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  1. Hace 2 días · Edward Villiers and Family. Sir Edward Villiers was baptised in the Abbey on 15th April 1620, son of Sir Edward Villiers (died 1626) half brother to George 1st Duke of Buckingham, and his wife Barbara, daughter of Sir John St John of Lydiard Tregoz in Wiltshire. Barbara was buried 16th September 1672 in the north ambulatory near St Paul's chapel.

  2. RIPPINGILLE, Edward Villiers 1817. Bristol Museums United Kingdom. The artist is seen working at his easel at his home in Portland Street, Kingsdown.

  3. 21 de nov. de 2021 · Biography. Sir Edward Villiers, born circa 1585, was the second son of Sir George Villiers by his first wife, Audrey Saunders (d.1587), the daughter and heir of William Saunders (d. 14 July 1582) of Harrington, Northamptonshire by Frances Zouche, the daughter of William Zouche of Bulwick, Northamptonshire, son of John Zouche, 7th Baron Zouche (c.1440-1527) of Harringworth, who fought for ...

  4. Edward Villiers (Master of the Mint) (ca. 1585–1626), English political figure, highest officer of the Royal Mint; half-brother to George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham. Edward Villiers (1620–1689), member of English noble family; fourth son of Edward Villiers, Master of the Mint. Edward Villiers, 1st Earl of Jersey (1656–1711), English ...

  5. Sir Edward Villiers (April 1620 – July 1689) was an English Royalist soldier and courtier. Part of the powerful Villiers family, he was a friend of Edward Hyde, chief advisor to Charles I and Charles II from 1641 to 1668. He fought for the Royalists in the First English Civil War and went into exile from 1649 until 1652 when he returned to England. During the Interregnum, he was a member of ...

  6. Villiers Charitable Institutions was founded in 1821 under the will of Hannah Villiers. While archives on Hannah and Edward Villiers are limited, it is known that Hannah Villiers, née Scott, was born in 1733 to a gentry family. She married Mr. Edward Villiers, a gentleman of similar social standing circa. 1758, and together they contributed ...

  7. Consequently, before the patent was discussed on 3 Apr., he offered to withdraw ‘if the House shall think him uncapable of sitting here during the debate’.41 This was not deemed necessary despite Sir Francis Nethersole’s objections, and despite the discovery by the committee that examined the leading patentee Matthias Fowle of ‘some things that concerned Sir Edward Villiers’.42