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  1. Hace 2 días · Thomas Lennard, Lord Dacre, who was created Earl of Sussex in 1675, left two daughters, coheiresses, who, with their mother, sold the manors of Dacre and Soulby, in 1715, to Sir Christopher Musgrave; the latter conveyed them the same year to Edward Hasell, Esq. of Dalemain, grandfather of Edward Hasell, Esq. the present proprietor.

  2. Hace 2 días · Lady Anne Palmer (Fitzroy) (1661–1722), married Thomas Lennard, 1st Earl of Sussex. She may have been the daughter of Roger Palmer, but Charles accepted her. [148]

  3. Hace 1 día · The manors of Mossdale and Swinside, which belonged anciently to the baronial family of Dacre, and passed by female heirs, with the title, to the families of Fiennes and Lennard, were sold by the co-heiresses of Thomas, Earl of Sussex, to Sir Christopher Musgrave, Bart. of Edenhall, and by him to Edward Hasell of Dalemain, ancestor ...

  4. Hace 4 días · By her, who died in 1711, he had two sons, Philip and Henry, successively lords Teynham; notwithstanding which, having the uncontrolled power in these manors vested in him, he, on his marriage with Anne, second daughter and coheir of Thomas Lennard, earl of Sussex, and widow of Richard Barrett Lennard, esq. afterwards baroness Dacre ...

  5. Hace 3 días · Book: Charles I and the Aristocracy, 1625-1642. Richard Cust. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2013, ISBN: 9781107009905 ; 363pp.; Price: £65.00. Reviewer: Dr Christopher Thompson. University of Buckingham. Citation: Dr Christopher Thompson, review of Charles I and the Aristocracy, 1625-1642, (review no. 1528)

  6. Hace 3 días · Dallington: ‘Six miles from everywhere’ – The History of a Sussex Village by Karen Bryant-Mole. This fascinating book was published in December 1999 to celebrate the millennium. It contains an outline history of the village since 1000, and lots of photographs and accounts of life here from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day.

  7. Hace 2 días · First to be explored is how the earldom of Norfolk came into being – how the fortunes of the Bigod family were made. By 1107, Morris shows, the Bigods had become 'barons of the first rank' (p. 1) and by 1166 were the fifth richest family in England.