oo Ba e SRR ARG S i i T e 2 R s 2w £ YEETES e 3 e
... ~% ,-‘/’ Y Sy ‘*,.: friend of Vanbrugh through the Kit-Kat the garden are ...
... ~% ,-‘/’ Y Sy ‘*,.: friend of Vanbrugh through the Kit-Kat the garden are ...
... ~% ,-‘/’ Y Sy ‘*,.: friend of Vanbrugh through the Kit-Kat the garden are ...
... ~% ,-‘/’ Y Sy ‘*,.: friend of Vanbrugh through the Kit-Kat the garden are ...
... redemption of British prisoners of war. In I 710 until I 713 he was Envoy Extraordinary to Portugal. In I 715, he was elected as Whig MP for West Looe in Cornwall. Two years later he bought the Seaton Delaval estate, a Delaval seat since the 12th century, from ...
... redemption of British prisoners of war. In I 710 until I 713 he was Envoy Extraordinary to Portugal. In I 715, he was elected as Whig MP for West Looe in Cornwall. Two years later he bought the Seaton Delaval estate, a Delaval seat since the 12th century, from ...
... victor of La Hogue, defeating a French fl eet sent in support of J ames 11. Thereafter, he was an influential member of the Whig 'junto'. MP for Cambridgeshire, he was created Earl of Orford in 1697. He clearly spent a great deal of money on Chippenham ...
... victor of La Hogue, defeating a French fl eet sent in support of J ames 11. Thereafter, he was an influential member of the Whig 'junto'. MP for Cambridgeshire, he was created Earl of Orford in 1697. He clearly spent a great deal of money on Chippenham ...
... royal family and a large marine painting of La Hogue. The latter, together with several Van de Velcles and a portrait of the Whig ~unto ', went to Ombersley Court, Worcestershire, built by the lst Lord Sanclys in the early 18th century. Lord Sanclys's wife ...
... though she was married to the richest man in England and came herself of one of the richest of families, the Spencers. The Whig oligarchy that ruled England for so much of the century found gambling irresistible and its social life was centred round it ...
... though she was married to the richest man in England and came herself of one of the richest of families, the Spencers. The Whig oligarchy that ruled England for so much of the century found gambling irresistible and its social life was centred round it ...
... devastating fire that reduced half the town to ashes. Worse still was the fact that most of the surrounding landowners were Whigs hostile to the king, and as he left the burnt town, he was subject to not one but two plots to capture and assassinate him ...
... devastating fire that reduced half the town to ashes. Worse still was the fact that most of the surrounding landowners were Whigs hostile to the king, and as he left the burnt town, he was subject to not one but two plots to capture and assassinate him ...