Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore (6 February 1731 – 4 September 1771), styled The Hon. Frederick Calvert until 1751, was an English nobleman and last in line of the Barons Baltimore. Although he exercised almost feudal power in the Province of Maryland, he never once set foot in the colony, and unlike his father, he took ...

  2. 4 September 1771. Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore. Baron Baltimore, of Baltimore, County Longford, was a title in the Peerage of Ireland. It was created in 1625 and ended in 1771, upon the death of its sixth-generation male heir, aged 40. Holders of the title were usually known as Lord Baltimore for short.

  3. Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore (6 February 1731 – 4 September 1771), styled The Hon. Frederick Calvert until 1751, was an English nobleman and last in line of the Barons Baltimore.

  4. Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts. Books. Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore (1732 - 1771) RA Collection: People and Organisations. Travel-writer, poet, libertine. Profile. Born: 1732. Died: 1771. Gender: Male. Share. Works associated with Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore in the RA Collection.

  5. Frederick Calvert, 6th, and last, Baron Baltimore, of Woodcote Park. Lord of Horton Manor 1751 – 1769. Calvert Crest. The birth of Frederick Calvert took place on 6 February 1731/2 in Epsom, Surrey, presumably at Woodcote Park, home of his parents Charles Calvert, 5th Lord Baltimore, and Mary (nee Janssen) who had married 20 July 1730.

  6. Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore (1731–1771) inherited from his father the title Baron Baltimore and the Proprietary Governorship of the Province of Maryland in 1751. The 6th Lord Baltimore wielded immense power in Maryland, which was then a colony of the Kingdom of Great Britain, administered directly by the Calverts.

  7. 1769: English lord lands in Vienna with his eight-woman harem. Frederick Calvert, the 6th Baron Baltimore (1731-71) was one of the 18th century’s most notorious womanisers. When his father died in 1751, Calvert inherited his titles and the family’s most lucrative asset: the colony of Maryland.