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  1. La famille Bowes-Lyon est une famille de la noblesse écossaise, descendante du 9e comte de Strathmore et Kinghorne, John Lyon, et de la riche héritière Mary Eleanor Bowes. À la suite de leur mariage en 1767, le nom de famille devient Lyon-Bowes, puis Bowes-Lyon . Le membre le plus connu de la famille est Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, devenue par ...

  2. 23 de nov. de 2020 · Nerissa and Katherine lived in the Bowes-Lyon family home in Scotland until 1941. According to a 1987 report from Canadian outlet Maclean's, it was their mother Fenella Bowes-Lyon who decided to place them in full-time care in the English town of Redhill in the county of Surrey (their father John had died in 1930).

  3. 16 de nov. de 2020 · The Bowes-Lyon family had, for centuries, been accused of madness; in the 1800s, rumors spread that they had a deformed heir. They said they'd faked his death and locked him away in Glamis Castle ...

  4. The site where Glamis Castle sits proudly today has remained in the Lyon family as the ancestral seat for the Earls of Strathmore and Kinghorne and their predecessors for 650 years since Sir John Lyon was granted the Thanage of Glamis by King Robert II in 1372. From the 1400s onwards, the castle we know today has been built and has been witness ...

  5. 21 de nov. de 2020 · In 1963, the Bowes-Lyon family reported to Burke’s Peerage, the guidebook to the British aristocracy, that both of the sisters had died, Nerissa in 1940 and Katherine in 1961.The reality of the ...

  6. Frances Dora Smith. Claude George Bowes-Lyon, 14th and 1st Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, KG, KT, GCVO, TD (14 March 1855 – 7 November 1944), styled as Lord Glamis from 1865 to 1904, was a British peer and landowner who was the father of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and the maternal grandfather of Queen Elizabeth II .

  7. 5 de dez. de 2018 · On 14th March 1797 Mary Elizabeth Lyon wrote to Charles Wren, possibly her family solicitor, from her home at Hetton House, County Durham. She warned Charles that they ‘should be on their guard’ when dealing with ‘Sir H. Vane’s coal’ and ended her letter by sending ‘her regards to Mrs Wren and Emma’. Correspondence between Mary Elizabeth Lyon and Charles Wren, dating from the ...