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  2. John Dyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Dyer

    John Dyer was the fourth of six children born to Robert and Catherine Cocks Dyer in Llanfynydd, Carmarthenshire, five miles from Grongar Hill.His exact birth date is unknown, but the earliest existing record of John Dyer dates his baptism on 13 August 1699 [2] – within fourteen days after his birth as was the tradition of the time – in Llanfynnydd parish.

  3. Falmouth Art Gallery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falmouth_Art_Gallery

    Falmouth Art Gallery is a publicly funded art gallery in Cornwall, with one of the leading art collections in Cornwall and southwest England, [1] which features work by old masters, major Victorian artists, British and French Impressionists, leading surrealists and maritime artists, children's book illustrators, automata, contemporary painters and printmakers.

  4. Dyer baronets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyer_Baronets

    There have been two baronetcies created for persons with the surname Dyer, both in the Baronetage of England. One creation is extant as of 2015. One creation is extant as of 2015. The Dyer Baronetcy , of Staughton in the County of Huntingdon, was created in the Baronetage of England on 8 June 1627 for Lodowick Dyer, a grandson of Richard Dyer .

  5. History of Cornwall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Cornwall

    The tribal name is therefore likely to be the origin of Kernow or later Curnow used for Cornwall in the Cornish language. John Morris suggested that a contingent of the Shropshire Cornovii was sent to South West Britain at the end of the Roman era, to rule the land there and keep out the invading Irish, but this theory was dismissed by ...

  6. Richard Grenville (died 1550) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Grenville_(died_1550)

    Arms of Grenville: Gules, three clarions or Early 16th c. bench end in Sutcombe Church in Devon, showing the arms of Grenville Richard Grenville (died 1550) lord of the manor of Stowe, Kilkhampton in Cornwall and of Bideford in Devon, was an English soldier, politician, and administrator who served as a Member of Parliament for Cornwall in 1529, [1] and served as Sheriff of Cornwall and ...

  7. Grongar Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grongar_Hill

    Grongar Hill is located in the Welsh county of Carmarthenshire and was the subject of a loco-descriptive poem by John Dyer.Published in two versions in 1726, during the Augustan period, its celebration of the individual experience of the landscape makes it a precursor of Romanticism.

  8. Old Town Hall, Falmouth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Town_Hall,_Falmouth

    The building was commissioned as a Congregational chapel probably around 1700. [2] It was designed in the Queen Anne style, built in brick, and was completed in around 1710. It is one of the oldest surviving non-conformist chapels in Cornwall, with only the Marazion Quaker Meeting House being older, and the one in Kea being of similar date. [1]

  9. Timeline of Cornish history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Cornish_history

    Whilst in Cornwall he carried out important work on steam engines and gas-lights. 1788: James Ruse, a Cornishman from Launceston, arrives in New South Wales aboard the transport Scarborough, part of the First Fleet of Australian convict ships. [45] 1792: Cornwall County Library (public) founded in Truro. 1792–1802: French Revolutionary Wars

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