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  1. Vor 3 Tagen · In 1569 Queen Elizabeth restored Little Packington to Edward, Lord Clinton, then Earl of Lincoln. He sold it to Sampson Baker in 1573, and on the death of the latter in 1584 his nephew Humphrey Baker succeeded.

  2. Vor 3 Tagen · She became secondly the wife of Edward lord Clinton, lord admiral of England, who after her death was in 1572 created earl of Lincoln. She had issue by her first husband two sons, Robert and George, who both died without issue, and one daughter, Elizabeth, who became his heir, and was, first, the wife of Thomas Wymbish (who claimed ...

  3. Vor 5 Tagen · Edward the ninth lord Clinton, his great grandson, was a distinguished commander at sea, and lord high admiral of England in 1550. He was advanced to the title of earl of Lincoln and died in 1585. Henry, second earl of Lincoln, his son, by Ursula, daughter of William lord Stourton, was one of the commissioners on the trial of Mary ...

  4. Vor 4 Tagen · This is a list of the various different nobles and magnates including both lords spiritual and lords secular. It also includes nobles who were vassals of the king but were not based in England (Welsh, Irish, French). Additionally nobles of lesser rank who appear to have been prominent in England at the time.

  5. Vor 22 Stunden · In 1301 at Lincoln, the young Edward became the first English prince to be invested with the title of Prince of Wales, when the King granted him the Earldom of Chester and lands across North Wales, hoping to give his son more financial independence.

  6. Vor 22 Stunden · George Malcolm (1917–1997), Pianist, Cembalist, Dirigent und Komponist. Arthur Thomas Malkin (1803–1888), Pionier der Bergsteigerei und Schriftsteller. James Mallet (* 1955), Evolutionsbiologe und Entomologe. Mark Malloch Brown, Baron Malloch-Brown (* 1953), Politiker und stellvertretender Generalsekretär der Vereinten Nationen.

  7. Vor 4 Tagen · He challenges Lincoln’s 1858 explanation for his late arrival on the antislavery scene – which was that it had been a ‘minor question’ with him until the Kansas-Nebraska Act overturned what he had taken as a national consensus – with the simple observation that for this to be true, Lincoln would have had to turn a blind eye ...