Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. He was the eldest son of Sir John Savage, 1st Baronet and his wife Mary née Allington, from whom he inherited Melford Hall in Suffolk. [1] In 1615, he inherited his father's baronetcy and was created Viscount Savage in 1626. On his death in 1635, Elizabeth (by now Viscountess Savage) inherited Melford. This and St Osyth Priory in Essex formed ...

  2. Oil painting on canvas, Sir Thomas Savage, 1st Viscount Savage (1586 - 1635) by Cornelius Johnson (London 1593 - Utrecht 1661), signed and dated 1632. A three-quarter-length portrait, of Sir Thomas Savage, who inherited Melford Hall in 1602, seated, with stylish beard, in black silk robes of office (with the purse of office) as Lord Chancellor to Queen Henrietta Maria, against an acqua-green ...

  3. Sir Thomas Savage, 2nd Bt. later 1st Viscount Savage. created. 4 Nov 1626 Viscount Savage . The Baronetcy of Savage of Rocksavage, co. Chester, was held by the Viscounts Savage (later Earls Rivers) from 4 Nov 1626 until 8 May 1737, when on the death of John [Savage], 5th Earl Rivers, without an heir all his titles including the Baronetcy became ...

  4. Thomas (2nd Baronet) SAVAGE. 1st Viscount RIVERS; (William) Born: abt. 1582 Died: 1635 Tower Hill. Lady Diana's 11-Great Grandfather. poss. Wives ...

  5. Daughter of Thomas Darcy, 1st Earl Rivers, wife of Thomas Savage, 1st Viscount Savage and mother of John Savage, 2nd Earl Rivers; John Savage, 2nd Earl Rivers (25 February 1603 – 10 October 1654) - Member of Parliament for Cheshire and supporter of the Royalist cause. Raised the Earl Rivers Regiment of Foote in support of Charles I.

  6. According to Anderson, Great Migration 1634-1635, Vol. 6, R-S., who has an extensive write-up on Captain Thomas Savage, his parents and origins are unknown. He is certainly not the son of Sir Thomas Savage, 1st Viscount Savage and Elizabeth Darcy, Countess Rivers suo jure. They had a son Thomas but he married Elizabeth Whitmore and died in 1655.

  7. This portrait, which was long thought to represent John Williams, the Archbishop of York, and Lord Keeper to James I during the 1620s, has now been conclusively identified by Dr John Adamson (Peterhouse, Cambridge) as depicting Sir Thomas Savage, 1st Viscount Savage, in his robes of office as Chancellor to Queen Henrietta Maria.