enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Thomas Tyndall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Tyndall

    Tyndall commissioned the Royal Fort House in Tyndalls Park in Bristol, now part of the University of Bristol. The house was built around 1767. [5] Tyndall's daughter Caroline married into another family heavily involved in the slave trade, the Brights. Bristol University holds a painting of Tyndall and his wife and children, painted by Thomas ...

  3. Tyndall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyndall

    The arms of the Tyndall family of Deane and Hockwald. [1]Tyndall (the original spelling, also Tyndale, "Tindol", Tyndal, Tindoll, Tindall, Tindal, Tindale, Tindle, Tindell, Tindill, and Tindel) is the name of an English family taken from the land they held as tenants in chief of the Kings of England and Scotland in the 11th, 12th and 13th centuries: Tynedale, or the valley of the Tyne, in ...

  4. Tyndalls Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyndalls_Park

    Tyndall's Park is an area of central Bristol, England. It lies north of Park Row and Queen's Road, east of Whiteladies Road and west of St Michael's Hill, between the districts of Clifton, Cotham and Kingsdown. It includes the campus of Bristol Grammar School, and many of the buildings of the University of Bristol.

  5. Royal Fort House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Fort_House

    The Royal Fort House is a historic house in Tyndalls Park, Bristol.The building currently houses the University of Bristol's Faculty of Science offices, the Brigstow Institute, Elizabeth Blackwell Institute for Health Research, the Cabot Institute and the Jean Golding Institute for data-intensive research.

  6. Tyndall (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyndall_(disambiguation)

    Tyndall is the name of an English family taken from the land they held as tenants in chief of the Kings of England and Scotland in the 11th, 12th and 13th centuries. Tyndall may also refer to: People

  7. Charles Edward Bright - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Edward_Bright

    He was the fifth son of Robert Bright, of Bristol and Abbots Leigh, Somerset, by Caroline, daughter of Thomas Tyndall, of The Fort, Bristol. The Bright family were merchants who owned land in the West Indies, and were compensated £8,384 by the British government for 404 slaves upon the abolition of slavery. [2]

  8. Humphrey Tyndall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humphrey_Tyndall

    Humphrey Tyndall descended from the noble, English, Tyndall family. He was the fourth son of Sir Thomas Tyndall of Hockwold, Norfolk and his second wife, Amy Fermor, daughter of Sir Henry Fermor of East Barsham, Norfolk. [2] Tyndall entered Cambridge University in 1555, matriculating at the age five or six as a pensioner of Gonville Hall.

  9. Tyndale Baptist Church - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyndale_Baptist_Church

    & A. Robinson, and mayor of Bristol in 1866. [1] The first minister was the Revd Richard Glover (1837–1919), President of the Baptist Union in 1884 and active in promoting the work of the Baptist Missionary Society. [1] Glover served the church until 1911. [2] Several members of the church were prominent in Bristol public life.