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Gutenberg

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  • 22557 - Canada
  • 22574 - engravings
  • 22700 - Brittany
  • 22718 - France cathedral
  • 22719 - Old Fort Snelling
  • 22832 - The Cathedral Church of Canterbury [2nd ed.]., by Hartley Withers
  • 22880 - Bell's Cathedrals: A Short Account of Romsey Abbey
  • 23095 - Wilmington
  • 23107 - Exploration - maps
  • 23458 - C19 author line drawings - "Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great"
  • 23668 - Bell's Cathedrals: The Cathedral Church of Salisbury
  • 23802 - Mr. & Mrs. Herne
  • 23881 - History of Punch
  • 24586 - Wesleyan Chapel
  • 24616 - Bell's Cathedrals: Southwark Cathedral
  • 24624 - Henry Ford illustrator
  • 24635 - exeter
  • 24654 - Chaldea
  • 24670 - The Botanical Magazine Vol. 8, by William Curtis

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Possible additional images at

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Provinces of India--Volume I (of IV), by R.V. Russell]

The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction

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http://search.live.com/results.aspx?q=&scope=books#q=Goldsworthy%20Gurney&filter=all&start=1&t=IZkoE8YncYLfMLaDethdPw&sq=Goldsworthy%20Gurney

Frendraught's DNB articles for wikifying

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Knollys married Catherine, daughter of William Carey, esquire of the body to Henry VIII, by Mary, daughter of Sir Thomas Boleyn, earl of Wiltshire, and sister of Queen Anne Boleyn. Lady Knollys was thus first cousin to Queen Elizabeth, and sister to Henry Carey, lord Hunsdon [q.v.] . She died, aged 39, at Hampton Court, while in attendance on the queen, 15 Jan. 1568–9, and was buried in April in St. Edmund's Chapel in Westminster Abbey, at the royal expense (Hatfield MSS. i. 415). Elizabeth keenly felt her loss (ib. i. 400). A broadside epitaph by Thomas Newton, dated in 1569, belonged to Heber (cf. Bibl. Heber. ed. Collier, p. 55). She left seven sons and four daughters. Of the latter, Lettice (1540–1634) was wife successively of Walter Devereux, earl of Essex, Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester, and of Sir Christopher Blount [see under DUDLEY, ROBERT]; Cecilia, maid of honour to Queen Elizabeth, married Sir Thomas Leighton, captain of Guernsey (NICOLAS, Hatton, p. 281); Anne, married to Thomas, lord de la Warr; and Catherine, married (1) to Gerald Fitzgerald, lord Offaly, and (2) Sir Philip Boteler of Watton Woodhall.[1]

All Knollys's sons were prominent courtiers in his lifetime. They were, according to Naunton, at continual feud with the Norris family, and, aided by Leicester's influence, kept their rivals in subjection until Leicester's death. Henry, the eldest son, described as of Kingsbury, Warwickshire, was educated at Magdalen College school, Oxford, and after accompanying his father to Germany, is said to have matriculated at the college, although his name does not appear in the university register, and to have obtained there the reputation of being a very cultivated and religious man. He was elected M.P. for Shoreham in 1562–3, and for Oxfordshire in 1572, and accompanied his brother-in-law, Walter Devereux, earl of Essex, to Ireland in 1574. He was an esquire of the body to Queen Elizabeth. His will, dated 21 Dec. 1582, was proved 14 May 1583. He married, before 11 April 1568, Margaret (1549?–1606), daughter of Sir Ambrose Cave, by whom he had two daughters, Elizabeth (dead before 1632), wife of Sir Henry Willoughby (d 1649) of Risley, Derbyshire, and Lettice, wife of William, fourth lord Paget (d 20 Aug. 1629), from whom descend the Marquises of Anglesey.[1]

William, the second son, and eventual heir, is noticed separately.[1]

Edward, the third son, was elected M.P. for Oxford 2 April 1571, and died about 1580.[1]

Robert, the fourth son, was appointed keeper of Sion House in 1560, and usher of the Mint in the Tower, 5 Feb. 1578. He was M.P. for Reading from 1572 to 1589, and for Breconshire from 1589 to 1604, subsequently sitting for Abingdon, 1614, and again in 1623–4 and 1625, and for Berkshire in 1620. He was created K.B. 24 July 1603, and died in January 1625. He married Katherine, daughter of Sir Rowland Vaughan of Porthamel, Anglesey.[1]

Richard, the fifth son, described as of Stanford-in-the-Vale, Berkshire, M.P. for Northampton in 1588 and for Wallingford in 1584, died at Rotherfield Greys 21 Aug. 1596, having married Joane, daughter of John Higham of Cliffords, Sussex, and sister of John Higham of Stanford. Her second husband was Francis Winchcombe of Bucklebury, Berkshire. She was buried at Rotherfield Greys 10 Oct. 1631. Sir Robert Knollys (d 1659), her son by her first husband, was knighted 10 Jan. 1612–13, and acquired Rotherfield Greys from his uncle William 4 March 1630–1. The estate was finally alienated from the family in 1686.[1]

Francis, sixth son, leased from the crown the manor of Battel, near Reading. He was well known at court as ‘young Sir Francis,’ and was M.P. for Oxford 1572–88, and for Berkshire in 1597 and 1625. His will was proved in 1648. He married Lettice, daughter of John Barrett of Hanham, Gloucestershire, by license dated 21 Dec. 1588. A son Sir Francis, who seems to have been M.P. for Reading in 1625–6–8 and 1640, died in 1643, and his daughter, Letitia or Lettice, was second wife of John Hampden [q.v.] .[1]

Thomas, apparently seventh son, distinguished himself in the warfare in the Low Countries, acting as governor of Ostend in 1586, and prominently aiding Peregrine Bertie [q.v.] in the siege of Bergen in 1588. He married Odelia, daughter of John de Morada, marquess of Bergen.[1]

Northumberland

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Ladykirk

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Ladykirk is a parish and small settlement in Berwickshire in the Scottish Borders. It is situated on the north bank of the Tweed, opposite and overlooking Norham. Ladykirk is mainly notable for its highly distinctive stone-roofed church, of sixteenth century Scottish Gothic design, commissioned by James IV.

The settlement of Ladykirk comprises a small number of houses and farms, and to the south, Ladykirk House, a stately home with ornamental gardens and an extensive riding stables.

The parish of Ladykirk, created by James IV, subsumed into it two older parishes, Upsettlington and Horndean, and the settlements associated with these. It measures 2.5 miles east to west, and 1 mile north to south.

Ladykirk church

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The church though of no very great relative antiquity, has a peculiar and very romantic origin. As the story goes, James IV, when crossing a ford in the Tweed near by at the head of his army, was in danger of being swept away by the swollen current. While in this plight he prayed earnestly to the Virgin Mary for deliverance, and vowed that if he should be saved he would build a church in honour of "Our Lady". The erection which sprang up in fulfillment of this vow was called Ladykirk.[2]

Ladykirk was one of the last pre-Reformation churches erected in Scotland, and is still substantially unimpaired.[2]

The church is cruciform in plan, and consists of an aisleless nave with a tower at the west end, a chancel with a semi-hexagonal termination, and north and south transepts, or transeptal chapels, similar in form to the chancel. Internally the nave measures 41 feet 8 inches in length, by 23 feet 3 inches in width; the chancel is 36 feet long, and of the same width as the nave; and the internal projection of the chapels is 15 feet 10 inches, and 16 feet 4 inches, respectively. The style of the architecture, as might have been expected, is far from pure, and displays the strong leaning to First-Pointed forms so characteristic of Scottish Gothic in its latest phases. The walls are ornamented with nineteen buttresses, on the top of which are carved figures, some of them now much worn by time and want of due care. Two string courses are carried round the building a short distance above the basement, the upper one rounded above, the lower sloping, and both hollow or concave below. A slightly projecting cornice, with a hollow on the under side, runs along the top of the wall beneath the eaves.[2]

The windows are mostly plain, lanciform openings, divided into two pointed lights by a nominal branching at the top, an exception being the east window of the chancel, which is wider than the others of this form, and is divided into three lights by two monials branching and intersecting in the head. The three principal windows in the south wall, however, are different in style, being wide, depressed-segmental or elliptical-headed apertures, each containing three pointed lights. The exterior window jambs have, in every case, two outer plain-chamfered orders, and an inner or tracery order hollow-chamfered. The interior jambs consist of a plain splay, with a quirked edge-roll carried up round the rear arch. Over every window, except one in the north wall of the nave, is a label or dripstone, terminating at each side in a rudely-sculptured head.[2]

Entrance has been provided to the interior by three doorways, the principal one being at the west end of the south wall of the nave. It is round-headed ; the jambs are composed of two continuous filleted rolls, with a wide hollow between; and the upper string course before described is carried round the head as a dripstone. The day light measures 8 feet from the ground to the crown of the arch, and is 5 feet in width. Another doorway of smaller dimensions, leading into the chancel through its south wall, displays in the jambs a single, continuous, filleted roll, the dripstone as in the first-mentioned example being merely a continuation of the upper string course round the head. The third, which is in the north wall of the nave, is now concealed on the outside by a building recently erected to contain the heating apparatus of the church. There is a blocked doorway in the wall of the south transept, but it is evidently relatively modern.[2]

The tower is of four stages, each of the three lower vaulted internally, but undistinguished on the outside except by small, rectangular, chamfered openings in the west face. The upper stage is modern (1743), and is surmounted by a kind of four-sided dome, with a belfry above, altogether out of harmony with the rest of the edifice. A wide, square-headed doorway, on the west side of the tower, affords access to the interior of the lowest or ground stage; and an assent to the upper stages is provided by a newel -stair, placed in a turret occupying the angle between the north wall of the tower and the west wall of the nave.[2]

The aspect of the interior of the church, though not wanting in impressiveness, is singularly bare. It has a pointed vault, the plainness and barrenness of which are only partially relieved by a series of transverse ribs in the nave and chancel, and of shorter diagonal ones at its eastern and lateral extremities, all of them broadly chamfered, and resting on moulded corbels. The arches opening into the transepts are of two chamfered orders, rising from capitaled responds with mouldings of debased character. These, however, are wholly restorations, although they may probably be exact reproductions of the original work. The superincumbent walls are carried above the roof outside, and form gables which terminate the roofs of the transepts at their inner extremities a very unusual, if not altogether unique, feature.[2]


Place Borough article
Calderdale Calderdale
Bradford City of Bradford
Salford City of Salford
Sunderland City of Sunderland
Wakefield City of Wakefield
Coventry Coventry
Birmingham Government of Birmingham
Kirklees Kirklees
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Manchester Manchester City Council
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Rochdale Metropolitan Borough of Rochdale
Rotherham Metropolitan Borough of Rotherham
Sandwell Metropolitan Borough of Sandwell
Sefton Metropolitan Borough of Sefton
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St Helens Metropolitan Borough of St Helens
Stockport Metropolitan Borough of Stockport
Walsall Metropolitan Borough of Walsall
Wigan Metropolitan Borough of Wigan
Wirral Metropolitan Borough of Wirral
Newcastle upon Tyne Newcastle City Council
North Tyneside North Tyneside
Sheffield Sheffield City Council
South Tyneside South Tyneside
Tameside Tameside
Trafford Trafford
Wolverhampton Wolverhampton
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Cite error: The named reference dnb was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b c d e f g James Robson, The churches and churchyards of Berwickshire, 1896, pp.139-142