- A
count palatine (Latin
comes palatinus), also
count of the
palace or
palsgrave (from
German Pfalzgraf), was
originally an
official attached to a royal...
-
Paulsgrave Williams (c. 1675 –
after 1723),
first name
occasionally Paul,
Palsgrave, or Palgrave, was a
pirate who was
active 1716–1723 and
sailed in the...
- John
Palsgrave (c. 1485 – 1554) was a
priest of
Henry VIII of England's court. He is
known as a
tutor in the
royal household, and as a
textbook author...
- John
Palsgrave Wyllys (1754-1790) was a
United States Army
officer from Connecticut.
Wyllys was the son of
George Wyllys and Mary Woodbridge, and the...
- New York:
Palsgrave MacMillan Weber 2015:37-58 in Weber's
Rationalism and
Modern Society, Tony
Waters and
Dagmar Waters eds. New York:
Palsgrave MacMillan...
-
Pfalzgraf (translated both as "Count Palatine" and, historically, as "
Palsgrave"),
Raugraf ("Raugrave", see "Graf", and
Waldgraf (comes nemoris), where...
- 1603,
Prince Henry's Men;
after 1612, the
Elector Palatine's Men or the
Palsgrave's Men) was a
playing company or
troupe of
actors in the
Elizabethan and...
- verb for "made into a Reichsfürst" + Graf.
Pfalzgraf Count Palatine or
Palsgrave (archaic)
Pfalz 'palatial estate, Palatinate' + Graf.
Originally ruled...
-
rudimentary education prior to his
elevation to the
peerage in 1525. John
Palsgrave grumbled loudly that
Henry had been
taught to
recite his
prayers in a...
- (count), it was
equivalent to such ****ociated
compound titles as Landgrave,
Palsgrave, and Gefürsteter Graf, yet
remained lower than
Herzog (duke) and even...