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Portrait of an East India Company man, perhaps Thomas Theophilus Metcalfe, a painting by Jivan Ram, Agra, 1824. Sir Thomas Theophilus Metcalfe, 4th Baronet, KCB (2 January 1795 – 3 November 1853) was an East India Company civil servant and agent of the Governor General of India at the imperial court of the Mughal Emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar.
KBC Band (also sometimes referred to as The Kantner Balin Casady Band) [1] [2] was formed in 1985 by former Jefferson Airplane (later Jefferson Starship) members Paul Kantner (guitar and vocals), Marty Balin (vocals and guitar) and Jack Casady ().
In March 1989, Central Scottish's legal name was changed in preparation for its July 1989 merger with Kelvin Scottish to Kelvin Central Buses (KCB) in preparation for privatisation. [1] [2] KCB had a difficult beginning with ongoing industrial action. By the time the dispute was resolved a number of new operators had stepped in to take on the ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... (KCB) - Since 1815 this has been the second level of the Order of the Bath ...
2 January 1815: Military division [9] [10] General Sir Alured Clarke, KB: 2 January 1815: Military division [11] [12] General Sir John Hely-Hutchinson, commonly called Lord Hutchinson, KB: 2 January 1815: Military division [13] [14] Admiral Sir John Thomas Duckworth, Bt., KB, RN: 2 January 1801: Military division [8] Admiral Sir James Saumarez ...
Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC) is the state-run media organisation of Kenya. [2] It broadcasts in English and Swahili, as well as in most local languages of Kenya.. The corporation was launched as a radio service in 1928 when Kenya was a British colony, making it the first radio station in Kenya.
Bruce joined the Royal Navy in 1803. [2] He took part in the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. [2] He also took part in the War of 1812. [2] He became Captain of HMS Britannia in 1823, of HMS Imogene in 1836, of HMS Agincourt in 1842 and of HMS Queen in 1847. [3] In 1851 he was appointed Commodore of the West Africa Squadron. [2]
Cromer Ashburnham by Camille Silvy (1861). Major-General Sir Cromer Ashburnham KCB (13 September 1831 – 25 February 1917) was a British Army officer. [1]He was born in 1831, the fourth son of Sir John Ashburnham, 7th Baronet, and joined the Army in 1855, commissioned in the 60th Rifles. [2]