John Darell (died 1438) was an English politician.
Darell was of Calehill in Little Chart, Scotney Castle in Lamberhurst, Kent. He was the second son of William Darell. The Darell family were from Sessay, Yorkshire. In 1400, he married Thomasina Barey of Faversham, who would only have been around twelve years old at this time. His second wife was Joan Chichele, a widow. [1]
Darell was a Member of Parliament for Kent in 1407, May 1413, April 1414, 1417, 1425, 1427 and 1429, and Sheriff of Kent three times (1411, 1417 and 1422). [2]
Barnabe Googe or Goche was a poet and translator, one of the earliest English pastoral poets.
For other roads with the same name see List of A21 roads.
Lamberhurst ( is a village and civil parish in the borough of Tunbridge Wells in Kent, England. The parish contains the hamlets of The Down and Hook Green. At the 2001 Census it had a population of 1,491, increasing to 1,706 at the 2011 Census.
Scotney Castle is an English country house with formal gardens south-east of Lamberhurst in the valley of the River Bewl in Kent, England. It belongs to the National Trust.
Lanning Roper was an American landscape architect and writer who studied and lived in England.
Little Chart is a village and civil parish, situated 4 miles (6.4 km) north-west of Ashford in Kent, South East England. The parish lies south of the M20 motorway.
The River Bewl is a tributary of the River Teise in Kent, England. Its headwaters are in the High Weald, in Sussex between Lamberhurst, Wadhurst and Flimwell. The valley is deeply incised into Tunbridge Wells red sandstone, with a base of alluvium on Wadhurst clay.
Charles Cordell was an English Roman Catholic priest.
Sir John Fogge (c.1417) was an English courtier, soldier and supporter of the Woodville family under Edward IV who became an opponent of Richard III.
Thomas Brockhill was an English politician.
John Darell or Darrell may refer to:
Henry Lynde of Canterbury, Kent, was an English politician.
John Golafre was an English courtier and Member of Parliament.
Sir William Mountfort was an English MP.
Sir Richard Arches, of Eythrope, in the parish of Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire, was MP for Buckinghamshire in 1402. He was knighted before 1401.
Sir John Darell (1645–1694), of Calehill, Little Chart, Kent, was an English politician.
Sir Thomas Kyriell was an English soldier of the Hundred Years' War and the opening of the Wars of the Roses. He was executed after the Second Battle of St Albans.
Major William Clive Hussey, was a British Army officer who was bailiff of The Royal Parks from 1902 to 1923.
Sir John Harpeden was an English knight. Little is known of him—he was never summoned to Parliament—but he was related to the Mortimers.
William Darell or Darrell was an English Anglican clergyman and antiquarian.