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Winifred Cochrane, Countess of Dundonald (Welsh: Winifred, Iarlles Dundonald) was born on 16 April 1859. She was a philanthropist, [2] a Lady of Grace of the Order of St John, [3] Marchioness of Maranham, [4] and was known within Wales by her bardic name, Rhiannon. She was the Welsh [5] [6] wife of Douglas Mackinnon Baillie Hamilton Cochrane ...
Robert Cochrane (26 January 1931 – 3 July 1966), who was born as Roy Bowers, was an English occultist who founded the tradition of Witchcraft known as The Clan of Tubal Cain. Born in a working-class family in West London, he became interested in occultism after attending a Society for Psychical Research lecture, taking a particular interest ...
Robert Cochran or Cochrane may refer to: Robert Cochran (actor), British actor; Robert Cochran (TV producer), co-creator of the television series 24; Robert Alexander Cochran (1917–1965), American film actor better known as Steve Cochran; Robert E. Cochran, defender at the Battle of the Alamo; Robert Leroy Cochran (1886–1963), former ...
Cochrane's Craft, also known as Cochranianism and The Clan of Tubal Cain, is a religious movement similar to Wicca that considers itself a form of Traditional Witchcraft.It was founded in 1951 by the English witch Robert Cochrane, who himself claimed to have been taught in the tradition by some of his elderly family members, a claim that is disputed by historians such as Ronald Hutton and Leo ...
Circa 1920, (she would have been 13 or 14), she married Robert Cochran and gave birth to a son, Robert, who died in 1925 at the age of 5. [4] After the marriage ended, she kept the name Cochran and began using Jacqueline or Jackie as her given name. Cochran then became a hairdresser and got a job in Pensacola, eventually moving to New York City.
Cochrane's father, The 9th Earl of Dundonald (1748–1831) Thomas Cochrane was born at Annsfield, near Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, Scotland.He was the son of Archibald, Lord Cochrane (1748–1831), who later became, in October 1778, The 9th Earl of Dundonald, and his wife, Anna Gilchrist.
Thomas Cochrane (said to have been executed and forfeited 1482), also referred to as "Robert Cochrane" in sixteenth-century chronicle accounts, was a royal servant and alleged "familiar" or favourite of King James III of Scotland.
Robert Hume Cochrane (July 9, 1924 – May 7, 2010) was bishop of the Diocese of Olympia in the Episcopal Church, serving from 1976 until his retirement in 1990.