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  • [[File:On Broad Law - geograph.org.uk - 510655.jpg|left|thumb|200px|Broad Law]] The highest point of Peeblesshire lies south of the Tweed; [[Broad Law]] at 2,756 feet. Close by and almost as high is [[Cramalt Craig]] (2,723 fe
    7 KB (1,132 words) - 21:14, 12 September 2015
  • ...lbert and other members of the Royal Family, including their future son-in-law Crown Prince Frederick of Prussia, later Emperor Frederick III.<ref>Crook, ...970s- St George's Hospital). Stanhope Lodge (Decimus Burton, 1824–25) at Stanhope Gate,<ref>Burton also provided lodges at Cumberland Gate and Grosvenor Gate
    13 KB (2,029 words) - 12:15, 23 June 2018
  • ...Victoria County History (VCH), London, 1962.</ref> It passed to his son-in-law, George, Lord Berkeley, and thence by descent, inter alia, to Lord Berkeley * William Roper (c. 1496 – 1578), husband of Margaret Roper, thus son-in-law of Sir and Saint Thomas More; with his second son, Anthony, Lords of the ma
    16 KB (2,355 words) - 10:23, 21 April 2017
  • ...Wear consist of several streams draining from the hills between [[Killhope Law]] and [[Burnhope Seat]], the latter the [[county top]]. The head of the ri ...Wear Weardale 20070617.jpg|right|thumb|250px|The wooded riverbanks between Stanhope and Frosterley]]
    10 KB (1,502 words) - 14:26, 7 July 2016
  • ...]], [[Middleton-in-Teesdale]], [[Stanhope, County Durham|Stanhope]], [[Tow Law]], and [[Wolsingham]],—though some also consider the Durham Dales to exte
    2 KB (395 words) - 21:32, 15 March 2015
  • ...John's Chapel, County Durham|St John's Chapel]], [[Stanhope, County Durham|Stanhope]] and [[Wolsingham]]. The small towns of [[Stanhope, County Durham|Stanhope]] and [[Wolsingham]] appear to have existed as Anglo-Saxon settlements befo
    11 KB (1,767 words) - 21:25, 16 March 2015
  • ...r, and it passed through his family until 1737, when it was sold by Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield to Charles Savage.<ref name=BHistBucksVol357>[htt ...rom the house, was erected by Mary Anne in 1862 in memory of her father-in-law.
    8 KB (1,259 words) - 08:13, 19 September 2019
  • ...1795). On his death the estate passed to a distant cousin William Spencer Stanhope who changed his name to Roddam. He was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 18
    1 KB (223 words) - 09:20, 19 September 2019
  • Other nearby places include the [[Alemoor Loch]] reservoir, [[Stanhope Law]], [[Wardlaw]] and the [[Ettrick Water]], and [[Ettricklaw]], the site of t
    988 B (143 words) - 09:01, 16 May 2016
  • ...o away down a narrow lane.<ref name=soe>Mackay, Page 618</ref> The farm of Stanhope is located on the other side of the burn with a ford existing in the 19th c ...he well and a path leading down to a ford across the Brow Burn that led to Stanhope Farm.<ref name=os/>
    12 KB (2,154 words) - 21:55, 24 June 2016
  • ...I had either to submit to work there or starve - Necessity with me had no law - The other mines in which I had wrought are worked in a different, safer, 'Strontian House' was built for Sir Alexander Murray of Stanhope in the late 1720s and was named after Colonel Horsy, Governor of the York B
    17 KB (2,615 words) - 10:08, 12 October 2017
  • ...14}}</ref><ref name="Mead2010">{{cite book|author=David Mead|title=The New Law of Peaceful Protest: Rights and Regulation in the Human Rights Act Era|url= ...d [[Chevening]] in Kent, a house that had been left to him by the 7th Earl Stanhope in 1967. The Prince of Wales found the journey from Chevening to Buckingham
    24 KB (3,649 words) - 12:32, 30 January 2021
  • ...Aal-IFI&ved=0CE8Q6AEwBg 67]}}</ref> This site is currently occupied by the Stanhope Street Convent of the Irish Sisters of Charity. In 1674 the Manor of Grange
    18 KB (2,751 words) - 22:45, 24 February 2021
  • Following dissolution, the estate was granted to Michael Stanhope, and around 1600 a manor house, 'Shelford Manor, was built on the site. The ...n, Nottinghamshire]]), for 60 years at a rental of £20. In November 1537 Stanhope, and his wife Anne, were granted the priory site, including the priory chur
    10 KB (1,487 words) - 21:11, 6 October 2021
  • ...of [[Surrey]]. It was long a lordly seat, the principal seat of the Earls Stanhope: it is now a government official residence provided usually to the Foreign ...at [[Hampton Court Palace|Hampton Court]]. Much remodelled by the 3rd Earl Stanhope in the late 18th century, the house was extensively restored in the 1970s b
    10 KB (1,592 words) - 17:01, 13 October 2021