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  1. Sir John Arundell (1474–1545) Knight Banneret, of Lanherne, St Mawgan-in-Pyder, Cornwall, was "the most important man in the county", being Receiver-General of the Duchy of Cornwall. His monumental brass in the church at St Columb Major in Cornwall was described by Dunkin (1882) as "perhaps the most elaborate and interesting brass ...

  2. John Arundell, son of Sir Thomas, one of the Truthall Arundells, was a colonel of horse for Charles II, and a deputy governor of Pendennis Castle, in 1665, under his relative Richard, Baron Arundell of Trerice; he died in 1671.

  3. Sir John Arundell (circa 1366 – 11 January 1435), called The Magnificent, of Lanherne in the parish of St Mawgan in Pydar in Cornwall, was an English knight who inherited large estates in the County of Cornwall. He was Sheriff of Cornwall and was one of Henry IV of England’s Kings Knights.

  4. He was appointed sheriff of the latter county on the last day of the Leicester Parliament (19 May 1414), and on 23 Oct. following, by virtue of his office, he held the elections in the shire court at Exeter, returning his eldest son John Arundell of Bideford as one of the shire knights.

  5. 2 de abr. de 2024 · A six-person Nantucket jury (three women and three men) found him not guilty. John Arundel, 58, of Washington D.C. had his name cleared of the Aug. 17, 2022 charges of assault & battery and strangulation following a trial that lasted approximately four hours.

  6. Há 2 dias · John Arundell was M.P. for Bodmin and a royalist colonel killed in November 1644. He was the second son of Sir John Arundell, popularly known in Cornwall as 'Jack for the King' Arundell. Samuel Cosworth was the son of Edward Cosworth, esq, and Dorothy, daughter of Sir John Arundell of Trerice.

  7. ARUNDELL, Sir John (by 1500-57), of Lanherne, St. Mawgan-in-Pyder, Cornw. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1509-1558, ed. S.T. Bindoff, 1982. Available from Boydell and Brewer.