-
honoured when he was made Earl of
Ronaldshay, in the
County of
Orkney and Zetland, and
Marquess of Zetland. The Earl of
Ronaldshay is the
courtesy title of the...
- June 1876 – 6
February 1961),
styled Lord
Dundas until 1892 and Earl of
Ronaldshay between 1892 and 1929, was a
British hereditary peer and Conservative...
-
North Ronaldsay (/ˈrɒnəltsiː/, also /ˈrɒnəldziː/, Scots:
North Ronalshee) is the
northernmost island in the
Orkney archipelago of Scotland. With an area...
-
South Ronaldsay (/ˈrɒnəltsiː/, also /ˈrɒnəldziː/, Scots:
Sooth Ronalshee) is one of the
Orkney Islands off the
north coast of Scotland. It is
linked to...
- Mark Zetland, is a
British hereditary peer,
known before 1989 as Earl of
Ronaldshay. Lord
Zetland is the
eldest son of
Lawrence Dundas, 3rd
Marquess of Zetland...
- Council, it is
modeled after British universities.[citation needed] Lord
Ronaldshay,
Governor of
Bengal between 1917 and 1922, was its
first chancellor. He...
-
Rangtong Sukna Tindharia Mahanadi Sonada Tung Ghum
Darjeeling The Earl of
Ronaldshay described a
journey on the
railway in the
early 1920s:
Siliguri is palpably...
- Tashichödzong
Tashichodzong at
night Tsechu festival at Tashichödzong Earl of
Ronaldshay (1923).
Lands of the Thunderbolt: Sikhim,
Chumbi & Bhutan, p. 242. Reprinted:...
- 1989), was a
British hereditary peer,
known before 1961 as the Earl of
Ronaldshay. He was also a lawn
tennis player of some note in the 1940s.[citation...
-
Thomas Holdich 1919–1922
Francis Younghusband 1922–1925 Lawrence, Earl
Ronaldshay 1925–1927
David George Hogarth 1927–1930
Charles Close 1930–1933 Admiral...