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  1. Media in category "Frances Twysden, Countess of Jersey". The following 5 files are in this category, out of 5 total. FrancesLadyJersey.JPG 397 × 465; 48 KB. Mw37372.jpg 591 × 783; 171 KB. Frances Villiers, Countess of Jersey (1753-1821) by Thomas Beach.jpg 1,303 × 1,657; 1.22 MB. George Villiers 4th Earl of Jersey (3) - Fashionable ...

  2. Philip Twysden was born circa 1714 to William Twysden (1677-1751) and Jane Twisden (c1682-c1756) and died 2 November 1752 of unspecified causes. He married Frances Carter (1718-) 27 February 1749 .

  3. 7 de oct. de 2020 · Frances Twysden was born in London on February 25, 1753, the daughter of the late Rt. Rev. Dr. Philip Twysden, Lord Bishop of Raphoe, and his second wife, Frances Carter. Rev. Twysden was a younger son of Sir William Twysden, 5th Baronet of Roydon Hall.

  4. She was born in 1605 and her mother was Elizabeth Blount. [1] Her father was Sir Nicholas Saunders of Nonsuch who had been knighted in 1603. She was the youngest of his three daughters. [2] They lived at Ewell in Surrey. Her father had been imprisoned as a Catholic but he had converted to the Church of England and became a member of parliament.

  5. Philip Twysden (1713–1752), was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Church of Ireland as Lord Bishop of Raphoe from 1747 to 1752. The circumstances of his death later became the subject of scandalous rumour. (en) dbo:almaMater: dbr:University_College,_Oxford; dbo:birthDate: 1713-09-07 (xsd:date) dbo:birthPlace: dbr:Kent; dbo:child

  6. everything.explained.today › Philip_TwysdenPhilip Twysden Explained

    Spouse: (1) Mary Purcell (2) Frances Carter. Children: 2, including Frances, Countess of Jersey. Alma Mater: University College, Oxford. Philip Twysden (1713–1752), was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Church of Ireland as Lord Bishop of Raphoe from 1747 to 1752. The circumstances of his death later became the subject of scandalous rumour.

  7. His promotion appears in The Gazette on 28 February 1746 (Gazette issue 8619): ‘And also for the Promotion of the Reverend Dr. Philip Twysden to the See of Raphoe’. The Gazette documents no wrongdoing on Twysden’s part, perhaps in line with the cause of death being circulated that it was due to an inflammation.