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  1. Heraldic achievement of the Coventry family, Earls of Coventry. Earl of Coventry is a title that has been created twice in the Peerage of England. The first creation for the Villiers family was created in 1623 and took its name from the city of Coventry. It became extinct in 1687.

    • Viscount Deerhurst, Baron Coventry (extinct 1719)
    • Peerage of England
  2. Coventry family, Earls of Coventry. This page summarises records created by this Family. The summary includes a brief description of the collection (s) (usually including the covering dates...

  3. George William Coventry, 11th Earl of Coventry (25 January 1934 – 14 June 2002) was a British hereditary peer and politician of the Conservative Party. Life and career. Coventry was the fourth child and only son of George Coventry, 10th Earl of Coventry and Nesta Donne Philips.

  4. George William Coventry, 13th Earl of Coventry (born 5 October 1939) is an English peer. Coventry is the son of Commander Cecil Dick Bluett Coventry, and was educated at Prince of Wales School, Nairobi. In 1965, he married Gillian Frances Randall, by whom he has one daughter: Lady Diana Elizabeth Sherwood Coventry (b. 1980)

  5. The Croome collection held at Worcestershire Record Office includes papers from the time of the 1st Baron Coventry of Allesborough, right up to the 9th Earl of Coventry. To make it easier to understand which Earl was seated at Croome throughout which years, here is a chronological table of the Barons and Earls of Coventry, the heads of the ...

  6. George William Coventry, 13th Earl of Coventry (born 5 October 1939) is an English peer. Coventry is the son of Commander Cecil Dick Bluett Coventry, and was educated at Prince of Wales School, Nairobi. In 1965, he married Gillian Frances Randall, by whom he has one daughter: [1] Lady Diana Elizabeth Sherwood Coventry (b. 1980)

  7. In 1751, the new 6th Earl of Coventry took over the helm of the vast Croome Estate and it is to the good fortune of historians today that he seems to have been an obsessive keeper of financial records. His stewards were encouraged to keep meticulous records – there are still three copies of all the accounts covering most of the 18th century.