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Sir Gelli Meyrick (also Gelly or Gilly) (1556? – 13 March 1601) was a Welsh supporter of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, and conspirator in Essex's rebellion ...
Sir John Meyrick (1584–1659), third son of Sir Francis, fought in the Thirty Years' War under Gustavus Adolphus and became MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme in the Short Parliament as later Long Parliament. Gelly Meyrick, brother of Sir John, was an ensign in the Bishops' Wars. He was knighted 26 March 1639.
Vaughan married Margaret, a daughter of Sir Gelly Meyrick, [5] with whom he had issue. Vaughan's father-in-law Sir Gelly Meyrick took part in the Earl of Essex's revolt and was executed for treason on 13 March 1601. Meyrick's daughter Margaret Vaughan and his son Roland Meyrick were restored in blood and name by King James I in 1606. [6]
In an undated letter from Skeres to Essex's right-hand man Gelly Meyrick, [17] he indicates that he is for some reason no longer in the Earl's good books, and seeks Meyrick's help in returning to the Earl's service. He insists that he intends to amend his previous ways (which seems to refer to his touting for loan sharks) which suggests a date ...
Sir Gelly Meyrick [3] 1601: John Philipps [3] MPs 1601–1832. Election Member [4] Party 1604 Alban Stepney: 1614 Sir John Wogan: 1620 1624 Sir James Perrott: 1625
Richard Vaughan was the elder of the two sons of John Vaughan, 1st Earl of Carbery, and his first wife Margaret Meyrick, daughter of Sir Gelli Meyrick. [1] In his youth he travelled abroad and went to Madrid in 1622, possibly with his father and the Prince of Wales on the occasion of the ill-fated Spanish Match.
Sir Robert Sidney Sir William Brooke: Brooke killed in duel, 1597 and replaced in 1598 by Percival Hart: Canterbury: John Boys Sir Henry Finch: Rochester: Sir Edward Hoby (Sir) Thomas Walsingham (elder) Queenborough: Sir George Carew Michael Sondes: Maidstone: Sir Thomas Fludde Sir John Leveson
Carmarthenshire boundaries 1885–1918. Until 1832, Carmarthen was a borough constituency consisting of the town of Carmarthen.. Between 1832 and 1918 Carmarthen was a district of boroughs constituency, consisting of Carmarthen itself and Llanelli, and was sometimes called "The Carmarthen Boroughs".