Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Joshua Reynolds, Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle, detail taken under ultraviolet light during removal of the upper varnish layer. Dark areas indicate where newer material lies over older paint, here revealing extensive networks of retouched cracking.

  2. Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle (Q2079507) From Wikidata. Jump to navigation Jump to search. English noble and diplomat. edit ...

  3. Thomas Howard earl of Arundel, Arundel, Thomas Howard, 14th earl of (1585–1646). Howard's father was a catholic convert and spent the last eleven years of his life in the Tower, wh… Leland Ossian Howard, applied entomology. Howard was the son of Ossian Gregory Howard and Lucy Duham Thurber.

  4. CARLISLE, Frederick Howard, Fifth Earl of (1 748- 1825), a statesman and author, was born in 1748. During his youth he was chiefly known as a man of pleasure and fashion ; and after he had reached thirty years of age, his appointment on a commission sent out by Lord North to attempt a reconciliation with the American colonies was received with sneers by the Opposition.

  5. The 5th Earl was also reputedly the natural father of Howard Staunton (1810–1874), an English chess master regarded as having been the world's strongest player from 1843 to 1851, according to information "gleaned" by chess historian H. J. R. Murray from various sources, although record of Staunton's birth or baptism has never been found.

  6. Carlisle was the eldest son of Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle of Castle Howard, and his wife Lady Margaret Caroline Leveson-Gower, Among his siblings were brothers: Hon. William Howard, Maj. Hon. Frederick Howard, and the Very Rev. Hon. Henry Howard, Dean of Lichfield; and sisters: Lady Isabella Howard (wife of John Campbell, 1st Baron ...

  7. Viceroy of Ireland George Howard, 7th Earl of Carlisle, was a Liberal politician and reformer over a wide range of issues in Britain and Ireland. He entered Parliament in 1826 as MP for his family seat of Morpeth. In 1835 he was appointed to the Privy Council and appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland, commencing a lengthy and intimate acquaintance with the affairs of that country. On the death ...