Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Lionel Tollemache, 5th Earl of Dysart


Related Topics

In the News (Thu 4 Dec 08)

  
  John Maitland, Duke Lauderdale - LoveToKnow 1911
1645), who was created earl of Lauderdale in 1624, and of Lady Isabel Seton, daughter of Alexander, earl of Dunfermline, and great-grandson of Sir Richard Maitland, the poet, a member of an ancient family of Berwickshire, was born on the 24th of May 1616, at Lethington.
He began public life as a zealous adherent of the Presbyterian cause, took the covenant, sat as an elder in the assembly at St Andrews in July 1643, and was sent to England as a commissioner for the covenant in August, and to attend the Westminster assembly in November.
By this time the earl, who had helped to found the Society of the Friends of the People in 1792, had somewhat modified his political views; this process was continued, and after acting as the leader of the Whigs in Scotland, Lauderdale became a Tory and voted against the Reform Bill of 1832.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /John_Maitland%2C_Duke_Lauderdale   (1311 words)

  
  Earl of Dysart - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The title Earl of Dysart (pronounced "Die-z't") was created in 1643 in the Peerage of Scotland, along with the title Lord Huntingtower.
However, in 1670, his daughter Elizabeth received a re-grant of both titles, with the provision that, for the purposes of precedence or seniority, they would be treated as having been created in 1643.
Lionel William John Tollemache, 8th Earl of Dysart (1794-1878)
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Earl_of_Dysart   (181 words)

  
 thePeerage.com - Person Page 3355
     Lionel Tollemache, 5th Earl of Dysart was born on 6 August 1734.
She married Lionel Tollemache, 5th Earl of Dysart, son of Lionel Tollemache, 4th Earl of Dysart, on 19 April 1791.
She married Wilbraham Tollemache, 6th Earl of Dysart, son of Lionel Tollemache, 4th Earl of Dysart, on 4 February 1773.
www.thepeerage.com /p3355.htm   (478 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Earl of Dysart
Earl of Dysart (pronounced "Die-z't") is a title in the Peerage of Scotland.
On the death in 1821 of his great-grandson, the sixth Earl, the Tollemache baronetcy became extinct.
John Jervis Tollemache, 1st Baron Tollemache, was the son of Admiral of the Fleet John Richard Delap Halliday (who in 1821 assumed by Royal licence the surname and arms of Tollemache in lieu of Halliday), eldest son of Lady Jane Halliday, youngest daughter and co-heir of the fourth Earl of Dysart.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Earl_of_Dysart   (528 words)

  
 Dysart
Although he had succeeded his mother as earl in 1696, two years thereafter he was chosen member of the English parliament for the county of Suffolk, being an Englishman, and having his property in England, and was rechosen for the same county in 1700 and 1701.
Of the daughters, Maria-Caroline, the second, married the fourth earl of Fife; and Louisa Grace, the third, became the wife of the sixth duke of St. Albans.
Lady Louisa Manners, the fourth and youngest daughter, married in 1808, John Dalrymple, seventh earl of Stair, which marriage was dissolved in 1809, in consequence of a previous contract in 1804, with Johanna, daughter of Charles Gordon of Cluny.
www.electricscotland.com /History/nation/dysart.htm   (1634 words)

  
 National Trust | Ham House | History
In 1648, she married Sir Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Baronet, of Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, a wealthy and cultivated squire.
Lionel took little interest in the house but by contrast, the 3rd Earl's grandson and heir, another Lionel, the 4th Earl, carried out major structural repairs in the 1740s.
The 5th Earl partially re-landscaped the garden and was succeeded in 1799 by his brother, Wilbraham, who immediately made improvements inside and outside the house.
www.nationaltrust.org.uk /main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-hamhouse/w-hamhouse-history.htm   (596 words)

  
 Lot 109: THE DYSART EPERGNE A MAGNIFICENT GEORGE II SILVER EPERGNE, PAUL CRESPIN, LONDON, 1749, THE CENTRAL - Featured ...
Lionel Tollemache was born at Helmingham Hall in 1708 and became the 4
Earl of Dysart upon the death of his grandfather in 1727.
Earl's architect John James concluded that the exterior of Ham required urgent attention, particularly the bay windows and door frontispiece which was 'gone so far as to endanger even pulling the Roof after it'.
www.artfact.com /artfact/sampleLot.cfm?sample=1849   (1726 words)

  
 Ham House, Richmond
In 1648, she married Sir Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Baronet, of Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, a wealthy and cultivated squire.
Lionel took little interest in the house but by contrast, the 3rd Earl's grandson and heir, another Lionel, the 4th Earl, carried out major structural repairs in the 1740s.
The 5th Earl partially re-landscaped the garden and was succeeded in 1799 by his brother, Wilbraham, who immediately made improvements inside and outside the house.
www.tocatch.info /en/Ham_House,_Richmond.htm   (798 words)

  
 The Silver Bowl - Amy Lloyd's History Part 4
CAPTAIN WILLIAM TOLLEMACHE was born 1663 the youngest son of the Duchess o Lauderdale by her first husband Sir Lionel Tollemache of Helmington, Suffolk.
Tollemache, son of the Duchess of Lauderdale, who killed the purser of H.M.S. Diamond, is here on bail and begs to be brought to trial as soon as possible.
HAM HOUSE One of the properties of the Tollemaches, was Ham House.
www.user.dccnet.com /s.brown/documents/Amy_Lloyd_History_p4.htm   (781 words)

  
 Earl of Dysart
The title Earl of Dysart was created in 1643 in the Peerage of Scotland, along with the title Lord Huntingtower.
However, in 1670, his daughter Elizabeth received a re-grant of both titles, with the provision that, for the purposes of precedence or seniority, they would be treated as having been created in 1643.
Lionel William John Tollemache, 8th Earl of Dysart (1794-1878)
www.xasa.com /wiki/en/wikipedia/e/ea/earl_of_dysart.html   (143 words)

  
 DUKE OF JOHN MAITLAND ... - Online Information article about DUKE OF JOHN MAITLAND ...
James Maitland, 8th earl of Lauderdale (1759–1839), was a member of parliament from 178o until August 1789 when he succeeded his father in the earldom.
Thomas Maitland (1803–1878), a grandson of the 7th earl, who became 11th earl of Lauder-dale.
Barclay-Maitland (1822–1884), a descendant of the 6th earl.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /LAP_LEO/LAUDERDALE_JOHN_MAITLAND_DUKE_O.html   (2220 words)

  
 thePeerage.com - Person Page 3093
Frederick James Tollemache, son of Sir William Talmash, Lord Huntingtower and Catherine Rebecca Grey, on 4 September 1847.
Frederick James Tollemache, son of Sir William Talmash, Lord Huntingtower and Catherine Rebecca Grey, on 26 August 1831.
She married Lionel Tollemache, 4th Earl of Dysart on 22 July 1729.
www.thepeerage.com /p3093.htm   (497 words)

  
 Lord Cromwell
Catherine Cromwell married Sir Lionel, Lord Tollemache of Helmingham, Suffolk, Godson to Queen Elizabeth and ancestor by Catherine to the Earls of Dysart.
Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, Lord High Chamberlain of England and Henry VIII’s chief minister responsible for the dissolution of the monasteries bought Launde for the sum of £1500.
The Earl of Bedford visited Cromwell at Launde, there is a record of the Earl forfeiting the traditional horse shoe to the Lord of the Manor, Edward Cromwell, at Oakham Castle.
ourworld.compuserve.com /homepages/brianpayne1/lord.htm   (8452 words)

  
 Lovat & Strichen
His uncle, Thomas Fraser of Knockie, prevailed upon Simon to execute an inhibition in 1587 to the effect that he would do nothing to hurt the interests of his family or prejudice his heirs, without the consent and advice of his three curators, one of whom was Sir Alexander Fraser, 8th laird of Philorth (c1537-1623).
Æmelia, Countess of Crawford, was buried at Holyrood in February 1711 and the Earl died in London in December 1713.
John Lindsay, 20th Earl of Crawford (1702-1749), in 1747 married Lady Jean Murray [eldest d/o James, 2nd Duke of Atholl], against the wishes of her father.
www.clanfraser.ca /lovat&.htm   (2859 words)

  
 artsworld   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Described by contemporaries as beautiful, ambitious and greedy, she married Sir Lionel Tollemache, a wealthy and cultivated squire in 1648 and had eleven children with him.
Following Tollemache's death in 1669, in 1672 Lady Dysart married John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale, Secretary of State for Scotland, and together they extended and refurnished Ham as a palatial villa reflecting the Duke's status as one of the most powerful ministers of Charles II.
Following her death in 1698, her son, Lionel, took little interest in the house but by contrast, the 3rd Earl's grandson and heir, another Lionel and the 4th Earl, carried out major structural repairs in the 1740s.
www.artsworld.com /genre/features.asp?ID=4074&genreID=6   (876 words)

  
 Chapter 21
His first regiment was the 5th Dragoon Guards, the same as his uncle Abraham Bolton, then as a Lieutenant he served with the Royal Horse Guards, and finally he was a Lieutenant Colonel with the King’s Regiment (2nd Lancashire Militia).
Jemima Amy Bolton (‘Mima’) married on 5th August 1896 Lionel Beresford Bethell, 3rd son of the Hon Slingsby Bethell, CB, DL, JP brother of Lord Westbury.
The youngest, Sarah Maria, was baptised on 5th November 1810 and if Susan Margaret was born after her she would have been 15 or 16 at the time of her marriage, so she must have been born in 1806 as the following deed of 1827 indicates.
www.bomford.net /IrishBomfords/Chapters/Chapter21/Chapter21.htm   (10879 words)

  
 Voyages In Time ~ Family, Friends & Places
Lady Jane Halliday was born Jane Tollemache and was sister to Louisa and Wilbrahim and so a daughter of Grace Carteret Tollemache.
Lionel Robert, however - an Ensign in the Grenadier Guards - was killed at the Siege of Valenciennes in 1793 at the age of eighteen.
In the tradition of the gardens of Ham House, Richmond - former seat of the Dysarts - and of Helmingham - it seems that the creation of magnificent gardens continues to be a forte of the family Tollemache.
www.zipworld.com.au /~lnbdds/home/tollemachecartoon.htm   (1569 words)

  
 tollemache1
Lionel Tollemache of Helmingham and Bentley, Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk (b c1482, d 25.06.1552)
Lionel Tollemache of Helmingham and Bentley, Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk (b c1497, d 05.12.1571, 4th son)
Lionel Tollemache of Helmingham and Bentley, Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk (b c1545, d 11.12.1575, 2nd son)
www.stirnet.com /HTML/genie/british/tt/tollemache1.htm   (766 words)

  
 Edward CROMWELL (4° B. Cromwell)
Harrington wrote a lively and informative account of the Earl’s progress in Ireland, observing of Essex shortly before the Earl’s downfall, "he shifteth from sorrow and repentance to rage and rebellion so suddenly, as well as proveth him devoid of good reason as of like mind".
Sir John Harrington was a godson of Queen Elizabeth and was deputed to appease the Queen's anger against the Earl of Essex.
On l2th Jul 1599 Edward Cromwell was knighted in Dublin by the Earl of Essex.
www.tudorplace.com.ar /Bios/EdwardCromwell(4BCromwell).htm   (8012 words)

  
 Charles Binns Photography landscape and travel photographs
When the Civil War broke out in 1642, Murray naturally joined the Royalist cause, and was created the 1st Earl of Dysart for his loyalty.
Renowned as a political schemer, she is said to have belonged to the Sealed Knot, the secret organisation supporting the exiled King Charles II restoration.
Maitland was a former Scottish Covenanter who had changed sides in the Civil War and was central to the CABAL government under Charles II.
www.charlesbinns.com /pages/ham-house.html   (728 words)

  
 National Portrait Gallery A-Z of Portrait Sitters (L)
Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 5th Marquess of Lansdowne (1845-1927), Viceroy of India and Foreign Secretary.
Maud Evelyn Petty-Fitzmaurice, Marchioness of Lansdowne (1850-1932), 7th daughter of 1st Duke of Abercorn; wife of 5th Marquess of Lansdowne.
Elizabeth Maitland, Countess of Dysart and Duchess of Lauderdale (1626-1698), Beauty; daughter of William Murray, 1st Earl of Dysart; wife of Sir Lionel Tollemache; 2nd wife of John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale.
www.npg.org.uk /live/search/a-z/sitL.asp   (2566 words)

  
 Voyages In Time ~ Family, Friends & Places
Eva Hanbury-Tracy was a daughter - and the eldest child - of the 4th Lord Sudeley and Ada Maria Tollemache and she married the M.P., Harry Anstruther (2nd.
Charles Tollemache and granddaughter of Louisa, Countess of Dysart, was a very beautiful girl and was hated by her mother (who was a daughter of Lord Gardner and a very beautiful woman.) She finally said that either she or the daughter must leave the house, the daughter at the time being 16.
The way in which some of the Thanet plate is in our possession is that Lady Tollemache, one of the daughters who ran away without a husband, set up house with a Miss Lyster and Lady Elizabeth Tufton, who was the last legitimate descendant of the Earls of Thanet.
www.zip.com.au /~lnbdds/home/adasudeley.htm   (3295 words)

  
 Index to royal Genealogical Data - ordered by forename - part 59
Lionel George Henry Seymour, Earl of Portalington 5th Dawson-Damer, b.
Lionel of Antwerp, Duke of Clarence Plantagenet, b.
Lionel William John, Earl of Dysart 8th Tollemache, b.
www.hull.ac.uk /php/cssbct/genealogy/royal/gedFx59.html   (1035 words)

  
 1672 dgun.org   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Maitland began public life as a zealous adherent of the Presbyterian cause, took the Covenant, sat as an elder in the assembly at St Andrews in July 1643, and was sent to the Kingdom of England as a commissioner for the Covenant in August, and to attend the Westminster assembly in November.
From this time onwards he kept his hold upon the king, was lodged at Whitehall, was "never from the king's ear nor council," and maintained his position against his numerous adversaries by a crafty dexterity in dealing with men, a fearless unscrupulousness, and a robust strength of will, which overcame all opposition.
Lauderdale married (1) Lady Anne Home, daughter of the 1st Earl of Home, by whom he had one daughter; and (2) Lady Elizabeth Murray, daughter of the 1st Earl of Dysart and widow of Sir Lionel Tollemache.
plutoi.eu.dgun.org /en/1672   (8085 words)

  
 The Barony of Duddingston
The Duchess of Lauderdale’s first husband, Sir Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Bt, had given her five children of which the elder daughter, Elizabeth Tollemache, married the 1st Duke of Argyll.
The nephew of the 8th Earl succeeded him and was in 1790 raised to the rank of a Marquess.
The Duddingston House in which she lived was replaced with a much larger mansion by the 8th Earl of Abercorn, but it is still possible to imagine the home she loved.
www.baronage.co.uk /2003c/Duddingston.html   (954 words)

  
 Office-Holders: Vice Admirals
as 5th Duke of Bolton 9 Oct. 1759)
1766 Berkeley, Frederick Augustus (Berkeley) 5th Earl of
Viscount Cathcart 9 Nov. 1807; Earl of Cathcart 16 Jul 1814)
www.history.ac.uk /office/viceadmirals.html   (1553 words)

  
 Index to royal Genealogical Data - ordered by forename - part 110
William of Berkshire, Earl of Salisbury 2nd Cecil, b.
William of Salisbury, Earl of Salisbury Longespée, b.
William of Suffolk, Earl of Suffolk Ufford, b.
www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk /genealogy/royal/gedFx110.html   (836 words)

  
 Ham House Investigation Mar 04
It was built in 1610 for Sir Thomas Vavasour, passing in 1626 to William Murray (later created Earl of Dysart), a childhood friend and lifelong supporter of Charles 1st, in whose family it remained until it was given to the National Trust in 1948.
The Ghost Club are most grateful to the National Trust, and to their Property Manager at Ham, for permission to investigate the ghostly phenomena which have been reported from the house and its grounds, and for their help in doing so.
In the lobby outside the Tollemache Room, Tom felt an “anticipation”, while Rosie felt that the room was strongly charged.
www.ghostclub.org.uk /ham_house.html   (2430 words)

  
 The Clutterbuck Book: August 2004   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Peter Clutterbuck, [5th son of Thomas Clutterbuck (6)], of Watford, J.P., born at Watford, 15 February, 1782, died at Newhouse, Watford, 16 January, 1837, aged 54, bur.
of Lionel, Lord Huntingtower, and sister to Lionel, 3rd Earl of Dysart, K.T., she died 8 December, 1772.
Lewis Clutterbuck, of Widcome, Somerset [5th son of Daniel Clutterbuck (10)], Town Clerk of Bath1, Attorney-at-Law; died “after a lingering illness” at Bath, 9 June, 1776, aged 58; bur.
clutterbuckorg.blogspot.com /2004_08_01_clutterbuckorg_archive.html   (13248 words)

  
 Index to royal Genealogical Data - ordered by lastname - part 85
Scot, John of Chester le, Earl of Chester, b.
Scott, John Joseph Nicholas, Earl of Eldon 5th, b.
Scott, Thomas Charles, Earl of Clonmell 5th, b.
www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk /genealogy/royal/gedx85.html   (387 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.