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  1. Eton College | 17,848 followers on LinkedIn. Honouring tradition; inspiring change | Founded in 1440 by King Henry VI, Eton College is a boys’ boarding school with around 1,300 pupils, situated ...

  2. Eton is the most illustrious public school in England; famous for educating the aristocracy, statesmen, and the royalty of countless countries. Founded in 1440, this historic school is usually out of bounds to all but the elite. In the last couple of years however, Eton has started offering guided tours of its historic buildings for one afternoon a week during the summer months. Fully booked ...

  3. 6 de set. de 2021 · The public school in Eton near Windsor is an all boys school that was founded way back in 1440 by Henry VI originally as a sister institution to King's College, Cambridge.

  4. 19th century. William Hay, 18th Earl of Erroll (1801–1846) Winthrop Mackworth Praed (1802–1839), poet and politician. José Agustín de Lecubarri (1802–1874), diplomat and navy officer. Sir John William Lubbock (1803–1865), Vice-Chancellor, University of London, 1837–1842, astronomer and mathematician. Field Marshal Lord William ...

  5. www.etoncollege.com › college-life › boardingBoarding - Eton College

    Home College Life Boarding. Book an Admissions tour. Boys are thrown together in groups of 10 or 11 as 13-year-olds, and they grow up together over the next five intense and action-packed years. Friendships built up during this period and will last for the whole of a person’s life. The roles of House Master and Dame are complex and varied.

  6. Edward Aglionby (1520–c.1587), poet. Thomas Tusser (1524–1580), poet and farmer. Robert Glover (died 1555), Protestant martyr. Laurence Saunders (died 1555), Protestant preacher and martyr. Sir Thomas Sutton (c.1532–1611), founder of Charterhouse School. Sir Humphrey Gilbert (c.1539–1583), coloniser of Newfoundland.

  7. 9 de dez. de 2008 · There is inserted a supplement of 12 pages with heading: There is given in the following pages information as to the places where the one thousand and thirty-one Etonians, whose deaths are attributable to enemy action, were killed or received a fatal wound Compiled by E. L. Vaughan