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  2. Thomas Fuller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Fuller

    Thomas Fuller (baptised 19 June 1608 – 16 August 1661) was an English churchman and historian. He is now remembered for his writings, particularly his Worthies of England, published in 1662, after his death.

  3. John Vicars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Vicars

    John Vicars (1582, London – 12 April 1652, Christ's Hospital, Greyfriars, London) was an English contemporary biographer, poet and polemicist of the English Civil War. His best-known work is English Worthies or England's Worthies , whose full title is England's Worthies under whom all the Civil and Bloudy Warres since Anno 1642 to Anno 1647 ...

  4. List of family seats of English nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_family_seats_of...

    John Bernard Burke, A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England (Scott, Webster and Geary, London, 1838) Bernard Burke, The General Armory of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales, Comprising a Registry of Armorial Bearings from the Earliest to the Present Time (Heritage Books, London, 1840)

  5. Nine Worthies of London - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nine_Worthies_of_London

    He was Lord Mayor of London in 1418 and in 1420 became a Member of Parliament. Sir Thomas White, who, in 1554, helped keep the citizens loyal to Mary Tudor during Wyatt's rebellion. A merchant tailor and son of a poor clothier, he founded St John's College, Oxford. He became both Sheriff and later Lord Mayor of London. John Hawkwood.

  6. List of family seats of Irish nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_family_seats_of...

    This is an incomplete index of the current and historical principal family seats of clans, peers and landed gentry families in Ireland. Most of the houses belonged to the Old English and Anglo-Irish aristocracy, and many of those located in the present Republic of Ireland were abandoned, sold or destroyed following the Irish War of Independence and Irish Civil War of the early 1920s.

  7. Nine Worthies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nine_Worthies

    The Nine Worthies were also a popular subject for masques in Renaissance Europe. In William Shakespeare's play Love's Labour's Lost the comic characters attempt to stage such a masque, but it descends into chaos. The list of Worthies actually named in the play include two not on the original list, Hercules and Pompey the Great. Alexander, Judah ...

  8. The Complete Peerage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Complete_Peerage

    The Complete Peerage (full title: The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom Extant, Extinct, or Dormant); first edition by George Edward Cokayne, Clarenceux King of Arms; 2nd edition revised by Vicary Gibbs et al.) is a comprehensive work on the titled aristocracy of the British Isles.

  9. David Lloyd (biographer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Lloyd_(biographer)

    The Statesmen and Favourites of England since the Reformation, London, 1665 and 1670, 8vo.A reprint of the work appeared under the title of State Worthies in 2 vols. London, 1766, 8vo, under the editorship of Sir Charles Whitworth, who added the characters of the sovereigns of England, and sought to counteract the effect of Lloyd's extravagant eulogies of the royalists by introducing extracts ...