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Edna, the Inebriate Woman is the second episode of the second season of the BBC anthology TV series Play for Today, originally broadcast on 21 October 1971. Edna, the Inebriate Woman was written by Jeremy Sandford, directed by Ted Kotcheff, produced by Irene Shubik, and starred Patricia Hayes.
Court appointments are the traditional positions within a royal, ducal, or noble household. In the early Middle Ages , when such households were established, most court officials had either domestic or military duties; the monarch's closest advisers were those who served in the household.
Darnall argued the point before the Court of King's Bench. Oneby, being convicted of murder, committed suicide by opening a vein on the night before the day appointed for the execution. Darnall successfully defended in 1730 Thomas Bambridge, late warden of the Fleet Prison, on his trial for the murder of a prisoner. In 1733 he was placed on a ...
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... Sir John Darnall (died 1735) (1672–1735), his son, English lawyer
John Darnall was the son of Ralph Darnall of Loughton's Hope, near Pembridge, Herefordshire, Clerk to the Parliament during the Protectorate. He was assigned in 1680 to argue an exception taken by the Earl of Castlemaine , on his trial for complicity in the Popish Plot , to the evidence of Thomas Dangerfield , on the ground that the witness had ...
Henry Darnall was born in Clohamon, County Wexford in 1645, the son of English barrister Philip Darnall and his wife Mary, the daughter of Sir Henry Breton. Darnall was the first of his family to emigrate to England's North American colonies, and arrived in the Province of Maryland in 1664, when he was granted a tract of 236 acres in what was then Calvert County. [1]
Here resteth the bodies of Henry Darnall, of Bird's Place, in this Parish, Esq., Councellor at Law, of Gray's Inn, and of Mary his Wife, Daughter of William Took, Esq; one of the Auditors of his Majesty's Court of Wards and Liveries, by whom he had Issue, John, Henry, Anne, Thomas, Susan, Philip and Ralph Darnall, all living at the time of his ...
He merged the two publications into "The Queen: The Ladies Newspaper and Court Chronicle" in 1864. [1] Elizabeth Lowe was offered the position of editor with Howard Cox (the owner's nephew) as overall manager of the enlarged magazine. [2] Paris Fashions in "The Queen, The Ladies Newspaper and Court Chronicle", 5th of July 1873