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MediEvil 2 (stylised as MediEvil II in North America) is a 2000 action-adventure game developed and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation. It is the second instalment of the MediEvil series and a sequel to MediEvil .
MediEvil: Resurrection is a 2005 action-adventure game developed by SCEE Cambridge Studio and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation Portable. It is a re-imagining of the first installment in the series, MediEvil. It was first released as a launch title in September 2005 in North America and Europe.
Sir Edmund Fortescue, 1st Baronet (1642–1666) Francis Fortescue (ca. 1563-1624), English politician Francis Fortescue Urquhart (1868–1934), an English academic
Sir Edmund Fortescue, 1st Baronet (baptised 22 September 1642 – 30 December 1666) was an English politician, MP for Plympton Erle. He was the second son of Sir Edmund Fortescue of Fallapit and his wife Jane, daughter of Thomas Southcote. [1] He was educated at Balliol College, Oxford, matriculating in 1658. [2]
A c. 1753 portrait of George II by Thomas Worlidge.Did the King dismiss Fortescue Aland as a judge in 1727 for a decision that displeased His Majesty? Fortescue Aland, who was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society on 20 March 1712 [8] and became a King's Counsel in 1714, [6] was appointed Solicitor General, first to the Prince of Wales (later George II) on 22 October that year, [9] and to then ...
He was descended from Sir Faithful Fortescue (c.1581–1666), a royalist commander during the English Civil War, a member of the Fortescue family of Buckland Filleigh in Devon, descended from Sir John Fortescue (c.1394-1479), Chief Justice of the King's Bench, of Ebrington Manor, Gloucestershire, a younger grandson of the Fortescue family of Whympston in the parish of Modbury in Devon, the ...
In the beginning of December 1642, Fortescue summoned the posse comitatus of the county to meet him at Modbury, in order to join Sir Ralph Hopton, who was then marching from Cornwall to besiege Plymouth. About two thousand men answered the summons and assembled on 6 December, intending on the next day to join the main army, whose headquarters ...
Fortescue, Thomas (1869), "Life of Sir John Fortescue", The Works of Sir John Fortescue, Knight, Chief Justice of England and Lord Chancellor to King Henry the Sixth, vol. 1, London: Printed for private distribution, pp. 1– 55, OCLC 47732533. Gairdner, James, ed. (1901–1908), The Paston Letters: 1422–1509 A.D.