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Hardinge Giffard was Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain from 1885 to 1886, 1886 to 1892 and 1895 to 1905, and had already been created Baron Halsbury, of Halsbury in the County of Devon, on 26 June 1885, [3] and was made Viscount Tiverton, of nearby Tiverton, at the same time he was given the earldom. Those titles were also in the Peerage of ...
Hardinge Stanley Giffard, 1st Earl of Halsbury, PC (3 September 1823 – 11 December 1921) was a British barrister and Conservative politician. He served three times as Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain , for a total of seventeen years, a record not equaled by anyone except Lords Hardwicke and Eldon .
Halsbury was long a seat of the ancient Giffard family, a distant descendant of which was the celebrated lawyer Hardinge Stanley Giffard, 1st Earl of Halsbury (1823–1921), who adopted the name Halsbury for his earldom and was the author of the essential legal reference books Halsbury's Statutes.
John Anthony Hardinge Giffard, 3rd Earl of Halsbury FRS (4 June 1908 – 14 January 2000), was a British crossbencher peer and scientist, succeeding to his title in 1943. [1]
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Brightley was the seat of a junior line of the prominent gentry family of Giffard of Halsbury in the parish of Parkham.The present house, named Brightley Barton which has long served as a large farmhouse, retains only one room of the former much larger mansion of the Giffards, but the mediaeval retaining walls of the former moat survive, which is a great rarity in North Devon. [3]
Green John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers A Hard Road (1967) 3:00 8 Driftin' Green Fleetwood Mac The Original Fleetwood Mac (1971) 8:29 Recorded 1967 - The Original Fleetwood Mac was an archive album 9 Showbiz Blues Green Fleetwood Mac Then Play On (1969) 4:08 10 Love That Burns Green, Adams Fleetwood Mac Mr. Wonderful (1968) 6:28 11 Looking For ...
The song is associated with Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, who was executed for treason in 1601 after he rebelled against Elizabeth I. The song is sometimes referred to as " The Earl of Essex Galliard" , although that title normally refers to an instrumental version, "The Earl of Essex, his galiard", scored for viol consort and lute .