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  1. editions.covecollective.org › chronologies › cleveland-streetCleveland Street Scandal | COVE

    Lord Ronald Gower was well known in the homosexual community at the time, and was publicly implicated in the Cleveland Street Scandal. Gower was a close friend of Wilde's and is portrayed in The Picture Dorian Gray through the character of Lord Henry Wotton.

  2. 27. Juni 2021 · The Lion Tower, with its barbicans and tête-du-pont, had the honour of a moat to itself, but all this has disappeared, Lion Gate, tower, barbican, tête-du-pont, have all vanished with the lions and other wild beasts which were kept here from the days of the Norman kings until the year 1834, when they were removed to Regent’s Park and formed the nucleus of the Zoological Gardens.

  3. 24. Feb. 2021 · Hier sollte eine Beschreibung angezeigt werden, diese Seite lässt dies jedoch nicht zu.

  4. Lord Ronald Charles Sutherland-Leveson-Gower (1845-1916) was the youngest son of the 2nd Duke of Sutherland, and "a very civilized author of books on eighteenth-century British portrait painters, one of his chief qualifications being his familiarity, as to the manor born, with our great country house collections" (Ward-Jackson). As well as being a British aristocrat, he was the rather retiring ...

  5. 10. Mai 2022 · Title: The Tower of London, (Vol. 2 of 2) Author: Ronald Charles Sutherland Gower. Release Date: May 10, 2022 [eBook #68039] Language: English. Produced by: MWS, Robert Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

  6. Gower Memorial. Aristocratic sculptor Lord Ronald Gower is the master behind this multisculpture homage to Shakespeare, which features the characters of Hamlet (representing philosophy), Prince Hal (history), Lady Macbeth (tragedy) and Falstaff (comedy) as well the Bard himself. The figures and decorative bronze work were cast in France in 1881 ...

  7. It was purchased from Ronald George Scotcher (1914–93) of Eastbourne, who informed the NPG that his father had done ‘a great deal of work for Lord Gower [sic] immediately preceding the first War’ and had also owned an early watercolour by Tuke depicting ‘two old gunboats in Falmouth’.