander Ranaldson MacDonald 6th of Glengarry was born in 1487, in Inverness-shire, Scotland, United Kingdom, his father, John Angus MacDonald 3rd of Glengarry, was 33 and his mother, NicDonald of Lochiel Cameron, was 40. He married Margaret de Insulus MacDonald Heiress of Lochalsh about 1510, in ...

  4. Alexander Macdonell (17 July 1762 – 14 January 1840) was the first Roman Catholic bishop of Kingston, Upper Canada . He was born at Glen Urquhart in Scotland and served as a chaplain with the Glengarry Fencibles during the Irish Rebellion of 1798. His presence insured that the regiment "distinguished itself by its humanity". [1]

  5. Alexander MacDonell of Glengarry was a soldier and chief of clan Macdonell of Glengarry. He succeeded his father, Duncan MacDonell (c.1744–1788) as chief of the clan in 1788 and inherited vast estates. MacDonell enrolled at University College, Oxford, in 1790.

  6. 4 de sept. de 2018 · Erected in 1812 by Alexander Ranaldson MacDonell, the Chief of Clan MacDonell of Glengarry, the monument marks the spot of an ancient well and gives a nod to a horrific series of events.

  7. By 1798 (1st April) letters re-appear in the CFM archive from Glengarry (Alasdair Ranaldson) to Alexander Macdonell, Writer. If Campbell Mackintosh took instructions to act for the Glengarry Estate on or about June 1788, he almost certainly did so at the behest of Lady Glengarry.