Thomas Langdon (died c. 1433), of Canterbury, Kent, was an English politician.
Langdon was married and had one daughter. Neither of their names are recorded. His brother was John Langdon, bishop of Rochester.
He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Canterbury in December 1421. [1]
Canterbury is a city and UNESCO World Heritage Site, in the county of Kent, England; it was a county borough until 1974. It lies on the River Stour. The city has a mild oceanic climate.
Thomas Nevile was an English clergyman and academic who was Dean of Peterborough (1591–1597) and Dean of Canterbury (1597–1615), Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge (1582–1593), and Master of Trinity College, Cambridge (1593–1615).
The Kent Institute of Art & Design was an art school based across three campuses in the county of Kent, in the United Kingdom. It was formed by the amalgamation of three independent colleges: Canterbury College of Art, Maidstone College of Art and Medway (Rochester) College of Design. In turn KIAD merged with the Surrey Institute of Art & Design, University College on 1 August 2005 to form the University College for the Creative Arts at Canterbury, Epsom, Farnham, Maidstone and Rochester. In 2008, this gained full university status and became the University for the Creative Arts.
Martin is a hamlet north-east of Dover in the county of Kent in England. The nearby village of Martin Mill is situated on the railway between Dover and Deal. The population of the village is included in the civil parish of Langdon.
Canterbury is a constituency in Kent represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2017 by Rosie Duffield of the Labour Party.
Lynch is a surname of English and Irish origin.
Langdon is a civil parish in the Dover district of Kent, England, and contains the villages of East Langdon and West Langdon, and the hamlets of Martin and Martin Mill. Langdon was the site of Langdon Abbey which was dissolved in 1535.
Sir John Fineux was an English judge and Chief Justice of the King's Bench.
Sir Thomas Hales, 2nd Baronet was an English politician who sat in the English and British House of Commons between 1701 and 1747.
John Langdon was a medieval Bishop of Rochester.
Kent was a parliamentary constituency covering the county of Kent in southeast England. It returned two "knights of the shire" to the House of Commons by the bloc vote system from the year 1290. Members were returned to the Parliament of England until the Union with Scotland created the Parliament of Great Britain in 1708, and to the Parliament of the United Kingdom after the union with Ireland in 1801 until the county was divided by the Reform Act 1832.
Stodmarsh is a small village in the civil parish of Wickhambreaux, in the Canterbury district, in east Kent, England. It is 5 miles to the east of Canterbury, overlooking the valley of the River Stour.
Langdon Abbey was a Premonstratensian abbey near West Langdon, Kent, founded in about 1192 and dissolved in 1535, reportedly the first religious house to be dissolved by Henry VIII. The visible remains of the abbey are now confined to the extensive cellaring below the 16th-century house that occupies its site and small remains of a 17th-century ice house.
Nicholas Potyn was an English politician.
John Sheldwich II, of Canterbury, Kent, was an English politician and lawyer.
Thomas Lane, of Canterbury, Kent, was an English politician.
Thomas Atwode, of Canterbury, Kent, was an English politician.
William Lovelace (c.1525-1577), of Bethersden, near Ashford and Canterbury, Kent, was an English politician and lawyer.
Thomas Norman, of Canterbury, Kent, was an English politician and brewer.