Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Political career. Family. References. Lord Edward Bentinck. Lord Edward Charles Cavendish-Bentinck (3 March 1744 – 8 October 1819), known as Lord Edward Bentinck, was a British politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1766 to 1802. Background and education.

  2. Lieutenant General Lord William Henry Cavendish-Bentinck GCB GCH PC (14 September 1774 – 17 June 1839), known as Lord William Bentinck, was a British soldier and statesman who served as the governor of Fort William (Bengal) from 1828 to 1834 and the first Governor-General of India from 1834 to 1835.

  3. Lord Edward Bentinck (1744–1819) Lord George Bentinck (1715–1759) Mary Capel, Countess of Essex, née Bentinck (1679–1726) Willem Bentinck van Rhoon, 1st Count Bentinck (1704–1774), Dutch politician; married Charlotte Sophie of Aldenburg (1715–1800), ruling Countess of Varel and Kniphausen

  4. 19 de set. de 2022 · She was the daughter of Reverend Charles Bentinck’s younger brother, Lieutenant-General Arthur Cavendish-Bentinck. Once her half-brother William succeeded as 6 th Duke of Portland in 1879, she was granted the rank of a duke’s daughter, so entitled to be called ‘Lady Ottoline’, while her husband (married in 1902) was simply Mr Philip Morrell.

  5. 22 This was the Muslim tradition, Scholars, themselves were rewarded, by titles and presents, at Court, and by pensions and grants of lands. Mr Thomason, in his Minute of 8 April 1841, writes, that at Delhi. “they have always been accustomed to regard these colleges as eleemosynary institutions for poor students.….

    • Percival Spear
    • 1938
  6. m. 28 Dec. 1782, Elizabeth, da. of Richard Cumberland, the dramatist, 2s. 2da. Offices Held. Biography. Nicknamed ‘Jolly Heart’, Lord Edward Bentinck entered Parliament because he was the brother of a Duke, but had no liking for it. He was returned unopposed at Lewes on the Duke of Newcastle’s interest, as a compliment to his brother.

  7. out Lord Edward Bentinck, described by Horace Walpole as his ‘idle and worth-less younger brother’, and lent as much as £56,000 to his rakish friend George Byng (Lord Torrington), which he never got back. In addition, he recklessly spent large sums of money in the general election of 1768 in a determined