Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/DNB Epitome 08

1

 * ✅Baron Burton - DNB redirect to Henry Paget, 1st Earl of Uxbridge
 * ✅Cassibelan Burton
 * ✅Catharine Burton
 * ✅Charles Burton
 * ✅Charles Edward Burton
 * ✅Decimus Burton
 * ✅Edward Burton (Jesuit)
 * ✅Edward Burton (theologian)
 * ✅Sir Frederic William Burton
 * ✅George Burton (chronologer)

2

 * ✅Henry Burton (Puritan)
 * ✅Hezekiah Burton
 * ✅Isabel Burton
 * ✅James Burton
 * James Daniel Burton
 * ✅John Burton (scholar)
 * ✅John Burton (antiquary)
 * ✅John Hill Burton
 * ✅Richard Francis Burton
 * ✅Robert Burton

3

 * ✅Robert Burton
 * ✅Simon Burton
 * ✅Thomas Burton
 * ✅William Burton
 * ✅William Burton
 * ✅William Burton
 * ✅William Evans Burton
 * William Paton Burton
 * ✅Joseph Burtt
 * ✅Viscount Bury - DNB redirect to William Keppel, 7th Earl of Albemarle

4

 * ✅Arthur Bury
 * ✅Lady Charlotte Susan Maria Bury
 * ✅Edward Bury (minister)
 * ✅Edward Bury
 * ✅Elizabeth Bury
 * ✅Henry de Bury
 * John of Bury
 * ✅John Bury (translator)
 * ✅John Bury (divine)
 * ✅Richard de Bury

5

 * ✅Samuel Bury
 * ✅Thomas Bury (judge)
 * ✅Thomas Talbot Bury
 * ✅Richard Busby
 * ✅Thomas Busby (composer)
 * ✅Paul Bush (bishop)
 * ✅Charles Kendal Bushe
 * ✅Brown Bushell
 * Seth Bushell
 * ✅Thomas Bushell (mining engineer)

6

 * ✅Leonard Busher
 * ✅John Stevenson Bushnan
 * ✅Catherine Bushnell
 * ✅John Bushnell
 * Walter Bushnell
 * ✅George Busk
 * ✅Hans Busk (1772–1862)
 * ✅Hans Busk (1815–1882)
 * ✅Robert William Buss
 * ✅John Bussy
 * ✅Martin van Butchell
 * ✅Edmund Butcher
 * ✅Richard Butcher
 * ✅Samuel Butcher
 * ✅Earl of Bute - DNB redirect to John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute
 * ✅Marquis of Bute - DNB redirect to John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute
 * ✅Alban Butler
 * ✅Charles Butler (beekeeper)
 * ✅Charles Butler (lawyer)
 * ✅Edmund Butler
 * ✅Sir Edward Gerard Butler
 * ✅Eleanor Butler - link to the joint biography of the Ladies of Llangollen
 * ✅George Butler (headmaster)
 * ✅George Butler (1819–1890)
 * ✅George Slade Butler
 * ✅James Butler, 2nd Earl of Ormond
 * ✅James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond
 * ✅James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond
 * ✅James Butler, 9th Earl of Ormond
 * ✅James Butler (military adventurer)
 * ✅James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde James Butler, twelfth Earl and first Duke of Ormonde (1610–1688), son of Thomas, viscount Thurles (d. 1619); grandson of Walter Butler, eleventh earl of Ormonde; styled Viscount Thurles, 1619; succeeded to the earldom, 1633; created marquis, 1642; created Earl of Brecknock in the English peerage, 1660; created Duke of Ormonde in the Irish peerage, 1661, and in the English peerage, 1682; placed by his mother under a catholic tutor at Finchley, 1619; made king's ward and brought up in the protestant religion at Lambeth under Archbishop Abbot; entrusted to Richard Preston, earl of Desmond, 1624-8; lived with his grandfather at Drury Lane, 1625-7, and at Carrickfergus, 1630; came to England, 1631; returned to Ireland, 1633; opposed Wentworth in the Irish parliament, but urged granting supplies to Charles I, 1634; raised troop of cuirassiers, 1638; supported Wentworth (now Earl of Strafford), 1640; assembled troops at Carrickfergus, July 1640; defended Strafford in the Irish parliament, 1641; commander against the Irish rebels, but kept inactive by the lords justices, 1641; defeated rebels, January-March 1642; quieted Connaught, 1642; again obstructed by the lords justices, 1642; commissioned by Charles I to ascertain the demands of the Irish rebels, 1643; defeated them at Ross, 18 March 1643; ordered in April to conclude truce; concluded truce for a year in September; sent five thousand troops into Cheshire, November 1643; lord lieutenant of Ireland, January 1644; sent Irish troops into Scotland to help Montrose; opposed both by the catholic rebels and by the proteetant parliamentarians, April 1644-April 1645; negotiated peace with the rebels; superseded in August 1646 by Glamorgan; arranged terms of peace between the king's forces and the catholic rebels, March 1646; asked parliament for help against the rebels, October-November 1646: induced by the rebelsrejection of his terms (February 1647) to approach parliament, with which he concluded peace, June 1647; conferred with Charles I at Hampton Court, August 1647; withdrew to Paris, 1648; royalist commander in Ireland,  I October 1648: concluded peace with rebels, January 1649;  proclaimed Charles II; attacked Dublin; defeated at Rat famines, August 1649; his garrisons crushed by Cromwell, September- December 1649; left Ireland, December 1650; employed in personal attendance on Charles II or on embassies in his interest, 1651-9; royalist spy in England, January- March* 1658; negotiated with Monck, 1659; received back his estates, and also his grandfather's county palatine of Tipperary; appointed lord steward of the household, 1660; lord high steward at the coronation, 1661; restored the protestant episcopate in Ireland; appointed lord-lieutenant of Ireland, 4 Nov. 1661; resided in Ireland, July 1662-June 1664; in London, July 1664 i May 1665; again in Ireland, 1665-8; returned to London, 1668; dismissed from the lord-lientenancy, March 1669; chancellor of Oxford University, 1669; his life attempted by Thomas Blood, 1669, at Buckingham's instigation; opposed attempts to repeal Act of Settlement, 1671-3; in Ireland on private affairs, July 1671-April 1675; recalled to London, 1675; lord-lieutenant of Ireland, 1677-82; at court in London, 1682; returned to Ireland, 1684; removed from the lord-lientenancy, October 1684; proclaimed  i James II before he left Dublin, February 1685; lord high steward at James IPs coronation; continued to be lord  steward of the household; withdrew, as much as he could, from public life, 1685, broken by the deaths of his wife and children; resisted some of James II's arbitrary acts, 1687.
 * James Butler (died 1709)
 * ✅James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde
 * James Armar Butler
 * ✅John Butler, 6th Earl of Ormonde
 * ✅John Butler, 12th Baron Dunboyne
 * ✅John Butler (bishop)
 * ✅Joseph Butler
 * ✅Sir Piers Butler, 8th Earl of Ormond
 * ✅Piers Butler, 3rd Viscount Galmoye
 * ✅Richard Butler, 1st Viscount Mountgarret
 * ✅Richard Butler, 3rd Viscount Mountgarret
 * ✅Richard Butler (general)
 * ✅Samuel Butler (poet)
 * ✅Samuel Butler (schoolmaster)
 * Simon Butler (Irish nationalist)
 * ✅Theobald Butler
 * Thomas Butler (translator)
 * ✅Thomas Butler, 10th Earl of Ormonde
 * ✅Thomas Butler, 6th Earl of Ossory
 * Thomas Hamly Butler
 * ✅Walter Butler, 11th Earl of Ormond
 * ✅Walter Butler of Roscrea
 * ✅Weeden Butler
 * ✅Weeden Butler the younger
 * William Butler (writer)
 * ✅William Butler (physician)
 * ✅William Archer Butler
 * ✅William John Butler
 * ✅Charles Parker Butt
 * ✅George Butt
 * ✅Isaac Butt
 * ✅John Butter
 * ✅Nathaniel Butter
 * William Butter
 * ✅Robert Butterfield
 * Swithun Butterfield
 * ✅William Butterfield
 * ✅Edwin Butterworth
 * ✅Henry Butterworth
 * ✅James Butterworth
 * ✅✅John Butterworth (minister)
 * ✅Joseph Butterworth
 * ✅Viscount Buttevant - DNB redirect to David de Barry, 5th Viscount Buttevant
 * ✅Ralph Button
 * ✅Sir Thomas Button
 * ✅William I Button
 * ✅William II Button
 * ✅Sir William Button, 1st Baronet
 * ✅John Butts
 * ✅Robert Butts (bishop)
 * ✅Sir William Butts
 * ✅Alan Buxhull
 * ✅Bertha Buxton
 * ✅Charles Buxton
 * ✅Jedidiah Buxton
 * ✅Richard Buxton
 * ✅Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton
 * ✅John By
 * Edward Byam (clergyman)
 * Henry Byam
 * John Byam
 * Nicholas Byer
 * ✅Katharine Byerley
 * ✅Thomas Byerley (journalist)
 * ✅James Byres
 * ✅Adoniram Byfield
 * John Byfield (engraver)
 * ✅Nicholas Byfield
 * ✅Richard Byfield

16

 * ✅Sir John Barnard Byles
 * ✅Robert Bylot
 * ✅Andrew Byng
 * ✅George Byng
 * ✅John Byng
 * ✅Sir John Byng
 * ✅Thomas Byng
 * Simon Bynham - DNB redirect to Simon Binham
 * ✅Henry Bynneman
 * ✅William Byrd

17

 * ✅Byrhtferth
 * ✅Anne Frances Byrne
 * ✅Charles Byrne
 * ✅Julia Clara Byrne
 * ✅Letitia Byrne
 * ✅Myles Byrne
 * Oscar Byrne
 * ✅William Byrne
 * ✅Byrnstan
 * ✅John Byrom
 * ✅Thomas Joseph Byrnes
 * ✅George Gordon Byron George Gordon Byron, sixth Baron (1788–1824), poet; son of a profligate, mad Jack Byron (17561791), late of the guards, by his second wife (m. at Bath, 1786), Catherine Gordon (d. 1811), of Gicht, Aberdeen, an hysterical Scotch heiress; born in London, after his father had dissipated his mother's fortune in France; hopelessly lame in both feet; removed to Aberdeen, where his mother took lodgings, having an income (under trust) of 135 J., afterwards of 190J. a year; lost his father in August 1791, who, having fled from his creditors to France, died at Valenciennes; alternately petted and abused by his mother; taught the bible by his nurse, May Gray; educated at Aberdeen grammar school, 1794-8; unexpectedly became heir-presumptive to the barony in consequence of the fifth baron's grandson falling in action in Corsica, 1794; succeeded to title and encumbered estates, 1798; taken to the family seat of Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire, 1798; put under the guardianship of the fifth Earl of Carlisle, a distant relative; sent to private schools, Newstead Abbey being let, 1799; wrote lampoons, 1799, and love verses, 1800; at Harrow, 1801-6, where he proved himself a poor scholar, a considerable reader, and a good boxer and batsman; proposed to Mary Anne Ohaworth, heiress of Annesley Hall, Nottinghamshire, who rejected him, 1803; at Trinity College, Cambridge, October 1805-May 1806, May 1807-May 1808; M.A. July 1808; at Cambridge read much history and fiction, and practised boxing and swimming, but kept low company and li ved extravagantly; got deeply in debt, the income (500J.) allowed him by the court of chancery being inadequate for his position and expectations; his chief college friend, John Cam Hobhouse, printed privately at Newark, October 1806, a small volume of poems by Byron entitled Fugitive Pieces which Byron reprinted with changes in January 1807, and published, with further changes, in the summer of 1807, as Hours of Idleness; his book denounced by the Edinburgh Review January 1808; settled at Newstead, July 1808, where he entertained company in theatrical imitation of Medmenham; took his seat in the House of Lords, March 1809; issued English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1809), which soon ran into its fifth edition; sailed with Hobhouse from Falmouth, July 1809; rode from Lisbon to Cadiz; sailed from Cadiz, visiting Gibraltar and Malta on the way, to North Greece; rode through Acaruania to Athens, 24 Dec.; addressed Maid of Athens to Theresa Macri, his hostess's daughter; sailed, 5 March 1810, from Athens to Smyrna, Ephesus, the Troad, swimming the Hellespont (3 May), and Constantinople; parted company with Hobhouse: sailed, 14 July, for Athens; travelled in the Morea; wintered in Athens; reached Portsmouth, July 1811: took London lodgings, October 1811; spoke twice in the House of Lords, February and April 1812; publishedChilde Harold cantos i. and ii., March 1812; made the acquaintance of Thomas Moore; proposed to Anne Isabella, daughter of Sir Robert Milbauke, but was rejected, 1812; tried to sell Newstead, September 1812; injured his constitution by devices to avoid corpulency; published a succession of poems, 1813-16; annoyed by the attentions of Lady Caroline Lamb, 1813; proposed again to Miss Milbanke, September 1814; married her 2 Jan. 1815; took the additional name of Noel, April; made his will, July; much importuned by his creditors; sold bis library, November; frequented the theatre and theatrical suppers; accused, 8 Jan. 1816, of insanity by his wife, who left him, 16 Jan.: signed a deed of separation and withdrew to the continent, April; travelled through Belgium and the Rhine country to Geneva; travelled in Switzerland with Shelley in June, and with Hobhouse in September; wrote Childe Harold canto iii.; travelled with Hobhouse to Italy, October; wintered in Yeiiiv; r of n child by Jane Clairmont, January 1817; visited Rome, April-May 1817; settled in a house on the Qrand Canal, Venice, and abandoned himself to degrading excesses; wrote canto iv. ofChilde Harold July 1817; received large sums for his copyrights; sold Newstead, November 1817; wrote the first five cantos of Don Juan 1818-20; met Teresa, countess Quiccioli (1803-1873), April 1819, whom he followed to Ravenna and Bologna, and took from her husband to live with him in Venice; visited by Thomas Moore, to whom he entrusted his autobiography (burnt, May 1824); followed to Ravenna the Countess Quiccioli, who had returned to her husband, 1819; wrote much while at Ravenna, the bulk of his work consisting of dramas (beginning with Marino Faliero April-July 1820); lived with Countess Guiccioli at Pisa, October 1821 -July 1822, and wrote later cantos of Don Juan; started a short-lived newspaper, The Liberal with Leigh Hunt as editor, in which he printed hisVision of Judgment a poem satirising Southey's apotheosis of Qeorge III; present at the cremation of Shelley, 1822; lived at Genoa with Countess Guiccioli, August 1822-July 1823; offered to join the Greek insurgents, May 1823; sailed from Genoa, July; lingered in Cephalonia, August-December; landed at Missolonghi, January 1824; enlisted a regiment of Suliotes, which he disbanded, in consequence of their mutinous temper, in February; tried to raise another corps to garrison Missolonghi; died of marsh-fever, 19 April; buried in England, at Hucknall Torkard; his collected Life by Tom Moore and Works published, 1832-6.
 * ✅Henry James Byron
 * ✅John Byron, 1st Baron Byron
 * ✅John Byron
 * Sir Thomas Byron (royalist)
 * ✅Thomas Byrth
 * ✅Edward Bysshe
 * ✅Edward Bysshe (writer)
 * ✅Victorinus Bythner
 * ✅Rudolph Cabanel
 * ✅Benjamin Bond Cabbell
 * ✅Sebastian Cabot
 * ✅✅Richard Caddick
 * ✅John Cade - currently redirects to Jack Cade's Rebellion, too little is known about Cade before the events of this period to be split into his own article.
 * ✅John Cade (antiquarian)
 * Laurence Cade
 * Salusbury Cade
 * ✅Cadell ap Rhodri
 * Cadell ab Arthfael
 * ✅Cadell ap Gruffydd
 * ✅Francis Cadell
 * ✅Jessie Cadell
 * ✅Robert Cadell
 * ✅Thomas Cadell (publisher)
 * Thomas Cadell the younger
 * ✅William Archibald Cadell
 * ✅Thomas Cademan
 * ✅Cadoc
 * ✅Charles Cadogan, 2nd Baron Cadogan
 * ✅Henry Cadogan
 * ✅William Cadogan (politician)
 * ✅William Cadogan, 1st Earl Cadogan
 * ✅William Cadogan (childcare)
 * ✅Cathróe of Metz
 * ✅Saint Cadfan
 * ✅Cadfan ap Iago
 * ✅Cadwaladr ap Gruffydd
 * ✅Cadwaladr Casail
 * ✅Cadwaladr
 * ✅Roger Cadwallador
 * ✅Cadwgan ap Bleddyn
 * ✅Cadwgan of Llandyfai
 * Sir Thomas Cadyman
 * ✅✅Caedmon
 * ✅Cadwallon ap Cadfan
 * ✅✅Cædwalla of Wessex
 * Lewis of Caerleon
 * ✅Adelmare Caesar
 * ✅Charles Caesar
 * ✅Henry Caesar
 * ✅Sir Julius Caesar
 * Julius Caesar (physician)
 * ✅Sir Thomas Caesar
 * ✅Sir James Crawford Caffin
 * ✅Matthew Caffyn
 * ✅Daniel William Cahill
 * ✅John Caillaud
 * ✅Caillin
 * Saint Caimin
 * ✅Rhys Cain
 * ✅Cainnech
 * ✅James Caird
 * ✅John Caird
 * ✅Alexander Cairncross (bishop)
 * ✅Robert Cairncross
 * ✅Saint Cairnech
 * ✅David Cairnes
 * ✅John Elliot Cairnes
 * ✅Hugh McCalmont Cairns
 * ✅John Cairns
 * William Cairns (philosopher)
 * Richard Caistor
 * ✅Earls of Caithness
 * ✅John Caius the Elder
 * ✅John Caius
 * ✅Thomas Caius
 * John Calah
 * Benjamin Calamy
 * ✅Edmund Calamy the Elder
 * ✅Edmund Calamy the Younger
 * ✅Edmund Calamy (historian)
 * ✅Edmund Calamy IV
 * Wellins Calcott
 * ✅Granby Thomas Calcraft
 * ✅John Calcraft
 * ✅John Calcraft (the younger)
 * ✅✅William Calcraft
 * ✅John Caldecott
 * ✅Randolph Caldecott
 * Thomas Caldecott (barrister)
 * ✅James Tait Calder
 * ✅John Calder
 * ✅Robert Calder
 * ✅Robert Calder
 * ✅James Calderbank
 * ✅Leonard Calderbank
 * ✅Philip Hermogenes Calderon
 * ✅David Calderwood
 * ✅Henry Calderwood
 * ✅Margaret Calderwood
 * ✅William Calderwood
 * ✅Alfred James Caldicott
 * ✅James Caldwall
 * ✅✅Richard Caldwall
 * Sir Alexander Caldwell (officer)
 * Andrew Caldwell (barrister)
 * ✅Sir Benjamin Caldwell
 * Hume Caldwell
 * Sir James Lillyman Caldwell

29

 * ✅John Caldwell (Jesuit)
 * ✅Robert Caldwell
 * ✅Walter Calenius
 * John de Caleto
 * ✅John Caley
 * ✅James Calfhill
 * ✅Patrick Calhoun
 * James Calkin
 * ✅Sir John Call
 * ✅Callachan

30

 * ✅Jeremiah Joseph Callanan
 * ✅Earl of Callander - DNB redirect to James Livingston, 1st Earl of Callendar
 * ✅James Callander
 * ✅John Callander
 * ✅Henry Callaway
 * ✅Sir Augustus Wall Callcott
 * ✅John Wall Callcott
 * ✅Maria Callcott
 * William Hutchins Callcott
 * ✅George William Callender
 * ✅James Thomson Callender
 * Robert Callis
 * ✅John Callow
 * ✅✅Henry Calthorpe
 * ✅Sir Charles Calthorpe
 * ✅Sir Hugh Calveley
 * ✅Edward Calver
 * There is an engraving of Edward Calver at File:Wenceslas Hollar - Edward Calver (State 2).jpg.


 * ✅Charles Stuart Calverley
 * Henry Calverley
 * ✅✅Walter Calverley
 * ✅Caroline Louisa Waring Calvert
 * Charles Calvert the elder
 * ✅Charles Calvert (painter)
 * ✅Charles Alexander Calvert
 * ✅Edward Calvert
 * ✅Frederick Calvert
 * ✅Frederick Baltimore Calvert
 * ✅Frederick Crace Calvert
 * ✅✅George Calvert
 * George Calvert (surgeon
 * ✅Sir Harry Calvert
 * ✅James Snowden Calvert
 * ✅Leonard Calvert
 * Michael Calvert (topographer)
 * Raisley Calvert - current link is a redirect to his relation, Charles Calvert (painter)
 * Thomas Calvert (puritan)
 * ✅Thomas Calvert
 * ✅James Cambell
 * ✅Giraldus Cambrensis
 * ✅Duke of Cambridge - DNB redirect to Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge.
 * ✅Earls of Cambridge
 * John Cambridge
 * ✅Richard Owen Cambridge
 * ✅Marquis of Camden - DNB redirect to John Pratt, 1st Marquess Camden
 * ✅Earl of Camden - DNB redirect to Charles Pratt, 1st Earl Camden
 * ✅William Camden William Camden (1551–1623), antiquary and historian; educated at Christ's Hospital and (1564-6) at St. Paul's School; servitor (apparently to Thomas Cooper, schoolmaster) at Magdalen College, Oxford, 1566; migrated to Broadgates Hall, and afterwards to Christ Church (perhaps as servitor); asked grace for B.A., 1570; left Oxford, 1671, having been excluded from an All Soulsfellowship by the catholic fellows; began to travel up and down England, probably subsidised by Gabriel Goodman (d. 1601), dean of Westminster, collecting archaeological material; usher of Westminster School, 1575-93; appointed head-master, 1593; continued in vacations, 1578-1600, his personal tours of antiquarian investigation; publishedBritannia 1586; asked grace for M.A., June 1688; prebendary of Salisbury (though a layman), 1589-1623; published a Greek grammar, 1597; Clarenceux king-of-arms, 1597-1623; answered in his fifth edition of Britannia 1600, the criticisms (printed, 1599) of Ralph Brooke (or Brookesmouth); printed the epitaphs in Westminster Abbey, 1600: published certain chronicles (being some of his early collections for the Britannia,Anglica... a veteribus scripta Frankfort, 1603, containing in the text of Asser the interpolation about King Alfred's foundations in Oxford, and, 1605, Remains concerning Britain; issued the sixth (greatly enlarged) edition ofBritannia and printed the official account of the Gunpowder plot trials, 1607; named a foundation fellow of Matthew Sutcliffe's projected college at Chelsea, 1610; offered M.A. by Oxford University, 1613; communicated to Thuanus (Jacques Auguste de Thou) his manuscript history of Elizabeth's reign, c. 1607; published Annales... regnante Elizabetha... ad annum 1589 1615 the second part was printed posthumously, 1628; wrote a skeleton life of James I (printed, 1691); founded a chair of history in Oxford University, 1622; memorial verses, Camdeni Insignia, printed after his death by Oxford University, 1624; his correspondence printed by Thomas Smith, 1691.
 * Cameleac
 * ✅Baron Camelford - DNB redirect to Thomas Pitt, 1st Baron Camelford
 * ✅Sir Alan Cameron
 * ✅Alexander Cameron
 * ✅Sir Alexander Cameron
 * ✅Archibald Cameron
 * ✅Charles Duncan Cameron
 * ✅Charles Hay Cameron
 * ✅Donald Cameron
 * ✅✅Sir Duncan Alexander Cameron
 * ✅✅Sir Ewen Cameron
 * George Poulett Cameron
 * Hugh Cameron (millwright)
 * ✅John Cameron (bishop)
 * ✅John Cameron (theologian)
 * ✅John Cameron (Reformed Presbyterian)
 * ✅John Cameron of Fassiefern
 * ✅Sir John Cameron (1773–1844)
 * John Alexander Cameron
 * ✅Julia Margaret Cameron
 * ✅Lucy Lyttelton Cameron
 * ✅Richard Cameron (Covenanter)
 * ✅Verney Lovett Cameron
 * William Cameron (poet)
 * John Camidge (1735–1803)
 * John Camidge II
 * Matthew Camidge
 * ✅Anne Camm
 * ✅John Camm
 * Thomas Camm (preacher)
 * ✅Saint Cammin
 * ✅George Camocke
 * ✅Thomas de Camoys
 * ✅Alexander Campbell of Carco
 * ✅Alexander Campbell
 * ✅Alexander Campbell (musician and writer)
 * ✅Alexander Campbell (minister)
 * ✅Sir Alexander Campbell (Canadian senator)
 * ✅Anna Mackenzie Campbell
 * ✅Archibald Campbell, 2nd Earl of Argyll
 * ✅Archibald Campbell, 4th Earl of Argyll
 * ✅Archibald Campbell, 5th Earl of Argyll
 * ✅Archibald Campbell, 7th Earl of Argyll
 * ✅Archibald Campbell, 1st Marquess of Argyll Archibald Campbell, Marquis of Argyll and eighth Earl (1598-1661), nicknamed, from his squint, Gillespie Grumach and the glaed-eyed marquis; eldest son of Archibald Campbell, seventh earl; styled Lord of Lorne till November 1638; fought in Kintyre, 1615; took over the estates from his father, 1619; privy councillor, i 1626; extraordinary lord of session, 1G34; summoned to London to advi-e Charles I, after the renewal of the covenant, 1638; discovered that Charles I had empowered the Earl of Antrim to invade Kintyre; succeeded to the earldom, November 1638; accepted the abolition of episcopacy by the general assembly, 1638; raised un army, took Brodick Castle, ami i-ncanipcd at Stirling; negotiated the peace of Berwick between the Scots and (harles I, June 1639; iilienated by his continual opposition to the king from Montrose; jM'rsuaded the Scottish parliament to sit in defiance of the king's order, and to appoint an executive committee, 1640; ravaged the lands of royalist nobles in IVrth, Aberdeen, and Forfar shires; imprisoned Montrose on a charge of slandering him to the king, June 1641: negotiated with the king at Edinburgh, September 1641; fled from Edinburgh, alleging that there was a plot to arrest him, October 1641; forced Charles I to accept the terms of the Scottish parliament, November 1641; intrigued to prevent Charles from getting help from Scotland, 1642; accompanied the Scottish army into England, January 1644; sent to repress Huntly's northern rising, April, and the Irish invasion of the west, July, 1644; resigned his commission, having been out-generalled by Montrose; surprised at Inverary by Montrose, and the Campbell country ravaged, December 1644; routed by Moutrose at Inverlochy, February 1645, and at Kilsyth in August; recovered his influence after Montrose's defeat at Philliphaugh, September 1645; negotiated with Charles at Newcastle, May 1646, and at London with the parliament, June 1646; became head of j the new executive committee and invited Cromwell to Edinburgh, October 1646; enraged at the execution of 1 Charles I, joined in proclaiming Charles II, February 1650; consented to Montrose's execution, May 1650; joined Charles II, but did not obtain his confidence; set the crown on Charles II's head, January 1651; vainly opposed the invasion of England; was besieged at Inverary; submitted to the Commonwealth, August 1652; engaged in intrigues in London, 1656; M.P. for Aberdeenshire in the Commonwealth parliament, 1658; came to London to welcome Charles II, 1660; charged with high treason; condemned at Edinburgh and executed, May 1661.
 * ✅Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll Archibald Campbell, ninth Earl of Argyll (d. 1685), eldest son of Archibald Campbell, marquis and eighth earl of Argyll; styled Lord of Lorne till 1663; travelled in France and Italy, 1648-9; a far more energetic royalist than his father; captain of Charles II's Scottish lifeguard, 1650; fought at Dunbar; tried to raise his clan for Charles II, September 1650; joined the highland royalists, 1653; quarrelled with them and withdrew his own men, January 1654; was excepted j from Cromwell's act of pardon, May 1654, and remained in arms; directed by Charles II to make his peace with Cromwell, March 16S6; submitted accordingly, 1655; suspected of plotting a royalist rising, August 1656; imprisoned at Edinburgh, 1657-60; well received at Charles II's court, 1660; strong efforts made by Middleton to involve him in his father's fall, 1661; supported by Lauderdale; imprisoned, July 1661, and sentenced to death, August, but the date left in Charles II's hands; released, June 1663; sentence of death recalled; restored to earldom and heavily burdened estates, 1663; Scottish privy counsellor, 1664; disarmed covenanters in Kintyre, 1665; hated by the extreme episcopalians, who accused him of favouring the insurgents. 1666; commissioner for quieting the highlands, 1667; raised a militia regiment, 1670; was constantly enjoined to repress conventicles after 1671, and constantly urged gentler measures; extraordinary lord of session, 1674-80; at war with the McCleans of Mull, 1674-8; ordered to disarm and secure i highland papists, 1679; ordered to send his highlanders to be quartered in the whig districts; opposed the arbitrary I measures resorted to by James, duke of York, then high l commissioner for Scotland, 1680; strongly opposed the Scottish test act, 1681; imprisoned on a charge of treason, November, sentenced to death and his estates forfeited, December 1681; escaped to London and to Holland, 1682; in treaty with the Rye House conspirators, 1683; appointed commander of the descent on Scotland, April 1685; published declaration in favour of Monmouth at Caiapbeltown, May, but was not joined by his clan; worsted by the king's ships at Inverary: taken prisoner, June 10S5: executed, without trial, at Edinburgh, in virtue of the sentence passed in 1681.
 * ✅Archibald Campbell, 1st Duke of Argyll
 * ✅Archibald Campbell (bishop)
 * ✅✅Archibald Campbell (philosopher)
 * ✅Archibald Campbell, 3rd Duke of Argyll
 * ✅Archibald Campbell (satirist)
 * ✅Sir Archibald Campbell (British Army officer, born 1739)
 * ✅Sir Archibald Campbell, 1st Baronet
 * ✅Colin Campbell, 1st Earl of Argyll
 * ✅Colin Campbell, 3rd Earl of Argyll
 * ✅Colin Campbell, 6th Earl of Argyll
 * Colin Campbell (theologian)
 * ✅Colen Campbell
 * Colin Campbell (British Army officer, died 1798) - ODNB states (1721/2–1798)
 * ✅Colin Campbell (British Army officer, born 1754)
 * ✅Sir Colin Campbell (British Army officer, born 1776)
 * ✅Sir Colin Campbell, 1st Baron Clyde
 * Daniel Campbell (divine)
 * ✅Daniel Campbell
 * ✅Donald Campbell (abbot)
 * ✅Donald Campbell (traveller)
 * ✅Duncan Campbell
 * ✅Lord Frederick Campbell
 * ✅Frederick William Campbell
 * ✅George Campbell (minister)
 * George Campbell (poet)
 * ✅Sir George Campbell (civil servant)
 * ✅George Douglas Campbell
 * ✅Sir Guy Campbell, 1st Baronet
 * ✅Harriette Campbell
 * ✅Hugh Campbell, 3rd Earl of Loudoun
 * ✅Sir Ilay Campbell
 * ✅Sir James Campbell
 * ✅Sir James Campbell (British Army officer, died 1745)
 * ✅Sir James Campbell, 1st Baronet
 * ✅Sir James Campbell (British Army officer, died 1831)
 * ✅James Campbell (governor)
 * ✅James Dykes Campbell
 * Sir John Campbell (Scottish judge)
 * ✅John Campbell, 1st Earl of Loudoun
 * ✅John Campbell, 1st Earl of Breadalbane and Holland
 * ✅John Campbell, 2nd Duke of Argyll
 * John Campbell (writer)
 * ✅John Campbell, 3rd Earl of Breadalbane and Holland
 * ✅John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun
 * ✅John Campbell of Stonefield
 * ✅John Campbell (Royal Navy officer)
 * ✅John Campbell (missionary)
 * ✅Sir Sir John Campbell, 2nd Baronet
 * ✅John Campbell, 1st Baron Campbell
 * ✅John Campbell, 2nd Marquess of Breadalbane
 * Sir John Campbell (1780–1863)
 * ✅John Campbell (minister)
 * ✅Sir John Campbell
 * ✅John Francis Campbell
 * ✅John McLeod Campbell
 * ✅Neil Campbell
 * ✅Sir Neil Campbell
 * ✅Patrick Campbell
 * Robert Campbell (minster)
 * Robert Calder Campbell
 * ✅Thomas Campbell
 * ✅Thomas Campbell
 * ✅Thomas Campbell
 * William Campbell (Irish Presbyterian)
 * ✅Willielma Campbell
 * ✅Viscounts Campden
 * ✅Lorenzo Campeggio
 * ✅Edmund Campion
 * ✅George Campion
 * ✅Maria Campion
 * ✅Thomas Campion
 * ✅William Campion (Jesuit)
 * ✅Gerard de Camville
 * ✅Thomas de Camville
 * ✅Viscount Canada - DNB redirect to William Alexander, 1st Earl of Stirling
 * ✅James Cancellar
 * ✅Hugh Candidus
 * ✅Ann Candler
 * ✅Robert Smith Candlish
 * ✅Robert Cane
 * ✅Vincent Canes
 * ✅Benedict Canfield
 * ✅Canicus
 * ✅Abraham Cann
 * ✅John Canne
 * Cannera
 * ✅Charles John Canning
 * ✅✅Elizabeth Canning
 * ✅George Canning George Canning (1770–1827), statesman ; son of a barrister; brought up by an uncle, a whig banker in London: educated at Eton, and, 1788-91, at Christ Church, Oxford; entered Lincoln's Inn, 1791; in horror of the French revolution attached himself to William Pitt, 1793; M.P., Newport, 1794; M.P., Wendover, 1797; undersecretary for foreign affairs in Pitt's administration, 1796-9; member of the India board, 1799-1800; paymaster-general, 1800-1; opposed Henry Addington's administration, 1801-4; treasurer of the navy in Pitt's administration, May 1804-February 1806; refused office in Grenville's administration; foreign secretary in Portland's administration, March 1807; planned seizure of Danish fleet, September 1807: dissatisfied with Castlereagh's policy at the war office, 1808; fought duel with Oastlereagh, and resigned office, September 1809; refused office under Spencer Perceval, November 1809; refused the foreign office under Lord Liverpool, May 1812; M.P., Liverpool, 1812-22; visited Portugal and the south of France, 1814-16; designated ambassador extraordinary to Portugal, 1814; joined Lord Liverpool's administration as president of the India board, June 1816; resigned, January 1821, as favouring Queen Caroline; wintered abroad, 1821-2; nominated governor-general of India, 27 March, but resigned, September 1822; M.P., Harwich, 1822; foreign secretary in Lord Liverpool's administration, September 1822; acknowledged independence of Spain's American colonies, 1823; shielded Greece from conquest by Turkey, 1825-7; supported the popular party in Portugal against absolutism, 1826-7; on Lord Liverpool's death, made premier.by George IV, and chancellor of the exchequer, April 1827; endeavoured to reform the corn-laws; friend and correspondent of Sir Walter Scott. His Poems were published, 1823, and his Speeches 1828.
 * Richard Canning (antiquary)
 * ✅Stratford Canning Stratford Canning, first Viscount Straford de Redcliffe (1786–1880), diplomatist, styled 'the Great Elchi' i.e. ambassador par excellence; educated at Eton, 1794, and King's College, Cambridge, 1805; clerk in the foreign office, 1807; secoud secretary to the envoy to Denmark, 1807; secretary to the envoy to Constantinople, 1808. left in charge of the embassy at Constantinople, 1810, to counteract Napoleon's influence, to protect British interests in the Levant, and to prevent war between Russia and Turkey, so as to leave Russia free to fight Napoleon; negotiated the treaty of Bucharest between Russia and Turkey, May 1812; returned to London; pensioned; visited Paris, 1814; plenipotentiary to Switzerland, 1814-20, to settle federal government there; his arrangements sanctioned by the congress of Vienna, 1815; envoy to Washington, 1820-4, but failed to obtain settlement of disputed points; envoy to St. Petersburg to settle the Alaska boundary and discuss the Greek question, 1824; envoy to Constantinople to obtain recognition of Greek independence, 1825; his mediation on behalf of Greece followed by the joint intervention of Great Britain, France, and Russia 1827, but negotiations broken off by the battle of Navarino, October 1827; withdrew to Corfu, and to London, February 182 negotiated the settlement of Greek affairs at Poros", with the French and Russian envoys, December 1828; M.P., Old Sarum, 1828; resigned his ambassadorship, 1829; G.O.B., December 1829; M.P., Stockbridge, by purchase, 1830; drew up the British case in the American boundary dispute, 1830; sent to Constantinople to obtain enlargement of the Greek frontier, November 1831; fruitlessly advised Palmerston to support the sultan against the viceroy of Egypt, 1832; failed to reconcile the rival parties in Portugal, 1832; named envoy to St. Petersburg, 1833, but the czar refused to receive him; declined governorship of Canada, 1835 and 1841; M.P., King's Lynn, 1835-41; ambassador at Constantinople, 1842; obtained abolition of execution for apostasy, 1844; obtained permission for Sir Henry Layard to explore Nineveh; home on leave, 1846-7; envoy to Switzerland, November 1847; returned to Constantinople, 1848; encouraged Turkey to protect the refugees from Hungary; visited England 1852; created Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe, May 1852; advised the sultan to refuse the czar's demands for a protectorate over the Greek church, 1853; visited the Crimea, 1855; resigned his ambassadorship, 1858; hon. D.C.L. Oxford, 1858; K.G., 1869; published verses and pamphlets. A statue of him was placed in Westminster Abbey.
 * ✅Richard Cannon
 * Robert Cannon (dean of Lincoln)
 * ✅John the Canon
 * ✅Pierre-Charles Canot
 * ✅Benedict Cansfield
 * ✅Andrew Cant (minister)
 * John de Cantebrig
 * Fuke de Cantelupe
 * ✅George de Cantelupe
 * Nicholas de Cantelupe
 * Roger de Cantelupe
 * Simon Cantelupe
 * ✅Thomas de Cantelupe Thomas de Cantelupe (1218?-1282), saint; bishop of Hereford; son of William de Cantelupe, second baron; nephew of Walter de Cantelupe, bishop of Worcester; studied possibly at Oxford, 1237, afterwards at Paris; attended council of Lyons, 1245, and obtained papal dispensation to hold benefices in plurality; studied civil law at Orleans and canon law at Paris; taught canon law at Oxford; chancellor of Oxford University, 1262-3; stated the case of the revolted barons before St. Louis at Amiens, 1263-4; lord chancellor of England, February-August 1265; pensioned by Henry III, March 1265, but took refuge at Paris in August; lectured in theology at Paris, and, 1272, at Oxford; possibly again chancellor of Oxford University; prebendary of Hereford, 1273, in a place claimed by Peter de Langona; held several canonries and rich rectories, especially in Herefordshire, in plurality; attended council at Lyons, 1274; elected bishop of Hereford, June, and consecrated, September 1275; chief supporter of Edward I and opponent of Llewelyn of Wales; a bitter enemy of the Jews; active in reforming diocese of Hereford, and in maintaining claims of see against Earl Gilbert of Gloucester, 1278, Lord Corbet, and the bishops of St. Asaph and St. David's; led the opposition to Archbishop Peckham in the council at Reading, July 1279; involved in a bitter dispute with Peckham regarding jurisdiction; withdrew for safety to Normandy, and appealed against Peckham to Rome, c. 1281; vigorously sued at Rome for the prebend of Hereford by Peter de Langona, 1281; tried to bribe the curia; excommunicated by Peckham through a dispute as to jurisdiction; appealed to Rome; went in person to Italy to press his appeal, March 1282; died at Orvieto, August; buried in Hereford Cathedral; translated to a new tomb there, 1287; miracles worked at his tomb; popularly accepted as a saint; the pope urged to canonise him, 1290, 1299, 1305; canonised by Pope John XXII as St. Thomas of Hereford, 1320.
 * ✅Walter de Cantelupe
 * ✅William de Cantelupe
 * ✅William de Cantelupe
 * ✅William de Cantelupe
 * ✅Viscounts Canterbury
 * ✅✅Richard Cantillon
 * ✅John Canton
 * ✅Henry Cantrell
 * ✅Andrew Cantwell