Robert Appleby (died 1407), of Lincoln, was an English burgess.
He was elected Mayor of Lincoln for 1402–03 and a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Lincoln in the parliaments assembled in January 1397 and October 1404. [1]
Appleby-in-Westmorland, a market town and civil parish in the Eden district of Cumbria, England, had a population was 3,048 at the 2011 Census. Traversed by the River Eden, Appleby is the county town of the historic county of Westmorland. It was known simply as Appleby until 1974, when its council of the successor parish to the borough, changed its name to preserve the name Westmorland, which had been disappeared with the county under the Local Government Act 1972. It lies 13.7 miles south-east of Penrith, 32.2 miles south-east of Carlisle, 27.2 miles north-east of Kendal, 45.2 miles west of Darlington and 61.2 miles west of Middlesbrough.
Martin Emil Marty is an American Lutheran religious scholar who has written extensively on religion in the United States.
Sir Robert Adair GCB was a distinguished British diplomat, and frequently employed on the most important diplomatic missions.
Thomas Chaucer was Speaker of the House of Commons and son of Geoffrey Chaucer, the poet, by his wife Philippa Roet.
Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford, of Appleby Castle, Westmorland, feudal baron of Appleby and feudal baron of Skipton in Yorkshire, was an English soldier who became 1st Lord Warden of the Marches, responsible for defending the English border with Scotland.
Appleby was a parliamentary constituency in the former county of Westmorland in England. It existed for two separate periods: from 1295 to 1832, and from 1885 to 1918.
John Booth may refer to:
Roger Hunt was an English MP and Speaker of the House of Commons.
Sir William Bagot was a politician and administrator under Richard II.
Appleby Grammar School is a mixed secondary school and sixth form in Appleby-in-Westmorland, Cumbria for students aged 11 to 18. Since August 2011, it has been an Academy.
Christopher Clapham (1608–1686) of Beamsley near Skipton in Yorkshire, England, was a politician who sat in the House of Commons in 1659 and 1660.
Richard Worsop, of Lincoln, was an English politician.
Thomas Forster, of Lincoln, was an English politician.
Richard Bell, of Lincoln, was an English politician.
Cuthbert Horsley, of Horsley, Northumberland, was an English politician.
Brooke Priory was a minor house of Augustinian monks in Brooke, Rutland. It was a cell of St Mary's Abbey, Kenilworth.
Robert or Bob Appleby may refer to:
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