- John
Charlewood (died 1593) was an
English printer. He went into
business early in Mary's
reign in
partnership with John Tisdale, in Holborn. He was important...
- with one of the
other Royal Navy
officers parti****ting,
Edward Charlewood.
Charlewood and
Fitzjames found that
contrary to the
understanding of Colonel...
-
Charlwood Lawton (17
February 1659 – 12 June 1721) was an
English lawyer and phrase-making pamphleteer, a Whig of
Jacobite views. He
invented the term...
- John
Francis Charlewood Turner (9 July 1927 – 3
September 2023) was a
British architect and
theorist known for his work on
informal self-help
housing and...
- 2022,
Favorite Reports" (XLS). TÜİK.
Retrieved 19
September 2023. Cpt.
Charlewood (1871). "Euphrates
Valley Railway".
Report and
Transactions of the Devonshire...
- Hon.
William Finch PC (18
January 1691 – 25
December 1766) of
Charlewood, Hertfordshire, was a
British diplomat and Whig
politician who sat in the House...
-
Development at the Open University, and his wife,
Catherine Kaplinsky (née
Charlewood), a psychotherapist. Kaplinsky's
paternal grandparents were Jewish, originating...
- furori [it] (On the
Heroic Frenzies, 1585). Some of
these were
printed by John
Charlewood. Some of the
works that
Bruno published in London,
notably The Ash Wednesday...
- died in 1807 and he
remarried to
Harriet Charlewood on 28 July 1807.
Harriet was a
daughter of
Benjamin Charlewood, of Windlesham, Surrey. Together, they...
- only
surviving child of the 5th Duke of
Roxburghe and the
former Harriet Charlewood (c. 1778–1855).
Before his parents'
marriage in 1807, his
father was widowed...