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  1. Lord Richard Frederick Cavendish, CB, CMG, DL, JP (31 January 1871 – 7 January 1946), known as Richard Cavendish until 1908, was a British aristocrat, author, magistrate, and politician. Background and education. A prominent figure from the Cavendish family, he was a younger son of Lord Edward Cavendish, third son of the 7th Duke of Devonshire.

  2. Lord Richard Cavendish (1752–1781), MP. George Augustus Henry Cavendish, 1st Earl of Burlington (1754–1834) William Cavendish (1783–1812) William Cavendish, 7th Duke of Devonshire (1808–91), Chancellor of the University of Cambridge 1861–91, for whom the Cavendish Laboratory is named.

    • 1346; 677 years ago
    • Normandy
  3. Richard Hugh Cavendish, Baron Cavendish of Furness FRSA DL (born 2 November 1941), is a British Conservative politician and landowner . Lord Cavendish owns Holker Hall and its 17,000 acre estate overlooking Morecambe Bay in Cumbria.

    • 1 son, 2 daughters
    • British
  4. 17 de may. de 1990 · Lords. Lord Cavendish of Furness. 17 May 1990 - 1 January 2021. Committee memberships. Lord Cavendish of Furness's full title is The Lord Cavendish of Furness DL. His name is Richard Hugh Cavendish, and he has retired from the House of Lords.

  5. Lord Richard Frederick Cavendish, CB, CMG, DL, JP (31 January 1871 – 7 January 1946), known as Richard Cavendish until 1908, was a British aristocrat, author, magistrate, and politician. "North Lancashire" Cavendish as caricatured by Spy ( Leslie Ward) in Vanity Fair, April 1900. Background and education.

  6. El experimento de Henry Cavendish o mejor conocido como “balanza de torsión” fue planeado con el propósito de dar a conocer la masa de la Tierra o como Henry Cavendish propuso “Un experimento para pesar la tierra”. Este descubrimiento fue esencial para descubrir la medida de la constante de gravitación universal, por

  7. Richard Cavendish, one of the Cavendishes of Suffolk from whom the Devonshires descended, was an Elizabethan politician and scholar—for twenty-eight years he was a student at Cambridge and Oxford—who translated Euclid into English and wrote poems including (and in spirit foreshadowing our Henry Cavendish) No Joy Comparable to a Quiet Minde, whic...