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  1. Edward Villiers, 1:e earl av Jersey, född 1656, död den 25 augusti 1711, var en brittisk diplomat, dotterson till Theophilus Howard, 2:e earl av Suffolk, kusin till hertiginnan av Cleveland, farfar till Thomas Villiers, 1:e earl av Clarendon . Villiers stod i hög gunst hos Vilhelm III och drottning Maria, för vilken hans mor varit uppfostrarinna.

  2. 29 de ene. de 2024 · Before too long, Villiers had easily ousted the king’s previous favourite, Robert Carr, and thus ascended through the ranks with aplomb. Only a year after meeting the king, Villiers was knighted as Gentleman of the Bedchamber and the following year became the King’s Master of the Horse. By 1617 he had become the Earl of Buckingham and two ...

  3. 6 de mar. de 2017 · By the death of that accomplished brother, she succeeded to two-thirds of his possessions. She had then been married six months to Edward, Earl of Bedford; and, at his decease, which happened in 1627, she was left in the uncontrolled possession of all that nobleman’s estates.

  4. Thomas Villiers, 1st Earl of Clarendon, PC (1709 – 11 December 1786) was a British politician and diplomat from the Villiers family. Clarendon was the second son of William Villiers, 2nd Earl of Jersey, and his wife Judith Herne, daughter of Frederick Herne. Property. Value.

  5. 5 de mar. de 2024 · George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, was a prominent figure in the court of King James VI and I, who wielded considerable influence due to his long-standing position as the king’s favourite. The second son born to a family of middling nobility in Leicestershire in c1592, Villiers grew up knowing a tumultuous family life and financial ...

    • Elinor Evans
    • 3 min
  6. Language Label Description Also known as; English: Edward Villiers, 1st Earl of Jersey. British diplomat

  7. THE following imperfect attempt to bring together a few notes relating to the ancient aristocracy of England, is confined in the first place to the families now existing, and regularly established either as knightly or gentle houses before the commencement of the sixteenth century; secondly, no notice is taken of those families who may have assumed the name and arms of their ancestors in the ...