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  1. Occupation. Politician. Coat of arms of the 3rd Earl of Jersey at Middleton Stoney church, impaled with the arms of Egerton, his in-laws. Portrait of Anne by Godfrey Kneller. William Villiers, 3rd Earl of Jersey, 6th Viscount Grandison, PC (died 28 August 1769) was an English peer and politician from the Villiers family .

  2. When Sir Edward Villiers - Viscount Grandison van Limerick was born on 15 April 1620, in Brooksby, Leicestershire, England, his father, Sir Edward Villiers, was 35 and his mother, Lady Barbara Chiffinch, was 28. He married Lady Frances Howard in 1642, in Suffolk, England. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 7 daughters.

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  4. William Villiers, 2nd Viscount Grandison (1614-23 September 1643) was an Irish nobleman and Royalist general during the English Civil War. William Villiers was born in London, Middlesex, England in 1614, the son of Sir Edward Villiers, the older half-brother of George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham. Villiers grew up mostly in London, where his father was Master of the Mint at the Tower of ...

  5. Grandison had no issue, and Villiers' half-brother, Buckingham, arranged for Villiers and his sons to inherit the Grandison title. Villiers' eldest son William Villiers, who succeeded as 2nd Viscount Grandison in 1630, and was the father of Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland, mistress of King Charles II. Villiers' second and third sons ...

  6. 19 de nov. de 2021 · William Villiers, 2nd Viscount Grandison was an Irish peer and Royalist soldier who was fatally wounded during the First English Civil War in 1643. William Frederick Le Poer Trench, 5th Earl of Clancarty, 4th Marquess of Heusden was an Irish peer of the House of Lords and a nobleman from the Dutch nobility, and was the deputy lieutenant of County Galway.

  7. George Mason-Villiers, 2nd Earl Grandison. George Mason-Villiers, 2nd Earl Grandison PC (13 July 1751 – 14 July 1800), styled Viscount Villiers between 1767 and 1782, was a British peer from the Villiers family and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1774 to 1780.