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  1. General Sir George de Lacy Evans GCB (7 October 1787 – 9 January 1870) was an Irish officer in the British Army who served in four of the United Kingdom's 19th century wars. He became a long-serving Member of Parliament. [3] Life. Evans was born in 1787, in Moig, County Limerick, Ireland.

  2. Sir George de Lacy Evans (Moig, Irlanda, 1787 — Londres, 9 de janeiro de 1870) foi um militar britânico. Depois de estar destinado na Índia, foi quem dirigiu as unidades britânicas, denominada Legião Auxiliar Britânica, enviadas em apoio do reinado de Isabel II durante a Primeira Guerra Carlista na Espanha, chegando a ser general.

  3. Evans, Sir George de Lacy (1787–1870), British army general, was born 7 October 1787 at Moig, Co. Limerick, son of John Evans, gentleman farmer, from Lisready, Co. Limerick, and Mary Ann Evans (née de Lacy) of Leamlara, Co. Cork. Educated at the Woolwich Military Academy, he joined the army in 1806 and was commissioned into the 22nd Regiment ...

  4. 28 de mai. de 2021 · De Lacy Evans was a friend of Major General John Gaspard Le Marchant, a 7th Light Dragoon who founded the Royal Military College, later the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst. He was promoted to full General in 1861 and died on 9 January 1870, aged 82, and is buried in Kensal Green Cemetery, London.

  5. George de Lacy Evans (Moig, en el condado de Limerick, Irlanda, 1787-Londres, 9 de enero de 1870) fue un militar británico. Biografía [ editar ] Estuvo destinado en la India , de donde fue llamado a luchar en la Guerra de Independencia Española , y en la Guerra anglo-estadounidense de 1812 .

    • De Lacy Evans
    • Cementerio de Kensal Green
  6. EVANS, George De Lacy (1787-1870), of 12 Regent Street and 6 Waterloo Place, Mdx. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1820-1832, ed. D.R. Fisher, 2009. Available from Cambridge University Press.

  7. In the 1820s, there were already fears in Britain about Russian expansion and potential interference in the Ottoman Empire and the route to British India. De Lacy Evans, a well-respected army officer, wrote two books about the threat and how it should be addressed.