Richard Bell (died c. 1417), of Lincoln, was an English politician.
He was elected Mayor of Lincoln for 1411–12 and a member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Lincoln in 1407. [1]
Year 1487 (MCDLXXXVII) was a common year starting on Monday of the Julian calendar.
Year 1376 (MCCCLXXVI) was a leap year starting on Tuesday of the Julian calendar.
John de la Pole may refer to:
Earl of Scarbrough is a title in the Peerage of England. It was created in 1690 for Richard Lumley, 2nd Viscount Lumley. He is best remembered as one of the Immortal Seven who invited William of Orange to invade England and depose his father-in-law James II. Lumley had already been created Baron Lumley, of Lumley Castle in the County of Durham, in 1681, and Viscount Lumley, of Lumley Castle in the County of Durham, in 1689. These titles are also in the Peerage of England. The title of Viscount Lumley, of Waterford, was created in the Peerage of Ireland in 1628 for his grandfather Sir Richard Lumley, who later fought as a Royalist in the Civil War.
Richard Bell may refer to:
The Dean of the Chapel Royal, in any kingdom, can be the title of an official charged with oversight of that kingdom's chapel royal, the ecclesiastical establishment which is part of the royal household and ministers to it.
Thomas Chaucer was an English courtier and politician. The son of the poet Geoffrey Chaucer and his wife Philippa Roet, Thomas was linked socially and by family to senior members of the English nobility, though he was himself a commoner. Elected fifteen times to the Parliament of England, he was Speaker of the House of Commons for five parliaments in the early 15th century.
The Garter Principal King of Arms is the senior King of Arms, and the senior Officer of Arms of the College of Arms, the heraldic authority with jurisdiction over England, Wales and Northern Ireland. The position has existed since 1415.
The Cofferer of the Household was formerly an office in the English and British Royal Household. Next in rank to the Comptroller, the holder paid the wages of some of the servants above and below stairs, was a member of the Board of Green Cloth, and sat with the Lord Steward in the Court of the Verge. The cofferer was usually of political rank and always a member of the Privy Council.
Sir William Cordell was an English lawyer, landowner, administrator and politician who held high offices under both the Catholic Queen Mary I and the Protestant Queen Elizabeth I.
Events from the 1480s in England. This decade marks the beginning of the Tudor period.
Henry Long of Wraxall was an English politician and lawyer.
Richard Baynard was an English administrator, MP and Speaker of the House of Commons of England in 1421.
Thomas Archer, of Lincoln, was an English politician.
Robert Walsh, of Lincoln, was an English politician.
Richard Bosom, of Exeter, Devon, was an English politician.
Sir Richard Arches, of Eythrope, in the parish of Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire, was MP for Buckinghamshire in 1402. He was knighted before 1401.
Henry Somer was a mediaeval English courtier and Member of Parliament who was Chancellor of the Exchequer. Somer's tenure as Chancellor occurred during the Great Bullion Famine and the beginning of the Great Slump in England.
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source .(May 2014) |