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  1. Ducado de Saint Albans. El ducado de Saint Albans, título nobiliario de Inglaterra, fue creado en 1684 para Charles Beauclerk, hijo ilegítimo del rey Carlos II y Nell Gwyn . Nombrado conde de Burford y caballero de la Jarretera se casó en 1694 con lady Diana de Vere, heredera del XX y último conde de Oxford. 1 .

  2. Charles Beauclerk, Duke of St Albans. Nell gave birth to her first son, Charles Beauclerk, on 8 May 1670. A second son, James Beauclerk was born in 1671, but died at a boarding school in Paris in 1680, the circumstances of his life in Paris and the cause of his death are both unknown, one of the few clues being that he died "of a sore leg".

  3. Nell Gwyn (o Gwynn o Gwynne ), nacida Eleanor, (2 de febrero de 1650-14 de noviembre de 1687), fue una de las primeras actrices inglesas que obtuvo reconocimiento público, y fue amante durante muchos años del rey Carlos II. Samuel Pepys la llamó pretty, witty Nell («bella e ingeniosa Nell»). Personificó el espíritu de la Restauración ...

  4. Charles Francis Topham de Vere Beauclerk (born 22 February 1965), also styled Earl of Burford by courtesy, is a British aristocrat and heir to the peerage title of Duke of St Albans. Beauclerk first came to public attention when he attempted to interfere with a debate in the House of Lords , declaring a Bill which would exclude hereditary peers from the House to be treasonable.

  5. When Lord Colonel Henry Beauclerk was born on 11 August 1701, in Winkfield, Berkshire, England, his father, Charles Beauclerk 1st Duke of St Albans, KG, was 31 and his mother, Lady Diana de Vere, was 22. He married Martha Lovelace on 25 June 1739. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 6 daughters. He died on 5 January 1761, at the age of 59.

  6. Duke of St Albans is a title in the Peerage of England.It was created in 1684 for Charles Beauclerk, 1st Earl of Burford, then 14 years old. King Charles II had accepted that Burford was his illegitimate son by Nell Gwyn, an actress, and awarded him the dukedom just as he had conferred those of Monmouth, Southampton, Grafton, Northumberland, and Richmond and Lennox on his other illegitimate ...

  7. Admiral Vere Beauclerk, 1st Baron Vere (14 July 1699 – 21 October 1781), known as Lord Vere Beauclerk until 1750, was a Royal Navy officer, British peer and politician who sat in the House of Commons for 24 years from 1726 to 1750. After serving various ships in the Mediterranean and then commanding the third-rate HMS Hampton Court, he joined ...