<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV" /><SPAN name="Page_326" id="Page_326"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
<h4>THE ROMANCE OF FAMILY TREES</h4>
<p>Such are a few of the scenes which arrest the eyes as the panorama of
our aristocracy passes before them; but it would require a library of
volumes to do anything like adequate justice to the infinite variety of
the dramas it presents. There is for instance a whole realm of romance
in the origins of our noble families whose proud palaces are often
reared on the most ignoble of foundations; and whose family trees
flaunt, with questionable pride, many a spurious branch, while burying
from view the humble roots from which they derive their lordly growth.</p>
<p>Although Cobden's assertion that "the British aristocracy was cradled
behind city counters" errs on the side of exaggeration, there is no
doubt that in the veins of scores of the proudest English peers runs the
blood of ancestors who served customers in City shops.</p>
<p>When, a couple of centuries ago, John Baring, son of the Bremen Lutheran
parson, Dr Franz Baring, opened his small cloth manufactory on the
outskirts of Exeter, his most extravagant ambition was to build up a
business which he could hand over to <SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327"></SPAN>his sons, and to provide a few
comforts for his old age; if any one had told him that he was laying the
foundations of four families which should hold their heads proudly among
the highest in the land he would no doubt have laughed aloud.</p>
<p>Yet John Baring lived to see his only daughter wedded to John Dunning,
who made a Baroness of her. Of his four sons, Francis was created a
Baronet by William Pitt, and found a wife in the cousin and co-heir of
his Grace of Canterbury. The second son of this union, Alexander, was
raised to the Peerage as Baron Ashburton, won a millionaire bride in the
daughter of Senator Bingham, of Philadelphia, and, from the immense
scale of his financial operations, was ranked by the Duc de Richelieu as
"one of the six great powers of Europe"—England, France, Russia,
Austria, and Prussia being the other five. Sir Francis's eldest
grandson, after serving in the exalted offices of Chancellor of the
Exchequer and First Lord of the Admiralty, was created Baron Northbrook,
a peerage which his son raised to an earldom; a second grandson
qualified for a coronet as Baron Revelstoke; and a third is known to-day
as Earl Cromer, the maker of modern Egypt, with half an alphabet of high
dignities after his name.</p>
<p>At least three dukes (Northumberland, Leeds, and Bedford) count among
their forefathers many a humble tradesman. Glancing down the pedigree of
his Grace of Northumberland, we find among his direct ancestors such
names as these, William le Smythesonne, of Thornton Watlous, husbandman;
<SPAN name="Page_328" id="Page_328"></SPAN>William Smitheson, of Newsham, husbandman; Ralph Smithson, tenant
farmer; and Anthony Smithson, yeoman. It was this Anthony whose son,
Hugh, left the paternal farm to serve behind the counter of Ralph and
William Robinson, London haberdashers, and thus to take the first step
of that successful career which made him a Baronet and a man of wealth.
From Hugh, the London 'prentice sprang in the fourth generation, that
other Hugh who won the hand of Lady Elizabeth Seymour, and with it the
vast estates and historic name of Percy.</p>
<p>Some years before Hugh Smithson, the farmer's son, set foot in London
streets, Edward Osborne left the modest family roof at Ashford, in Kent,
to serve his apprenticeship to, and sit at the board of, William Hewitt,
a merchant of Philpot Lane, who shortly after moved his belongings to a
more fashionable home on London Bridge. One day it chanced that while
his only daughter, the fair "Mistress Anne," was hanging her favourite
bird outside the parlour window she lost her balance and fell into the
river, then racing in high tide under the arches of the bridge.
Fortunately for Mistress Anne the young apprentice saw the accident;
quick as thought he threw off his shoes and surcoat, and, plunging into
the swollen waters, caught the maiden by her hair as she was being swept
away, and with difficulty dragged her to a passing barge, on which both
found safety.</p>
<p>There was only one proper sequence to this romantic incident; Mistress
Anne lost her heart to <SPAN name="Page_329" id="Page_329"></SPAN>her gallant rescuer, the grateful parents smiled
on his wooing, and one fine August morning, not many months later, the
wedding-bells of St Magnus Church were spreading far and wide the news
that young Osborne had found a bride in one of the fairest and richest
heiresses of London town. In due time Osborne became, as his
father-in-law had been before him, Lord Mayor of London; the son of this
romantic alliance was knighted for prowess in battle; Edward Osborne's
grandson was made a Baronet; and his great-grandson, Sir Thomas, added
to the family dignities by becoming in turn, Baron, Viscount, Earl and
Marquis, and, finally, Duke of Leeds. Thus only two generations
separated the 'prentice lad of Philpot Lane from his descendant of the
strawberry-leaves, the first of a long and still unbroken line of
English dukes, whose blood has mingled with that of many noble families.</p>
<p>The noble house of Ripon has its origin in Yorkshire tradesmen who
carried on business in York, some of whom were Lord Mayors of that city
two or three centuries ago. These early Robinsons added to their fortune
and enriched their blood by alliances with some of the oldest families
in the north of England—such as the Metcalfes of Nappa and the
Redmaynes of Fulford—and slowly but surely laid the foundation of one
of the wealthiest and most distinguished of great English houses. For
four generations the head of the family was a Cabinet Minister, while
one of them was Prime Minister of England.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330"></SPAN>The Marquises of Bath derive descent from one John o' th' Inne, who
was, probably, a worthy publican of Church Stretton, and who was
descended in the seventh generation from William de Bottefeld, an
under-forester of Shropshire in the thirteenth century; while, through
his mother, the late Marquis of Salisbury derived a strain of 'prentice
blood from Sir Christopher Gascoigne, the first Lord Mayor of London to
live in the Mansion House.</p>
<p>Until a few years ago there might be seen in the main street of the
village of Appletrewick, in Yorkshire, a single-storey cottage, little
better than a hovel, which was the cradle of the noble family of Craven.
It was from this humble home that William Craven, the young son of a
husbandman, fared forth one day in the carrier's cart to seek fortune in
far-away London town. Like many another boy who has taken a stout heart
and an empty pocket to the Metropolis as his sole capital, he fought his
way to wealth; and before he died he was addressed as "My lord," in his
character of London's chief magistrate. The eldest son of this peasant
boy won fame as a soldier, became the confidential friend of his
Sovereign, and was created in turn a Baron, a Viscount, and Earl of
Craven. He died unwed, and all his wealth and dignities passed to a
kinsman who, like himself, traced his descent from the peasant stock of
Appletrewick.</p>
<p>The Earls of Denbigh have for ancestor one Godfrey Fielding, who served
his apprenticeship in London city, made a fortune as a Milk Street
mercer, <SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331"></SPAN>and was Lord Mayor when Henry VI. was King. Five years later,
we may note in passing, London had for chief magistrate Godfrey Boleyn,
whose great-grand-daughter wore the crown of England as Queen Elizabeth.</p>
<p>The present Earl of Warwick, whose title was once associated with such
names as Plantagenet, Neville, Newburgh, and Beauchamp, has in his veins
a liberal strain of 'prentice blood. The founder of the family fortunes
was William Greville, citizen and woolstapler of London, who died five
centuries ago, after amassing considerable wealth; while another
ancestor was Sir Samuel Dashwood, vintner, who as Lord Mayor entertained
Queen Anne at the Guildhall in 1702, and found a husband for his
daughter in the fifth Lord Broke.</p>
<p>The father of the noble house of Dudley was William Ward, the son of
poor Staffordshire parents, who was apprenticed to a goldsmith and made
a fortune as a London jeweller.</p>
<p>In the latter half of the seventeenth century Nottingham had among its
citizens a respectable draper named John Smith, who, it is said, made
himself useful to his farmer customers, in the intervals of selling
tapes and dress materials to their wives, by helping them with their
accounts. John lived and died an honest draper, and never aspired to be
anything else; but his descendants were more ambitious. From drapers
they blossomed into bankers and Members of Parliament; and in 1796
George III. departed for once from his rule never to raise a man of
<SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332"></SPAN>business to the Peerage, by converting Robert Smith into Baron
Carrington. His successor abandoned the patronymic Smith for his
title-name; and the present-day representative of John Smith, the
Nottingham draper is Charles Robert Wynn Carrington, first Earl
Carrington, P.C., G.C.M.G., and joint Hereditary Lord Chamberlain of
England.</p>
<p>When William Capel left the humble paternal roof at Stoke Nayland, in
Suffolk, to see what fortune and a brave heart could do for him in
London, it certainly never occurred to him that his name would be handed
down through the centuries by a line of Earls, Viscounts, and Barons.
Fortune had indeed strange experiences in store for the Suffolk youth;
for, while she made a Knight and Lord Mayor of him, she consigned him on
a life sentence to the Tower for resisting the extortions of the
mercenary Henry VII. Sir William's son won his knightly spurs on French
battlefields, wedded a daughter of the ancient house of Roos of Belvoir,
and became the ancester of the Barons Capel, Viscounts Malden, and Earls
of Essex.</p>
<p>The Earls of Radnor owe their rank and wealth to the enterprise which
led young Laurence des Bouveries from his native Flanders to a
commercial life at Canterbury in the days of Queen Bess. From this
humble Flemish apprentice sprang a line of Turkey merchants, each of
whom in turn added his contribution to the family dignities and riches,
until Sir Jacob, the third Baronet, blossomed into a double-barrelled
peer as Lord Longford and Viscount Folkestone. Not the least, by any
means, <SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333"></SPAN>of the descendants of Laurence des Bouveries was Canon Pusey,
the great theologian, who was grandson of the first Lord Folkestone.</p>
<p>Lord Harewood springs from a stock of merchants who accumulated great
wealth in the eighteenth century; and Lord Jersey owes much of his
riches to Francis Child, the industrious apprentice who, in Stuart days,
married the daughter of his master, William Wheeler, the goldsmith, who
lived one door west of Temple Bar.</p>
<p>Other peers who count London apprentices among their ancestors are Lord
Aveland and Viscount Downe, both descendants of Gilbert Heathcote, whose
commercial success was crowned by the Lord Mayoralty in 1711; the
Marquis of Bath, a descendant of Lord Mayor Heyward, whose sixteen
children are all portrayed in his monument in St Alphege Church, London
Wall; and also of Richard Gresham, mercer, who waxed rich from the
spoils of the monasteries, and whose son was founder of the Royal
Exchange. The Earl of Eldon owes his existence to that runaway exploit
which linked the lives of John Scott, the Newcastle tradesman's son, and
Miss Surtees, the banker's daughter.</p>
<p>If George III. during his lengthy reign only raised one business man to
the Peerage, later years have provided a very liberal crop of coroneted
men of commerce. To mention but a few of them, banking has been
honoured—and the Peerage also—by the baronies granted to Lords
Aldenham and Avebury; Lords Hindlip, Burton, Iveagh, and Ardilaun owe
<SPAN name="Page_334" id="Page_334"></SPAN>their wealth and rank to successful brewing; Baron Overtoun was
proprietor of large chemical works; Lord Allerton's riches have been
drawn from his tan-pits; Lord Armstrong's millions come from the
far-famed Elswick engine-works at Newcastle; and Lord Masham's from his
mills at Manningham. The Viscounty of Hambleden has sprung from a modest
news-shop in the Strand; the Barony of Burnham was cradled in a
newspaper office; and Lords Mount-Stephen and Strathcona were shepherd
boys seventy years or more ago, before they found their way through
commerce to the Roll of Peers.</p>
<p>Although these lowly origins are as firmly established as Holy Writ, and
are in most cases as well known to the noble families who trace rank and
riches from them as to the expert in genealogy, they are often as
carefully excluded from the family tree as the poor and undesirable
relation from the doors of their palaces. Not content with a lineage
extending over long centuries, and with a score of strains of undoubted
blue blood, many of our greatest nobles and oldest gentle families
strain after an ancestry which is not theirs, and throw overboard some
obscure forefather to find room for a mythical Norman marauder, who in
many cases exists nowhere but in the place of honour on their own
pedigrees.</p>
<p>"What are pedigrees worth?" asks Professor Freeman. "I turn over a
'Peerage' or other book of genealogy, and I find that, when a pedigree
professes to be traced back to the times of which I know most in detail,
it is all but invariably false. As a rule <SPAN name="Page_335" id="Page_335"></SPAN>it is not only false, but
impossible. The historical circumstances, when any are introduced, are
for the most part not merely fictions, but exactly that kind of fiction
which is, in its beginning, deliberate and interested falsehood."</p>
<p>This scathing criticism refers to pedigrees which profess to be based on
existing records; what shall we say, then, of those family trees which
have their ambitious roots in the dark centuries which no ray of
genealogical light can possibly pierce? Take, for instance, that amazing
pedigree of the Lyte family of Lytes Cary, at the head of which is
"Leitus (one of the five captains of Beotia that went to Troye)," whose
ancestors came to England first with Brute, "the most noble founder of
the Britons." (It is only fair to say that the present representative of
this really ancient family, Sir H. Maxwell-Lyte, an expert genealogist,
turns his back resolutely on the Beotian captain, and even on Brute
himself, and generally lops his family tree in a merciless but most
salutary fashion.)</p>
<p>The College of Arms, among many amazing pedigrees, treasures one of a
family "whose present representative is sixty-seventh in descent in an
unbroken male line from Belinus the Great (Beli Mawr), King of Britain,"
which actually exhibits the arms of Beli, who, poor man, died long
centuries before heraldry was even cradled.</p>
<p>Of families who derive descent from Charlemagne the name is legion; but
even such elongated pedigrees are quite contemptible in their brevity
compared with <SPAN name="Page_336" id="Page_336"></SPAN>others which have at their head no other progenitor than
Adam, the father of us all. At Mostyn Hall, we learn, there is a vellum
roll, twenty-one feet long, of pedigrees, some of which "are traced back
to 'Adam, Son of God,' without any conscious sense of the incongruous";
and these records, we must remember, are in the hand of "a man
thoroughly trustworthy as to the matters of his own time." There is in
the College of Arms a similar family tree which commences boldly with
Adam and the Garden of Eden; and an authority on Welsh pedigrees
declares,</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"A Welshman whose family was in any position in the
sixteenth century can, as a rule, without much trouble
find a pedigree thence to Adam; an Englishman who is
unable to do the same has a natural tendency to regard
all Welsh pedigrees with distrust, not to say contempt."</p>
</div>
<p>Mr Horace Round gives some startling examples of flagrant dishonesty,
where forgery is only one of the implements used. Take, for example,
that shameful story of the "Shipway frauds," which is thus referred to
by a clergyman of the parish.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"In the fall of 1896, by an elaborate system of impudent
frauds, an unscrupulous attempt was made to claim these
monuments for one who was an entire stranger to the
parish. An agent from London was employed in a search for
a pedigree. He, by fraudulent means, concocted a very
plausible story. Genealogies were manufactured, tombs
were desecrated, registers were falsified, wills were
forged—in a word, various outrages were committed, with
many <SPAN name="Page_337" id="Page_337"></SPAN>sacred things in this parish and elsewhere. These
two figures, as part of the pedigree, were deposited in a
niche in the chantry; on either side were huge brass
tablets on which were engraven various untruthful and
unfounded statements."</p>
</div>
<p>In another case Hughenden Church was desecrated to gratify the vanity of
a family of Wellesbourne, anxious to trace their descent from the
Montforts.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"They caused a monumental effigy of an imaginary ancestor
to be carved in the style of the thirteenth century
...they adapted the plate-armour effigy to their purpose
by cutting similar arms on the skirts, and they had three
rude effigies fabricated by way of filling up the gaps
between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries."</p>
</div>
<p>To give but two more out of many cases of similar imposture, the
Deardens, many years ago, actually had a family chapel constructed in
Rochdale Church with sham effigies, slabs, and brasses to the memory of
wholly fictitious ancestors; while in two Scottish churches altar-tombs
were placed to the memory of successive apocryphal lairds of Coulthart.
Such are the lengths to which a craze for ancestry has carried some
unprincipled persons; and there is no doubt that the arts of the forger
are still enlisted in the service of people who crave long descent and
do not scruple as to the methods by which they attain it.</p>
<p>Happily, however, the mania for ancestors does not often take such
extreme and reprehensible forms; its manifestations are usually rather
amusing than criminal. A common weakness is, however plebeian <SPAN name="Page_338" id="Page_338"></SPAN>and
obvious in its origin a surname may be, to dignify it with a Norman or
at least French cradle. Thus we are solemnly assured that the Smithsons
(a name which bluntly proclaims its own derivation) are "a branch of the
baronial family of Scalers, or De Scallariis, which flourished in
Aquitaine as long ago as the eighth century." The first Cooper was not,
as the unlearned might imagine, a modest if respectable tradesman of
that name—no, he was a member of the great house of De Columbers, one
of whom was "Le Cupere, being probably Cup-bearer to the King"; Pindar,
the patronymic of the Earls Beauchamp, is, of course, a translation of
the Norman Le Bailli, and its bearers are "probably descended from
William, a Norman of distinction"; while at least one family of Brownes
springs lineally from "Turulph, a companion of Rollo," founder of the
Ducal House of Normandy. After this, one learns with meek resignation
that the honourable cognomen Smith is derived from <i>Smeeth</i>, "a level
plain"; and that some, at least, of the Parker family had for ancestors
certain De Lions, who flourished bravely under William the Conqueror.</p>
<p>Another favourite vanity is to glorify a name by the prefix De:</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"a particle which has been all but unknown in England
since the first half of the fifteenth century, and which
has never possessed in Great Britain that nobiliary
character which the French nation have chosen to assign
to it. De Bathe, De Trafford, and the rest are
restorations in the modern Gothic manner."</p>
</div>
<p><SPAN name="Page_339" id="Page_339"></SPAN>It is, we fear, a similar vanity which has displaced such modest
surnames as Bear, Hunt, Wilkins, Mullins, Green, and Gossip in favour of
De Beauchamp, De Vere, De Winton, De Moleyns, De Freville, and De Rodes.</p>
<p>This ludicrous yearning for a Norman ancestry is responsible for many of
the absurdities in the pedigrees of even our most exalted families. Thus
it is that we find such statements as this widely circulated, and
accepted with a quite childlike credence:</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"This noble family (Grosvenor) is descended from a long
train in the male line of illustrious ancestors, who
flourished in Normandy with great dignity and grandeur
from the time of its first erection into a sovereign
Dukedom, A.D. 912, to the Conquest of England. The
patriarch of this ancestral house was an uncle of Rollo,
the famous Dane...."</p>
</div>
<p>And again:</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"The blood of the great Hugh Lupus, Duke (<i>sic</i>) of
Chester, flows in the Grosvenor veins."</p>
</div>
<p>This pleasing fiction still rears its head unabashed in spite of all
attempts to destroy it; in its honour the late Duke of Westminster was
actually named "Hugh Lupus" at the baptismal font, while his younger
brother was labelled Richard "de Aquila"; and yet it is an indisputable
fact that the Grosvenor ancestors cannot be carried beyond a Robert de
Grosvenor, of Budworth, who lived a good century after the Conquest, and
who has no more traceable <SPAN name="Page_340" id="Page_340"></SPAN>connection with Rollo than with the Man in
the Moon.</p>
<p>The Ducal House of Fife, we are told, "derives from Fyfe Macduff, a
chief of great wealth and power, who lived about the year 834, and
afforded to Kenneth II., King of Scotland, strong aid against his
enemies, the Picts." The present Duke, however, has the good sense to
disclaim any hereditary connection with the old Earls of Fife, and to
place at the top of his family tree one Adam Duff, who laid the
foundation of the family prosperity in the seventeenth century. The
Spencers, it is claimed, spring lineally from the old baronial
Despencers, "being a branche issueing from the ancient family and
chieffe of the Spencers, of which sometymes were the Earles of
Winchester and Glocester, and Barons of Glamorgan and Morgannocke."
This, no doubt, is a very distinguished origin; but, alas! the earliest
provable ancestors of this "noble" family were respectable and
well-to-do Warwickshire graziers, and the first authentic title on the
true pedigree is the knighthood conferred on John Spencer in 1519, less
than four centuries ago. Similarly the Russells, Dukes of Bedford, are
said to be derived from one Hugh de Russell, or Rossel (who took that
name from his estate in Normandy), one of the Conqueror's attendant
barons on his invasion of England. Here, again, facts fail lamentably to
support the descent claimed, since the earliest known progenitor of this
"great house" was that Henry Russell who was sent to Parliament to
represent <SPAN name="Page_341" id="Page_341"></SPAN>Weymouth in the fifteenth century, and whose great-grandson
blossomed into the first Earl of Bedford. (It may, perhaps, be well to
state that, although the pedigrees here criticised are those that have
been or are widely accepted, they are not necessarily approved by the
families whose descent they profess to give.)</p>
<p>Another Norman ancestor who must go overboard is the alleged founder of
the "noble" house of Bolingbroke—that "William de St John who came to
England with the Conqueror as grand master of the artillery and
supervisor of the wagons and carriages," since it can be positively
shewn that the St John family first set foot in England a good many
years after William I. was safely underground; and with this mythical
William must also go that equally nebulous progenitor of the Fortescue
family, "who" according to the venerable and almost uniform tradition,
"landed in England with his master in the year 1066, and, protecting him
with his shield from the blows of an assailant, was graciously dubbed
'Fortescu,' the man of the stout shield." The Stourtons, so the
"Peerages" say, were "of considerable rank before the Conquest, and
dictated their own terms to the Conqueror"; but, as Canon Jackson, the
learned antiquary, truly points out, "of this there is no evidence. The
name is found, apparently for the first time, among Wiltshire
landowners, in the reign of Edward I., when a Nicholas Stourton held one
knight's fee under the Lovells of Castle Cary."</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_342" id="Page_342"></SPAN>The Duke of Norfolk has a family tree of very stately growth, and can
well afford to repudiate a good many of the ancestors provided for him
by "Peerage" editors. Certainly, if he ever read the following statement
he must have smiled aloud:</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"The Duke's proudest boast is that his name of Howard is
merely that of an ancestor, Hereward the Wake, whose
representative, Sir Hereward Wake, is still in
Northamptonshire."</p>
</div>
<p>As a matter of fact, his Grace's earliest known ancestor was Sir William
Howard, "who was a grown man and on the bench in 1293, whose real
pedigree is very obscure"; and who, no doubt, would have laughed as
heartily as his descendant of to-day at his imaginary derivation from
the Conqueror's stubborn foe of the fens, Hereward the Wake.</p>
<p>In the Fitzwilliam pedigree we encounter another nebulous knight of the
Conqueror. "The Fitzwilliams," we are informed, "date so far back that
their record is lost, but Sir William, a knight of the Conqueror's day,
married the daughter of Sir John Elmley," and so on; and further, that
at Milton Hall, Peterborough, one may actually look on an antique scarf
which "was presented to a direct ancestor of the Fitzwilliams by William
the Conqueror." The most skilled of our genealogists have sought in vain
for an authentic trace of this gallant knight of Conquest days; and
Professor Freeman does not hesitate to dismiss the story of his
existence as "pure fable." But if Sir William of Normandy must fall from
the family tree, <SPAN name="Page_343" id="Page_343"></SPAN>his place is most creditably taken by Godric, a Saxon
Thane, who, as a forefather, is at least as respectable as any Norman
warrior in William's train.</p>
<p>The house of Fitzgerald is credited with an ancestor, one Dominus Otho,
"who is supposed to have been of the family of the Gherardini of
Florence. This noble passed over into Normandy, and thence, in 1057,
into England, where he became so great a favourite with Edward the
Confessor that he excited the jealousy of the Saxon Thanes." Dominus
Otho must too pass, with many another treasured ancestor, into the
crowded genealogical land of the rejected; for the real founder of the
Fitzgerald house was Walter, son of "Other," whose name is first met
with in Domesday Book in 1086. The Otho story is shown to be "absolute
fiction."</p>
<p>In view of such examples of misplaced ingenuity exhibited by the makers
of pedigrees for our noble families, one can almost read without a smile
that</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"there were Heneages at Hainton in the time of King Edwy;
they doubtless took part in the revolt which brought
Edgar to the throne, and it is not impossible that some
of them were in the train of Wulfhere, King of Mercia;"</p>
</div>
<p>or that</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"Lord Alington comes of a family of ancient lineage, one
of his ancestors being Sir Hildebrand de Alington, who
was marshal to William the Conqueror at the battle of
Hastings,"</p>
</div>
<p>though we may know full well that the Sturt pedigree <SPAN name="Page_344" id="Page_344"></SPAN>really begins in
the seventeenth century, and that the earliest known Heneage lived and
died some three centuries before.</p>
<p>But "noble" families have no monopoly of misguided genealogy. "The
immense majority of the pedigrees of the landed gentry," says a
well-known officer of arms, "cannot, I fear, be characterised as
otherwise than utterly worthless. The errors of the 'peerage' are as
nothing to the fables which we encounter everywhere;" and the same may
be said of many another collection of pedigrees which is a treasured
possession in countless British homes.</p>
<p>Some even justly famous men have not been proof against this insidious
form of vanity and pretence. Edmund Spenser was ungenerous enough to
"dismiss his known ancestry of small Lancashire gentry and plant himself
modestly in the shadow of the newly discovered shield of arms of the
noble house of Spencer, 'of which I meanest boast myself to be.'" And
Lord Tennyson, whose ultimate ascertainable forefather was an eighteenth
century Lincolnshire apothecary, was provided with a slightly
differenced cadet's version of the arms of Archbishop Tenison, with whom
he had no connection whatever.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="INDEX" id="INDEX" /><SPAN name="Page_345" id="Page_345"></SPAN>INDEX</h2>
<ul class="IX"><li> Aberdeen, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_299">299</SPAN></li>
<li> Affleck, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_66">66</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Misses, <SPAN href="#Page_66">66</SPAN></li>
<li> Alava, General, <SPAN href="#Page_44">44</SPAN></li>
<li> Albemarle, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_235">235</SPAN></li>
<li> Aldenham, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Alexander, Emperor, <SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN></li>
<li> Alington, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_343">343</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir Hildebrand, <SPAN href="#Page_343">343</SPAN></li>
<li> Allerton, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_334">334</SPAN></li>
<li> Almack's, <SPAN href="#Page_45">45</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN></li>
<li> Andrews, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_71">71</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_73">73</SPAN></li>
<li> Anglesey, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_165">165</SPAN></li>
<li> Anne, of Austria, <SPAN href="#Page_2">2</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Princess, <SPAN href="#Page_113">113</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Queen, <SPAN href="#Page_331">331</SPAN></li>
<li> Ardilaun, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Argyll, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_295">295</SPAN></li>
<li> Arlington, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_184">184</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_6">6</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_182">182</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_183">183</SPAN></li>
<li> Armstrong, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_334">334</SPAN></li>
<li> Arran, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_76">76</SPAN></li>
<li> Ashburton, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li> Atholl, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_299">299</SPAN></li>
<li> Avebury, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Aveland, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Aylesbury, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_154">154</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Bacon, Francis, <SPAN href="#Page_270">270</SPAN></li>
<li> Barillon, <SPAN href="#Page_193">193</SPAN></li>
<li> Baring, Alexander, <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Francis, Sir, <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Franz (Dr), <SPAN href="#Page_326">326</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, John, <SPAN href="#Page_326">326</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li> Barnard, Dr, <SPAN href="#Page_64">64</SPAN></li>
<li> Bath, Marquess of, <SPAN href="#Page_330">330</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Beaconsfield, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_159">159</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_160">160</SPAN></li>
<li> Beauchamp, Earl, <SPAN href="#Page_338">338</SPAN></li>
<li> Beaufort, Duc de, <SPAN href="#Page_178">178</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_179">179</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_191">191</SPAN></li>
<li> Becher, Sir William W., <SPAN href="#Page_251">251</SPAN></li>
<li> Bedford, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Dukes of, <SPAN href="#Page_340">340</SPAN></li>
<li> Bentinck, Lord George, <SPAN href="#Page_156">156</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_164">164</SPAN></li>
<li> Berkeley, Annie May, <SPAN href="#Page_162">162</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_163">163</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_162">162</SPAN></li>
<li> Bilton, Miss Belle, <SPAN href="#Page_255">255</SPAN></li>
<li> Bingham, Senator, <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li> Blantyre, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_1">1</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_20">20</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_305">305</SPAN></li>
<li> Blessington, Countess of, <SPAN href="#Page_97">97</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_100">100</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_109">109</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_99">99</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_105">105</SPAN></li>
<li> Blount, Christopher, <SPAN href="#Page_281">281</SPAN></li>
<li> Boleyn, Godfrey, <SPAN href="#Page_330">330</SPAN></li>
<li> Bolingbroke, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_290">290</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_321">321</SPAN></li>
<li> Bolton, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_246">246</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_246">246</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mary Catherine, <SPAN href="#Page_246">246</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_247">247</SPAN></li>
<li> Boothby, Brook, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></li>
<li> Boswell, <SPAN href="#Page_296">296</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_297">297</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_298">298</SPAN></li>
<li> Bottefeld, William de, <SPAN href="#Page_330">330</SPAN></li>
<li> Bouveries, Laurence des, <SPAN href="#Page_332">332</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Bracegirdle, Mrs, <SPAN href="#Page_166">166</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_173">173</SPAN></li>
<li> Bridges, Sir Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_85">85</SPAN></li>
<li> Bridgewater, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_295">295</SPAN></li>
<li> Bristol, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_199">199</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_204">204</SPAN></li>
<li> Broke, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_331">331</SPAN></li>
<li> Brougham, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_107">107</SPAN></li>
<li> Browne, family, <SPAN href="#Page_338">338</SPAN></li>
<li> Brunton, Louisa, <SPAN href="#Page_251">251</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_252">252</SPAN></li>
<li> Buccleuch, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_300">300</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_299">299</SPAN></li>
<li> Buckingham, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_4">4</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_6">6</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_36">36</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_80">80</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_85">85</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_112">112</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_181">181</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_182">182</SPAN></li>
<li> Buller, Lady Harriet, <SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN></li>
<li> Bunbury, Sir Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_216">216</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_218">218</SPAN></li>
<li> Burke, Sir Bernard, <SPAN href="#Page_62">62</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_63">63</SPAN></li>
<li> Burleigh, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_257">257</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_258">258</SPAN></li>
<li> Burney, Dr Charles, <SPAN href="#Page_22">22</SPAN></li>
<li> Burnham, Barony, <SPAN href="#Page_334">334</SPAN></li>
<li> Burrell, Mrs Drummond, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></li>
<li> Burton, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Bute, Countess of, <SPAN href="#Page_238">238</SPAN></li>
<li> Byron, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_42">42</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_43">43</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_45">45</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_102">102</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Cadogan, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_208">208</SPAN></li>
<li> Campbell, Colonel John, <SPAN href="#Page_295">295</SPAN></li>
<li> Canning, <SPAN href="#Page_42">42</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mrs, <SPAN href="#Page_35">35</SPAN></li>
<li> Capel, William, <SPAN href="#Page_332">332</SPAN></li>
<li> Cardigan, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_74">74</SPAN></li>
<li> Carhampton, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_89">89</SPAN></li>
<li> Carlingford, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_7">7</SPAN></li>
<li> Carnegie, James, <SPAN href="#Page_223">223</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_225">225</SPAN></li>
<li> Caroline, Princess, <SPAN href="#Page_45">45</SPAN></li>
<li> Carrington, Lords, <SPAN href="#Page_332">332</SPAN></li>
<li> Castlemaine, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_8">8</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_12">12</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_14">14</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_18">18</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_115">115</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_116">116</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_184">184</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_192">192</SPAN></li>
<li> Castlereagh, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_42">42</SPAN></li>
<li> Catherine, Empress, <SPAN href="#Page_205">205</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Queen, <SPAN href="#Page_3">3</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_10">10</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_12">12</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_16">16</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, the Great, <SPAN href="#Page_75">75</SPAN></li>
<li> Cecil, Henry, (Earl of Exeter), <SPAN href="#Page_256">256</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_265">265</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Lord Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_265">265</SPAN></li>
<li> Chaffinch, Barbara (Countess of Jersey), <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN></li>
<li> Charles I., <SPAN href="#Page_1">1</SPAN></li>
<li> Charles II., <SPAN href="#Page_1">1</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_20">20</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_75">75</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_84">84</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_110">110</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_112">112</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_115">115</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_116">116</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_177">177</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_194">194</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_207">207</SPAN></li>
<li> Charlotte, Queen, <SPAN href="#Page_202">202</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_214">214</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_296">296</SPAN></li>
<li> Chesterfield, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_116">116</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_291">291</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_325">325</SPAN></li>
<li> Child, Anne, <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_41">41</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Francis, <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Robert, <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_41">41</SPAN></li>
<li> Christina, Queen of Sweden, <SPAN href="#Page_74">74</SPAN></li>
<li> Chudleigh, Colonel, <SPAN href="#Page_195">195</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_196">196</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Elizabeth, <SPAN href="#Page_195">195</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_206">206</SPAN></li>
<li> Churchill, Arabella, <SPAN href="#Page_115">115</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, John, <SPAN href="#Page_114">114</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_126">126</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Winston, <SPAN href="#Page_114">114</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_120">120</SPAN></li>
<li> Clarendon, Chancellor, <SPAN href="#Page_17">17</SPAN></li>
<li> Cobden, <SPAN href="#Page_326">326</SPAN></li>
<li> Cochrane, Lady Susanna, <SPAN href="#Page_222">222</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_227">227</SPAN></li>
<li> Compton, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_142">142</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_147">147</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_139">139</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_147">147</SPAN></li>
<li> Congreve, <SPAN href="#Page_166">166</SPAN></li>
<li> Conolly, Lady Louisa, <SPAN href="#Page_209">209</SPAN></li>
<li> Coombe, William, <SPAN href="#Page_63">63</SPAN></li>
<li> Cooper family, <SPAN href="#Page_338">338</SPAN></li>
<li> Coutts, Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_252">252</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_255">255</SPAN></li>
<li> Coventry, Countess of, <SPAN href="#Page_287">287</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_290">290</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_286">286</SPAN></li>
<li> Cowper, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></li>
<li> Cradock, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_52">52</SPAN></li>
<li> Craven, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_252">252</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_330">330</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, William, <SPAN href="#Page_330">330</SPAN></li>
<li> Crawford, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_306">306</SPAN></li>
<li> Creevey, <SPAN href="#Page_43">43</SPAN></li>
<li> Cromer, Earl, <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li> Crosby, Sir John, <SPAN href="#Page_137">137</SPAN></li>
<li> Cumberland, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_91">91</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_95">95</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_87">87</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_95">95</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_286">286</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Dalkeith, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_300">300</SPAN></li>
<li> Dalrymple, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_305">305</SPAN></li>
<li> D'Arblay, Madame, <SPAN href="#Page_22">22</SPAN></li>
<li> Darlington, Countess of, <SPAN href="#Page_324">324</SPAN></li>
<li> Darnley, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_275">275</SPAN></li>
<li> Dashwood, Sir Samuel, <SPAN href="#Page_331">331</SPAN></li>
<li> D'Aubigny, Duchesse, <SPAN href="#Page_184">184</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_194">194</SPAN></li>
<li> Dearden family, <SPAN href="#Page_337">337</SPAN></li>
<li> De Bathe, <SPAN href="#Page_338">338</SPAN></li>
<li> De Beauchamp, <SPAN href="#Page_339">339</SPAN></li>
<li> De Freville, <SPAN href="#Page_339">339</SPAN></li>
<li> Delany, Mrs, <SPAN href="#Page_288">288</SPAN></li>
<li> De Moleyns, <SPAN href="#Page_339">339</SPAN></li>
<li> Denbigh, Earls of, <SPAN href="#Page_330">330</SPAN></li>
<li> Derby, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_249">249</SPAN></li>
<li> De Reti, Cardinal, <SPAN href="#Page_2">2</SPAN></li>
<li> De Rodes, <SPAN href="#Page_339">339</SPAN></li>
<li> De Trafford, <SPAN href="#Page_338">338</SPAN></li>
<li> De Vere, <SPAN href="#Page_339">339</SPAN></li>
<li> Devonshire, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_166">166</SPAN></li>
<li> De Winton, <SPAN href="#Page_339">339</SPAN></li>
<li> Dibdin, Charles, <SPAN href="#Page_22">22</SPAN></li>
<li> Digby, Francis, <SPAN href="#Page_9">9</SPAN></li>
<li> Dillon, Colonel, <SPAN href="#Page_77">77</SPAN></li>
<li> Disraeli, <SPAN href="#Page_106">106</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_159">159</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_160">160</SPAN></li>
<li> Doran, Dr, <SPAN href="#Page_166">166</SPAN></li>
<li> D'Orsay, Count, <SPAN href="#Page_101">101</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_109">109</SPAN></li>
<li> Dorset, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_166">166</SPAN></li>
<li> Douglas, Archibald, <SPAN href="#Page_298">298</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_315">315</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_299">299</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_301">301</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_302">302</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_306">306</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_307">307</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_310">310</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_311">311</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_312">312</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, James, Marquess of, <SPAN href="#Page_299">299</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Jean (Lady), <SPAN href="#Page_298">298</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_315">315</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sholto, <SPAN href="#Page_312">312</SPAN></li>
<li> Downe, Viscount, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Dryden, <SPAN href="#Page_182">182</SPAN></li>
<li> Dudley, Earls of, <SPAN href="#Page_331">331</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Edmond, <SPAN href="#Page_266">266</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Guildford, <SPAN href="#Page_268">268</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_269">269</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Robert (Earl of Leicester), <SPAN href="#Page_266">266</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_281">281</SPAN></li>
<li> Duff, Adam, <SPAN href="#Page_340">340</SPAN></li>
<li> Dundalk, Baroness of, <SPAN href="#Page_322">322</SPAN></li>
<li> Dundonald, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_222">222</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Eberstein, Princess von, <SPAN href="#Page_322">322</SPAN></li>
<li> Edward VI., <SPAN href="#Page_268">268</SPAN></li>
<li> Eglinton, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_311">311</SPAN></li>
<li> Eldon, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Elizabeth, Queen, <SPAN href="#Page_137">137</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_139">139</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_142">142</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_144">144</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_258">258</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_269">269</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_281">281</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_331">331</SPAN></li>
<li> Errington, Mr Sheriff, <SPAN href="#Page_59">59</SPAN></li>
<li> Errol, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_216">216</SPAN></li>
<li> Essex, Countess of, <SPAN href="#Page_277">277</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_60">60</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_248">248</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_270">270</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_332">332</SPAN></li>
<li> Esterhazy, Princess, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Prince Paul, <SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN></li>
<li> Evelyn, <SPAN href="#Page_84">84</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_177">177</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_193">193</SPAN></li>
<li> Exeter, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_264">264</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Fane, Lady Sarah Sophia, <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_41">41</SPAN></li>
<li> Farmer, Captain, <SPAN href="#Page_97">97</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_100">100</SPAN></li>
<li> Farren, Elizabeth, <SPAN href="#Page_248">248</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_249">249</SPAN></li>
<li> Fenton, Lavinia, <SPAN href="#Page_245">245</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_246">246</SPAN></li>
<li> Ferrers, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_51">51</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_61">61</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_289">289</SPAN></li>
<li> Feversham, Countess of, <SPAN href="#Page_322">322</SPAN></li>
<li> Fielding, Sir Godfrey, <SPAN href="#Page_330">330</SPAN></li>
<li> Fife, Dukes of, <SPAN href="#Page_340">340</SPAN></li>
<li> Fitzgerald, Henry Gerald, <SPAN href="#Page_128">128</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_133">133</SPAN></li>
<li> —— family, <SPAN href="#Page_343">343</SPAN></li>
<li> Fitzwilliam family, <SPAN href="#Page_342">342</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_343">343</SPAN></li>
<li> Folkestone, Viscount, <SPAN href="#Page_332">332</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Foote, <SPAN href="#Page_201">201</SPAN></li>
<li> Forbes, George, <SPAN href="#Page_220">220</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_228">228</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Susan Janet, <SPAN href="#Page_227">227</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_230">230</SPAN></li>
<li> Forneron, <SPAN href="#Page_189">189</SPAN></li>
<li> Fortescue, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_64">64</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_65">65</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_68">68</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_69">69</SPAN></li>
<li> —— family, <SPAN href="#Page_341">341</SPAN></li>
<li> Fox, Charles James, <SPAN href="#Page_62">62</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_249">249</SPAN></li>
<li> Frederick, The Great, <SPAN href="#Page_198">198</SPAN></li>
<li> Freeman, Professor, <SPAN href="#Page_334">334</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_342">342</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Gainsborough, <SPAN href="#Page_3">3</SPAN></li>
<li> Galloway, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_222">222</SPAN></li>
<li> Gardiner, Lady Harriet, <SPAN href="#Page_104">104</SPAN></li>
<li> Gascoigne, Sir Christopher, <SPAN href="#Page_330">330</SPAN></li>
<li> George I., <SPAN href="#Page_317">317</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_325">325</SPAN></li>
<li> —— II., <SPAN href="#Page_209">209</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_210">210</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_287">287</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_293">293</SPAN></li>
<li> —— III., <SPAN href="#Page_22">22</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_87">87</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_91">91</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_93">93</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_210">210</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_221">221</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_296">296</SPAN></li>
<li> —— IV., <SPAN href="#Page_45">45</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_94">94</SPAN></li>
<li> Gilchrist, Miss Constance, <SPAN href="#Page_255">255</SPAN></li>
<li> Glastonbury, Baroness of, <SPAN href="#Page_322">322</SPAN></li>
<li> Gloucester, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_93">93</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duke of (Richard), <SPAN href="#Page_137">137</SPAN></li>
<li> Godefroi, M., <SPAN href="#Page_308">308</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_310">310</SPAN></li>
<li> Godric, <SPAN href="#Page_343">343</SPAN></li>
<li> Gordon, Lord William, <SPAN href="#Page_217">217</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_218">218</SPAN></li>
<li> Graeme, Colonel, <SPAN href="#Page_214">214</SPAN></li>
<li> Gramont, <SPAN href="#Page_10">10</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_75">75</SPAN></li>
<li> Granville, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_43">43</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN></li>
<li> Gresham, Sir Richard, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Greville, William, <SPAN href="#Page_331">331</SPAN></li>
<li> Grey, Lady Jane, <SPAN href="#Page_268">268</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_269">269</SPAN></li>
<li> Gronow, Captain, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_47">47</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_253">253</SPAN></li>
<li> Grosvenor, Countess, <SPAN href="#Page_87">87</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_89">89</SPAN></li>
<li> —— family, <SPAN href="#Page_339">339</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_340">340</SPAN></li>
<li> Guise, Comte de, <SPAN href="#Page_2">2</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duchesse de, <SPAN href="#Page_188">188</SPAN></li>
<li> Gunning, Elizabeth, <SPAN href="#Page_282">282</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_297">297</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, John, <SPAN href="#Page_282">282</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Maria, <SPAN href="#Page_282">282</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_297">297</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mrs, <SPAN href="#Page_284">284</SPAN></li>
<li> Gwynn, Nell, <SPAN href="#Page_186">186</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_187">187</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_192">192</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Haldane, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_304">304</SPAN></li>
<li> Halhed, <SPAN href="#Page_26">26</SPAN></li>
<li> Hambleden, Viscounty of, <SPAN href="#Page_334">334</SPAN></li>
<li> Hamilton, Betty (Lady), <SPAN href="#Page_297">297</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Colonel, <SPAN href="#Page_174">174</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_175">175</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Count, <SPAN href="#Page_4">4</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_6">6</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_10">10</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_14">14</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_173">173</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_176">176</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_196">196</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_197">197</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_239">239</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_249">249</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_291">291</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_294">294</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_299">299</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_314">314</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, George, <SPAN href="#Page_7">7</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_8">8</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Susanna (Lady), <SPAN href="#Page_222">222</SPAN></li>
<li> Hanmer, Mrs, <SPAN href="#Page_197">197</SPAN></li>
<li> Harewood, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Harrington, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_282">282</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></li>
<li> Hastings, Marquess of, <SPAN href="#Page_148">148</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_156">156</SPAN></li>
<li> Hatton, Sir Christopher, <SPAN href="#Page_277">277</SPAN></li>
<li> Hay, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_305">305</SPAN></li>
<li> Heathcote, Gilbert, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Heneage family, <SPAN href="#Page_343">343</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_277">277</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_279">279</SPAN></li>
<li> Henri IV., <SPAN href="#Page_191">191</SPAN></li>
<li> Henrietta Maria, Queen, <SPAN href="#Page_2">2</SPAN></li>
<li> Hereford, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_277">277</SPAN></li>
<li> Hereward, the Wake, <SPAN href="#Page_342">342</SPAN></li>
<li> Hervey, Hon. Augustus, <SPAN href="#Page_197">197</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_199">199</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_93">93</SPAN></li>
<li> Hewit, Mrs, <SPAN href="#Page_304">304</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_308">308</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_310">310</SPAN></li>
<li> Hewitt, Anne, <SPAN href="#Page_328">328</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_329">329</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, William, <SPAN href="#Page_328">328</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_329">329</SPAN></li>
<li> Heyward, Lord Mayor, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Hill, Captain Richard, <SPAN href="#Page_167">167</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_173">173</SPAN></li>
<li> Hillsborough, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_68">68</SPAN></li>
<li> Hindlip, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Hoggins, Sarah (Countess of Exeter), <SPAN href="#Page_259">259</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_265">265</SPAN></li>
<li> Holland, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_210">210</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_211">211</SPAN></li>
<li> Home, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_315">315</SPAN></li>
<li> Hopetoun, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_299">299</SPAN></li>
<li> Horton, Christopher, <SPAN href="#Page_89">89</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mrs, <SPAN href="#Page_89">89</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_91">91</SPAN></li>
<li> Howard, Bernard, <SPAN href="#Page_81">81</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Captain Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_76">76</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_78">78</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir William, <SPAN href="#Page_342">342</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Ibbetson, Captain, <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN></li>
<li> Irnham, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_81">81</SPAN></li>
<li> Iveagh, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Jackson, Canon, <SPAN href="#Page_341">341</SPAN></li>
<li> Jennings, Frances, <SPAN href="#Page_111">111</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_112">112</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, John (Sir), <SPAN href="#Page_111">111</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_112">112</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sarah, <SPAN href="#Page_110">110</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_126">126</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Squire, <SPAN href="#Page_110">110</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_111">111</SPAN></li>
<li> Jermyn, Henry, <SPAN href="#Page_9">9</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_76">76</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_78">78</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_112">112</SPAN></li>
<li> Jerrold, Douglas, <SPAN href="#Page_107">107</SPAN></li>
<li> Jersey, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_41">41</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_50">50</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Countess of (Sarah), <SPAN href="#Page_41">41</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_50">50</SPAN></li>
<li> Johnson, Dr, <SPAN href="#Page_25">25</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_62">62</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_296">296</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_298">298</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mr John, <SPAN href="#Page_54">54</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_57">57</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Kemble, John, <SPAN href="#Page_250">250</SPAN></li>
<li> Kendal, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_322">322</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_325">325</SPAN></li>
<li> Kent, John, <SPAN href="#Page_157">157</SPAN></li>
<li> Ker, Captain, <SPAN href="#Page_301">301</SPAN></li>
<li> Kerr, Captain, <SPAN href="#Page_158">158</SPAN></li>
<li> Kielmansegg, Baroness von, <SPAN href="#Page_318">318</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_320">320</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_324">324</SPAN></li>
<li> Kildare, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_210">210</SPAN></li>
<li> Killigrew, Harry, <SPAN href="#Page_78">78</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_81">81</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_83">83</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Tom, <SPAN href="#Page_79">79</SPAN></li>
<li> King, Colonel, <SPAN href="#Page_130">130</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_133">133</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir John, <SPAN href="#Page_127">127</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mary (Hon.), <SPAN href="#Page_127">127</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_135">135</SPAN></li>
<li> Kingsborough, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_128">128</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_130">130</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Viscount, <SPAN href="#Page_127">127</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_129">129</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_132">132</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_133">133</SPAN></li>
<li> Kingston, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_134">134</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_200">200</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_206">206</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_199">199</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_231">231</SPAN></li>
<li> Königsmarck, <SPAN href="#Page_318">318</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> La Brune, Madame, <SPAN href="#Page_309">309</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_310">310</SPAN></li>
<li> Landor, Walter Savage, <SPAN href="#Page_104">104</SPAN></li>
<li> Lauder, Farmer, <SPAN href="#Page_229">229</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mrs, <SPAN href="#Page_230">230</SPAN></li>
<li> Lawrence, Sir Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_99">99</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_106">106</SPAN></li>
<li> Leeds, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_329">329</SPAN></li>
<li> Leicester, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_275">275</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_281">281</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Countess of, <SPAN href="#Page_281">281</SPAN></li>
<li> Lennox, Lady Sarah, <SPAN href="#Page_207">207</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_230">230</SPAN></li>
<li> Lieven, Princess of, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></li>
<li> Lindores, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_311">311</SPAN></li>
<li> Linley, Elizabeth Ann, <SPAN href="#Page_21">21</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_35">35</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mary, <SPAN href="#Page_28">28</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_35">35</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_21">21</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_22">22</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_24">24</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_28">28</SPAN></li>
<li> Long, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_24">24</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_31">31</SPAN></li>
<li> Louis XIV., <SPAN href="#Page_2">2</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_19">19</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_79">79</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_179">179</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_194">194</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Napoleon (Prince), <SPAN href="#Page_107">107</SPAN></li>
<li> Lovelace, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_166">166</SPAN></li>
<li> Luttrell, Anne, <SPAN href="#Page_89">89</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_95">95</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Colonel, <SPAN href="#Page_89">89</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Elizabeth, <SPAN href="#Page_95">95</SPAN></li>
<li> Lyndhurst, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_106">106</SPAN></li>
<li> Lyon of Brigton, <SPAN href="#Page_223">223</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_224">224</SPAN></li>
<li> Lyte, Sir H. Maxwell, <SPAN href="#Page_335">335</SPAN></li>
<li> —— family, <SPAN href="#Page_335">335</SPAN></li>
<li> Lyttelton, Thomas, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_62">62</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_73">73</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Macartney, Major-General, <SPAN href="#Page_174">174</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_175">175</SPAN></li>
<li> Madden, Dr, <SPAN href="#Page_109">109</SPAN></li>
<li> Mancini, Hortense de, <SPAN href="#Page_189">189</SPAN></li>
<li> Mann, Sir Horace, <SPAN href="#Page_201">201</SPAN></li>
<li> Mansfield, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_311">311</SPAN></li>
<li> Manvers, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_160">160</SPAN></li>
<li> March, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_208">208</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_209">209</SPAN></li>
<li> Marsante, Comte de, <SPAN href="#Page_96">96</SPAN></li>
<li> Mary, Queen, <SPAN href="#Page_269">269</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_270">270</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, —— of Scots, <SPAN href="#Page_275">275</SPAN></li>
<li> Masham, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_334">334</SPAN></li>
<li> Matthews, Major, <SPAN href="#Page_26">26</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_30">30</SPAN></li>
<li> Mazarin, Duchesse de, <SPAN href="#Page_192">192</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_193">193</SPAN></li>
<li> Meath, Bishop of, <SPAN href="#Page_22">22</SPAN></li>
<li> Mellon, Harriet, <SPAN href="#Page_252">252</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_254">254</SPAN></li>
<li> Meredith, Sir William, <SPAN href="#Page_52">52</SPAN></li>
<li> Merrill, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_197">197</SPAN></li>
<li> Messalina, <SPAN href="#Page_74">74</SPAN></li>
<li> Metcalfes, of Nappa, <SPAN href="#Page_329">329</SPAN></li>
<li> Michele, <SPAN href="#Page_309">309</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_310">310</SPAN></li>
<li> Mohun, Charles Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_165">165</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_176">176</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir William de, <SPAN href="#Page_165">165</SPAN></li>
<li> Monaldeschi, Count, <SPAN href="#Page_74">74</SPAN></li>
<li> Monmouth, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_116">116</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_191">191</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_243">243</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_244">244</SPAN></li>
<li> Montagu, Edward Wortley, <SPAN href="#Page_231">231</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_242">242</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Lady Mary Wortley, <SPAN href="#Page_231">231</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_238">238</SPAN></li>
<li> Montford, Jack, <SPAN href="#Page_167">167</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_173">173</SPAN></li>
<li> Montgomery, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Miss, <SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN></li>
<li> Moore, Dr, <SPAN href="#Page_239">239</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_101">101</SPAN></li>
<li> More, Hannah, <SPAN href="#Page_202">202</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_137">137</SPAN></li>
<li> Morland, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_193">193</SPAN></li>
<li> Mornington, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_47">47</SPAN></li>
<li> Mount Stephen, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_334">334</SPAN></li>
<li> Munster, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_322">322</SPAN></li>
<li> Murray, Captain, <SPAN href="#Page_97">97</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_98">98</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Napier, Hon. George, <SPAN href="#Page_218">218</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_220">220</SPAN></li>
<li> Napier, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_219">219</SPAN></li>
<li> Neave, Sir Digby, <SPAN href="#Page_66">66</SPAN></li>
<li> Newbattle, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_212">212</SPAN></li>
<li> Newcastle, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_204">204</SPAN></li>
<li> Ney, Marshal, <SPAN href="#Page_104">104</SPAN></li>
<li> Norfolk, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_342">342</SPAN></li>
<li> Northbrook, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li> Northumberland, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_266">266</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_268">268</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_269">269</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> O'Neill, Eliza, <SPAN href="#Page_249">249</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_251">251</SPAN></li>
<li> Orleans, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_179">179</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_181">181</SPAN></li>
<li> Ormond, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_76">76</SPAN></li>
<li> Ormonde, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_277">277</SPAN></li>
<li> Osborne, Edward, <SPAN href="#Page_328">328</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_329">329</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_329">329</SPAN></li>
<li> Osnabrück, Bishop of, <SPAN href="#Page_324">324</SPAN></li>
<li> "Other," <SPAN href="#Page_343">343</SPAN></li>
<li> Otho, Dominus, <SPAN href="#Page_343">343</SPAN></li>
<li> Overtoun, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_334">334</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Page, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_170">170</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_171">171</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mrs, <SPAN href="#Page_168">168</SPAN></li>
<li> Paget, Lady Florence, <SPAN href="#Page_151">151</SPAN></li>
<li> Panmure, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_299">299</SPAN></li>
<li> Parker family, <SPAN href="#Page_338">338</SPAN></li>
<li> Payne, George, <SPAN href="#Page_159">159</SPAN></li>
<li> Peach, Joseph, <SPAN href="#Page_64">64</SPAN></li>
<li> Pelham, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_311">311</SPAN></li>
<li> Pepys, <SPAN href="#Page_5">5</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_8">8</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_12">12</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_17">17</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_18">18</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_78">78</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_80">80</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_192">192</SPAN></li>
<li> Peterborough, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_243">243</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_244">244</SPAN></li>
<li> Pierce, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_12">12</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_18">18</SPAN></li>
<li> Pierrepoint, Hon. H.M., <SPAN href="#Page_265">265</SPAN></li>
<li> Pindar, <SPAN href="#Page_338">338</SPAN></li>
<li> Pope, <SPAN href="#Page_243">243</SPAN></li>
<li> Portland, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_157">157</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_163">163</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_164">164</SPAN></li>
<li> Portsmouth, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_184">184</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_194">194</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_207">207</SPAN></li>
<li> Power, Edmund, <SPAN href="#Page_96">96</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_99">99</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Marguerite, <SPAN href="#Page_96">96</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_109">109</SPAN></li>
<li> Pulteney, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_196">196</SPAN></li>
<li> Pusey, Canon, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Queensbury, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_300">300</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_311">311</SPAN>,</li>
<li> Querouaille, Louise de, <SPAN href="#Page_19">19</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_177">177</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_194">194</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Radnor, Earls of, <SPAN href="#Page_332">332</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Radzivill, Prince, <SPAN href="#Page_205">205</SPAN></li>
<li> Raikes, Mr T., <SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN></li>
<li> Raleigh, Sir Walter, <SPAN href="#Page_137">137</SPAN></li>
<li> Rawlins, Colonel Giles, <SPAN href="#Page_77">77</SPAN></li>
<li> Redmaynes (of Fulford), <SPAN href="#Page_329">329</SPAN></li>
<li> Revelstoke, Baron, <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li> Reynolds, <SPAN href="#Page_23">23</SPAN></li>
<li> Richelieu, Duc de, <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN></li>
<li> Richmond, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_17">17</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_20">20</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_13">13</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_18">18</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_208">208</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_218">218</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_265">265</SPAN></li>
<li> Ripon, Marquesses of, <SPAN href="#Page_329">329</SPAN></li>
<li> Robinson, Anastasia, <SPAN href="#Page_243">243</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_244">244</SPAN></li>
<li> Robinsons, <SPAN href="#Page_328">328</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_329">329</SPAN></li>
<li> Robsart, Amy, <SPAN href="#Page_268">268</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_274">274</SPAN></li>
<li> Rogers, Samuel, <SPAN href="#Page_45">45</SPAN></li>
<li> Rollo, Duke of Normandy, <SPAN href="#Page_339">339</SPAN></li>
<li> Rotier, Phillipe, <SPAN href="#Page_12">12</SPAN></li>
<li> Round, Mr Horace, <SPAN href="#Page_336">336</SPAN></li>
<li> Rowe, <SPAN href="#Page_166">166</SPAN></li>
<li> Russell, Lord John, <SPAN href="#Page_44">44</SPAN></li>
<li> —— family, <SPAN href="#Page_340">340</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_341">341</SPAN></li>
<li> Ruvigny, <SPAN href="#Page_19">19</SPAN></li>
<li> Ryder, Lady Susanna, <SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> St Albans, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_254">254</SPAN></li>
<li> St Aldegonde, Count, <SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN></li>
<li> St Evremond, <SPAN href="#Page_182">182</SPAN></li>
<li> St John family, <SPAN href="#Page_341">341</SPAN></li>
<li> St Simon, <SPAN href="#Page_190">190</SPAN></li>
<li> Salisbury, Marquess of, <SPAN href="#Page_330">330</SPAN></li>
<li> Sandwich, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_231">231</SPAN></li>
<li> Sault, Comte de, <SPAN href="#Page_179">179</SPAN></li>
<li> Schulenburg, Ehrengard von der, <SPAN href="#Page_316">316</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_325">325</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mathias (Count), <SPAN href="#Page_316">316</SPAN></li>
<li> Scott, John, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> Sedley, Catherine, <SPAN href="#Page_120">120</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_121">121</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir Charles, <SPAN href="#Page_120">120</SPAN></li>
<li> Sefton, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></li>
<li> Selkirk, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_314">314</SPAN></li>
<li> Selwyn, George, <SPAN href="#Page_216">216</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_288">288</SPAN></li>
<li> Sentinelli, Count, <SPAN href="#Page_74">74</SPAN></li>
<li> Seymour, Lady Elizabeth, <SPAN href="#Page_328">328</SPAN></li>
<li> Shaw, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_311">311</SPAN></li>
<li> Sheffield, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_277">277</SPAN></li>
<li> Sheridan, Charles, <SPAN href="#Page_25">25</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Mrs (E. Linley), <SPAN href="#Page_31">31</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_35">35</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Richard Brinsley, <SPAN href="#Page_25">25</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_35">35</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Thomas (Dr), <SPAN href="#Page_25">25</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Thomas, <SPAN href="#Page_25">25</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_283">283</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_284">284</SPAN></li>
<li> Shipway frauds, <SPAN href="#Page_336">336</SPAN></li>
<li> Shirley, Lady Barbara, <SPAN href="#Page_51">51</SPAN></li>
<li> —— Laurence, (Earl of Ferrers), <SPAN href="#Page_51">51</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_61">61</SPAN></li>
<li> Shrewsbury, Anna Maria, Countess of, <SPAN href="#Page_74">74</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_86">86</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_75">75</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_81">81</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_82">82</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_84">84</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_86">86</SPAN></li>
<li> Smith, Albert, <SPAN href="#Page_107">107</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, General, <SPAN href="#Page_90">90</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, John, <SPAN href="#Page_331">331</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Robert, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li> —— family, <SPAN href="#Page_338">338</SPAN></li>
<li> Smithson, Hugh, <SPAN href="#Page_328">328</SPAN></li>
<li> Smythesonne, Smitheson, etc., <SPAN href="#Page_327">327</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_328">328</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_338">338</SPAN></li>
<li> Sophia, Electress of Hanover, <SPAN href="#Page_317">317</SPAN></li>
<li> —— Dorothea of Zell, <SPAN href="#Page_317">317</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_323">323</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_324">324</SPAN></li>
<li> Southwell, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_236">236</SPAN></li>
<li> Spencer, Elizabeth, <SPAN href="#Page_139">139</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_147">147</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir John, <SPAN href="#Page_136">136</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_144">144</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_340">340</SPAN></li>
<li> —— family, <SPAN href="#Page_340">340</SPAN></li>
<li> Spenser, Edmund, <SPAN href="#Page_344">344</SPAN></li>
<li> Standish, Charles, <SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN></li>
<li> Stanley, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_297">297</SPAN></li>
<li> Stephens, Catherine, <SPAN href="#Page_247">247</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_248">248</SPAN></li>
<li> Stewart, Andrew, <SPAN href="#Page_314">314</SPAN></li>
<li> —— Colonel John, <SPAN href="#Page_302">302</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_315">315</SPAN></li>
<li> Stourton, family, <SPAN href="#Page_341">341</SPAN></li>
<li> Stow, <SPAN href="#Page_136">136</SPAN></li>
<li> Strangways, Lady Susan, <SPAN href="#Page_211">211</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_212">212</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_215">215</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_216">216</SPAN></li>
<li> Strathcona, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_334">334</SPAN></li>
<li> Strathmore, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_223">223</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_224">224</SPAN></li>
<li> Stuart, La belle, <SPAN href="#Page_1">1</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_20">20</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Lady Louisa, <SPAN href="#Page_300">300</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Madame, <SPAN href="#Page_2">2</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Walter, <SPAN href="#Page_2">2</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_3">3</SPAN></li>
<li> Sturt pedigree, <SPAN href="#Page_343">343</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_344">344</SPAN></li>
<li> Suffolk, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_317">317</SPAN></li>
<li> Surtees, Miss, <SPAN href="#Page_333">333</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Taafe, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_236">236</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_237">237</SPAN></li>
<li> Talbot, Sir John, <SPAN href="#Page_81">81</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Richard, <SPAN href="#Page_112">112</SPAN></li>
<li> Tenison, Archbishop, <SPAN href="#Page_344">344</SPAN></li>
<li> Tennyson, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_344">344</SPAN></li>
<li> Thackeray, <SPAN href="#Page_108">108</SPAN></li>
<li> Thormanby, <SPAN href="#Page_157">157</SPAN></li>
<li> Thurlow, <SPAN href="#Page_204">204</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Edward, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_247">247</SPAN></li>
<li> Tripp, Baron, <SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN></li>
<li> Turenne, Marshal, <SPAN href="#Page_116">116</SPAN></li>
<li> Tyrconnel, Duchess of, <SPAN href="#Page_112">112</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Vaillant, Sheriff, <SPAN href="#Page_59">59</SPAN></li>
<li> Vendôme, Philippe de, <SPAN href="#Page_191">191</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_192">192</SPAN></li>
<li> Vernon, Miss, <SPAN href="#Page_259">259</SPAN></li>
<li> Villiers, Adela, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Barbara, <SPAN href="#Page_1">1</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_115">115</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Clementina, <SPAN href="#Page_50">50</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, Sir George, <SPAN href="#Page_36">36</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, George, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_37">37</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_41">41</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> Wake, Sir Hereward, <SPAN href="#Page_342">342</SPAN></li>
<li> Wales, Prince of (Henry Frederick), <SPAN href="#Page_95">95</SPAN></li>
<li> Walpole, Horace, <SPAN href="#Page_23">23</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_51">51</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_89">89</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_190">190</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_201">201</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_204">204</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_211">211</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_289">289</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_291">291</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_295">295</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_318">318</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_321">321</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_325">325</SPAN></li>
<li> Walsingham, Countess of, <SPAN href="#Page_325">325</SPAN></li>
<li> Warburton, General, <SPAN href="#Page_63">63</SPAN></li>
<li> Ward, Mr Plumer, <SPAN href="#Page_72">72</SPAN></li>
<li> ——, William, <SPAN href="#Page_331">331</SPAN></li>
<li> Warwick, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_331">331</SPAN></li>
<li> Wellesbourne family, <SPAN href="#Page_337">337</SPAN></li>
<li> Wellington, Duke of, <SPAN href="#Page_42">42</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_47">47</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_48">48</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_107">107</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_265">265</SPAN></li>
<li> Wentworth, Lord, <SPAN href="#Page_138">138</SPAN></li>
<li> Westmorland, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_38">38</SPAN>-<SPAN href="#Page_40">40</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_216">216</SPAN></li>
<li> Wigton, Lady, <SPAN href="#Page_306">306</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_307">307</SPAN></li>
<li> Wilberforce, William, <SPAN href="#Page_106">106</SPAN></li>
<li> Wilkes, John, <SPAN href="#Page_23">23</SPAN></li>
<li> William III., <SPAN href="#Page_86">86</SPAN></li>
<li> Willis, Mr, <SPAN href="#Page_47">47</SPAN></li>
<li> Wilton, Earl of, <SPAN href="#Page_249">249</SPAN></li>
<li> Wood, Major, <SPAN href="#Page_130">130</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_131">131</SPAN></li>
<li> Woodrow, <SPAN href="#Page_301">301</SPAN></li>
<li></li>
<li> York, Duke of (James), <SPAN href="#Page_112">112</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_115">115</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_185">185</SPAN>, <SPAN href="#Page_193">193</SPAN></li>
</ul>
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