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Earl of Holdernesse - Encyclopedia In 1606 the king created him Viscount Haddington and Lord Ramsay of Barns, and in 1621 made him an English peer as earl of Holdernesse Ramsay died without surviving issue in February 1626, when his titles became extinct
Holdernesse History, Family Crest Coats of Arms What does the name Holdernesse mean? The roots of the Anglo-Saxon name Holdernesse come from when the family resided in the Holderness district in the East Riding of Yorkshire
Earl of Holderness | Monarchies Wiki | Fandom The title was first held by Odo, Count of Champagne created Earl of Holderness (an area of land occupying the far east of East Yorkshire along the North Sea and Humber Estuary) by his brother-in-law William the Conqueror after the Norman Conquest
Duke of Holdernesse - Baker Street Wiki Sherlock Holmes investigated the kidnapping of his son and heir, Arthur, Lord Saltire, in The Adventure of the Priory School The Duke of Holdernesse was one of the wealthiest and most respectable men in the Empire
Earls Of Holderness - theinfolist. com TheInfoList com - (Earls_of_Holderness) The title Earl of Holderness also known as Holdernesse existed in the late 11th and early 12th centuries as a feudal lordship and was officially cre
Holdernesse - Oxford Reference ‘a mersshy contree’ in Yorkshire in which the friar of The Summoner's Tale preaches and operates (III 1710) It is a flat area east of Hull (Hulle), which contains some notable
3. 3 The Summoners Tale | Harvards Geoffrey Chaucer Website In Yorkshire, at Holdernesse, a friar making his rounds, begging from householders, calls upon old Thomas, who is very ill The wife tells him Thomas is grouchy, and the friar preaches a sermon on the evils of anger
Earl of Holdernesse - 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica In 1606 the king created him Viscount Haddington and Lord Ramsay of Barns, and in 1621 made him an English peer as earl of Holdernesse Ramsay died without surviving issue in February 1626, when his titles became extinct
John Ramsay, Earl of Holdernesse - Westminster Abbey John Ramsay, Viscount Haddington, Baron of Kingston upon Thames and Earl of Holdernesse was buried in St Paul's chapel in Westminster Abbey on 28th February 1626 but he has no monument or marker He was the son of James Ramsay who died about 1580