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  1. WYNN family, of Wynnstay Ruabon. The founder of the family was Hugh Williams, D.D. (1596 - 1670), rector of Llantrisant and Llanrhyddlad, Anglesey, and second son of William Williams of Chwaen Isaf, Llantrisant. Hugh's eldest son Sir William Williams (1634 - 1700), gained distinction as a lawyer; he was speaker of the House of Commons, 1680-1 ...

  2. Charles Watkin Williams-Wynn (9. října 1775 – 2. září 1850, Londýn) byl britský politik ze starého rodu z Walesu. Celkem 53 let byl poslancem Dolní sněmovny za stranu whigů . Byl blízkým příbuzným významné rodiny Grenvillů a mimo jiné synovcem premiéra Williama Grenvilla .

  3. Charles Eryl Wynn-Williams (5 de março de 1903 — 1979) foi um físico britânico.. Bibliografia. Budiansky, Stephen (2000), Battle of wits: The Complete Story of Codebreaking in World War II, ISBN 978-0684859323, Free Press, pp. 234–235, 241, 360

  4. Charles Watkin Williams-Wynn of Llangedwyn, Denbighshire was the second son of Sir Watkin Williams Wynn, 4th bart, of Wynnstay. Following private tutorship, Wynn was admitted to Westminster School in 1784 before entering Christ Church, Oxford in 1791, where he met his lifelong friend, the poet Robert Southey.

  5. Williams Wynn and his elder brother Sir Watkin were satirized as ‘Bubble and Squeak’ and Charles was the latter: he was celebrated for a voice defect that also caused contemporaries to label him ‘Sqwynne’ and, after his aspirations to the Speaker’s chair became known, ‘Mr Squeaker’. A timid young man with antiquarian and literary ...

  6. 27 de nov. de 2023 · Charles Watkin Williams-Wynn (4 October 1822 – 25 April 1896) was a Welsh Conservative politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1868 to 1880. Williams-Wynn was the son of Charles Wiliams-Wynn, who was MP for Montgomeryshire 1796–1850, and his wife Mary Cunliffe daughter of Sir Foster Cunliffe, 3rd Baronet.

  7. In his uncle’s ministry, Williams Wynn was under-secretary at the Home Office, though Windham, who had another arrangement in mind, wrote to Lord Grenville, 17 Apr. 1806: ‘Has Wynn no object which he would like as well as an undersecretaryship?’; to which Grenville replied the same day, ‘Charles Williams is Member for a county, and all his objects are in the House of Commons and in the ...