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A Descriptive Catalogue of Ancient Deeds
… Easter for all service. [Norf.] A. 8026. Feoffment by John Moray of Hemmesbi and Margery his wife to John Wylde of …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… 3165. Dores is in the presbytery of Inverness and synod of Moray, and in the patronage of the Earl Cawdor; the … is still held by his descendant, the present Earl of Moray. Mary, Queen of Scots, and her husband, Lord Darnley, … of worship. Doune gives the title of Baron to the Earl of Moray.See Kilmadock. Doura DOURA, a village, in the parish of …
Donors to the VCH Oxfordshire Trust
A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 18, Benson, Ewelme, and the Chilterns (Ewelme Hundred)
… Pellew Dermot Roaf The Sandford Trust Lord Saye & Sele Moray Scott-Dalgleish Marian Shaw Francis Sheppard St Johns …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… three broad, containing 10,000 acres, and lies along the Moray Frith, by which it is bounded on the north. The coast … superintendence of the presbytery of Elgin and synod of Moray; patron, Sir Archibald Dunbar, of Northfield, Bart. The …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… church, and subsequently translated to the see of Moray in 1411; Thomas Hay, also dean of Dunbar, and in 1532 … Pentland Frith, the Orkney islands, the German Sea, the Moray Frith, and the mountains of Banff, Aberdeen, and Elgin. …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… and including the old tower built by Randolph, Earl of Moray, and incorporated with the present structure; it is … The parish is in the presbytery of Abernethy and synod of Moray, and in the patronage of the Earl of Seafield; the … united in 1618. The whole is bounded on the north by the Moray Frith, and on the west by the county of Nairn, and …
Alumni Oxonienses
… James (or Atkins) rector of Winifrith, Dorset, bishop of Moray in Scotland 1677, and of Galloway 1680, until his death …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… in the twelfth century, to his brother, Bishop Gilbert Moray, by whom, in 1235, it was transferred to a third brother, Richard Moray, of Culbyn. About the year 1440, it came to the family of Kinnaird of Kinnaird, by an heiress, Egidia Moray; and in 1515. Andrew Kinnaird disposed of it to John …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… on the grounds of Drumseugh, the property of the Earl of Moray, consisting of Moray-place, a spacious octagon, communicating with an oval … railway, and the inmates will be removed to the Regent Moray's house in the Canongate, which will be appropriately …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… of Drummine. The parish, which is frequently called Brae-Moray, is about thirteen miles in extreme length, and seven … with numerous hills, of which the highest, named Knock-Moray, has an elevation of about 1000 feet above the level of … through the parish, and falls into Findhorn loch, in the Moray Frith; the Divie rises in the hills in the southern …
Displaying 131 - 140 of 1394