Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/DNB Epitome 11

1

 * Francis Clater
 * Thomas Clater
 * ✅Antoine François Jean Claudet
 * ✅Piers Calverley Claughton
 * ✅Thomas Legh Claughton
 * ✅John Clavel
 * Robert Clavell
 * ✅John Graham of Claverhouse
 * ✅John Clavering (British Army officer)
 * ✅Robert Clavering

2

 * ✅Laurence Claxton
 * ✅Marshall Claxton
 * Alfred Borron Clay
 * ✅Charles Clay
 * ✅Frederick Clay
 * ✅James Clay (author)
 * ✅John Clay (chaplain)
 * John Granby Clay
 * William Clay
 * William Keatinge Clay

3

 * ✅John Claymond
 * ✅Elizabeth Claypoole
 * ✅John Claypoole
 * Charlotte Clayton
 * ✅John Clayton (botanist)
 * ✅✅John Clayton (divine)
 * John Clayton (painter)
 * ✅✅John Clayton (minister)
 * John Clayton (architect)
 * John Clayton, junior

4

 * John Clayton (British actor)
 * ✅✅Nicholas Clayton (divine)
 * ✅Richard Clayton (dean)
 * ✅✅Richard Clayton (barrister)
 * ✅Robert Clayton
 * ✅✅Robert Clayton (bishop)
 * ✅Thomas Clayton
 * ✅Anthony Cleasby
 * ✅✅Richard Cleasby
 * ✅Euseby Cleaver

5

 * ✅William Cleaver
 * Bourchier Cleeve
 * James Clegg
 * ✅John Clegg (violinist)
 * Samuel Clegg (born 1814)
 * ✅✅Samuel Clegg All text from DNB is present, but this includes the bio of his son. Still needs a link to WS.
 * George Cleghorn (18th-century physician)
 * James Cleghorn
 * Francis Clein
 * ✅✅James Cleland (statistician)

6

 * ✅John Cleland
 * ✅William Cleland
 * William Cleland (Commissioner)
 * Clement Scotus I
 * ✅Clement of Ireland
 * Clement of Llanthony
 * ✅Caesar Clement
 * ✅Gregory Clement
 * ✅John Clement (physician)
 * Margaret Clement

7

 * ✅William Innell Clement
 * Michael Clements
 * Andrew Clench
 * John Clench
 * There are images of this guy at File:Wenceslas Hollar - John Clenche (State 2).jpg and File:Wenceslas Hollar - John Clenche (State 1).jpg.


 * ✅Luke Clennell
 * ✅Maurice Clenocke
 * John Clephane
 * Charles Louis Clérisseau
 * ✅Sir George Clerk
 * ✅Sir George Russell Clerk

8

 * ✅John Clerk (bishop)
 * John Clerk
 * ✅Sir John Clerk, 2nd Baronet
 * ✅John Clerk of Eldin
 * ✅✅John Clerk (judge)
 * Josiah Clerk
 * Matthew Clerk
 * William Clerk
 * George Clerk-Maxwell
 * ✅James Clerk-Maxwell

9

 * ✅Bartholomew Clerke
 * ✅Charles Clerke
 * ✅Francis Clerke (lawyer)
 * ✅Gilbert Clerke
 * ✅Henry Clerke
 * ✅Richard Clerke
 * Thomas Henry Shadwell Clerke
 * William Clerke
 * ✅Sir William Henry Clerke, 8th Baronet
 * ✅Michael Clery

10

 * ✅William Vane, 1st Duke of Cleveland
 * ✅Barbara Palmer, 1st Duchess of Cleveland
 * ✅Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Cleveland
 * Augustus Cleveland
 * ✅John Cleveland
 * ✅John Cleveley the Younger
 * ✅Robert Cleveley
 * Samuel Cleverley
 * ✅Anne of Cleves
 * ✅Francis Cleyn

11

 * Robert de Cliderhou
 * Henry de Cliff
 * ✅Anne Clifford
 * Arthur Clifford
 * ✅Sir Augustus William James Clifford
 * ✅Sir Conyers Clifford
 * ✅George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland
 * ✅Henry Clifford, 10th Baron de Clifford
 * ✅Henry Clifford, 1st Earl of Cumberland
 * ✅Henry Clifford, 2nd Earl of Cumberland

12

 * ✅Henry Clifford, 5th Earl of Cumberland
 * Henry Clifford
 * ✅✅Sir Henry Hugh Clifford
 * ✅✅Hugh Clifford, 7th Baron Clifford of Chudleigh
 * James Clifford (musician)
 * ✅John Clifford, 9th Baron de Clifford NOTE: article is certainly for the right person, but the enumeration of the barons de Clifford used in WP does not match the enumeration in DNB.
 * ✅Margaret Clifford, Countess of Cumberland
 * Martin Clifford
 * ✅Richard Clifford
 * ✅Robert de Clifford, 1st Baron de Clifford this is the correct person, but the WP enumeration of the de Cliffords does not match the DNB enumeration.

13

 * Roger de Clifford (judge)
 * ✅Roger de Clifford, 5th Baron de Clifford
 * ✅Rosamond Clifford
 * ✅Thomas de Clifford, 6th Baron de Clifford
 * ✅Thomas Clifford, 8th Baron de Clifford
 * ✅Thomas Clifford, 1st Baron Clifford of Chudleigh
 * ✅Walter de Clifford
 * ✅William Clifford (priest)
 * ✅William Kingdon Clifford
 * ✅William Clift

14

 * Francis Clifton
 * John Clifton
 * ✅Richard Clifton (Brownist)
 * Robert Cox Clifton
 * Henry Cline
 * Alfred Clint
 * ✅George Clint
 * Scipio Clint
 * ✅Charles Clinton
 * Charles John Fynes Clinton

15

 * ✅Edward Fiennes de Clinton
 * ✅Geoffrey de Clinton
 * ✅Sir Henry Clinton (1730–1795)
 * ✅Henry Clinton (British Army officer)
 * ✅Henry Pelham-Clinton, 2nd Duke of Newcastle-under-Lyne
 * ✅Henry Fynes Clinton
 * ✅Henry Pelham-Clinton, 4th Duke of Newcastle
 * ✅Henry Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle
 * ✅Sir William Henry Clinton
 * John Clipstone

16

 * ✅✅Augustus Clissold
 * Stephen Clissold
 * Sir Christopher Clitherow
 * ✅Margaret Clitherow
 * ✅Caroline Clive
 * ✅Kitty Clive
 * ✅Edward Clive (judge)
 * ✅Edward Clive, 1st Earl of Powis
 * ✅Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive Robert Clive, Baron Clive (1725–1774), governor of Bengal; eldest son of an impoverished Shropshire squire; exhibited a turbulent and masterful temper at school; offered writerehip in the East India Company's service, 1743; reached Madras penniless and hi debt owing to an exceptionally protracted voyage, 1744; friendless and miserable; tried to shoot himself; taken prisoner by Labourdonnais at Madras, September 1746; escaped to Fort St. David; ensign, 1747; showed great bravery at the unsuccessful siege of Pondicherry, 1748; lieutenant under Major Stringer Lawrence at Devikota; commissariat officer; twice sent in charge of reinforcements to Trichinopoly; captain; allowed to try his plan of attacking Arcot, capital of the Oarnatic; marched from Madras, and occupied Arcot, 1751; besieged by ten thousand troops 23 Sept.-14 Nov.; beat off all attacks, having only eighty Europeans and 150 Sepoys efficient; reinforced, 15 Nov.; defeated the enemy at Ami; twice took Con jeveram: defeated the French and natives at Caveripak; helped Major Lawrence to take Trichinopoly; reduced Covelong and Ohingleput; invalided to England, 1753; paid his father's debts; tried to enter parliament; appointed lieutenant-colonel; reached Bombay, 1755; helped to reduce Gheriah, the stronghold of the pirate Angria, 1756; took charge of Fort St. David, 20 June 1756 (the day before theBlack Holeof Calcutta); recovered Calcutta and Hugli; came to terms with Suraj ud Dowlah, the guilty nawab of Bengal; captured Chandernagore; discovered the nawab's intended treachery; negotiated privately with his general Mir Jaffler, through the Hindu Omichand; cheated Omichand by having two treaties drawn up, one of them fictitious; marched against the nawab, and won the great victory of Plassey, 1767; installed Mir Jaffier as nawab; accepted from him a large present and the quit-rent of the company's territory; governor of the company's Bengal possessions, 1757-60; repulsed the Dutch attempt to found a rival colony at Chinsura, 1759; sailed for England, 1760; M.P., Shrewsbury, 17601774; created Baron Clive in the Irisb peerage, 1762; sent out to put down abuses in Bengal; assumed the governorship of Bengal, 1765; reformed the civil administration; restored military discipline and pensioned the nawab of Bengal; obtained for the company the lordship of the province; created, out of a legacy from Mir Jaffier, a pension fund for disabled officers; returned to England in shattered health, 1766; rancorously attacked by politicians and others; went through a parliamentary inquiry, 1772-3; became a victim to opium; committed suicide.
 * ✅✅Robert Clobery

17

 * Abraham Josias Cloëté
 * Alexander Clogie
 * ✅Valentine Lawless, 2nd Baron Cloncurry
 * ✅John Scott, 1st Earl of Clonmell
 * Viscount Clontarff
 * ✅Sir Hugh Clopton
 * Walter de Clopton
 * ✅Sir Barry Close
 * Francis Close
 * John Close

18

 * ✅Nicholas Close
 * ✅✅Thomas Close
 * George Closse
 * ✅John Closterman
 * ✅Sir John Clotworthy
 * ✅Anne Jemima Clough
 * ✅Arthur Hugh Clough
 * Richard Clouqh
 * Thomas Cloutt
 * Joseph Clover (farrier)

19

 * Butler Clowes
 * John Clowes
 * ✅William Clowes (surgeon)
 * William Clowes (1582–1648)
 * ✅William Clowes (printer)
 * ✅William Clowes (Primitive Methodist)
 * William Clowes (the younger)
 * John Clubbe
 * William Clubbe
 * William Benton Clulow
 * John Clunie
 * Henry Clutterbuck
 * Robert Clutterbuck
 * Baron Clyde
 * William Clyffe
 * Cnut
 * ✅✅Charles Coates (priest)
 * Robert Coates
 * Thomas Coats
 * James Cobb
 * Samuel Cobb
 * Charles Cobbe
 * William Cobbett
 * Ingram Cobbln
 * Elizabeth Cobbold
 * John Spencer Cobbold
 * Richard Cobbold
 * Thomas Spencer Cobbold
 * Edward Cobden
 * Richard Cobden
 * Viscount Cobham
 * ✅Barons Cobham
 * Eleanor Cobham
 * ✅✅Henry Cobham (diplomat)
 * John de Cobham
 * Thomas de Cobham
 * Thomas Cobham
 * Duke of Coburg
 * William Cochran
 * Robert William Cochran-Patrick
 * Sir Alexander Forrester Inglis Cochrane
 * Archibald Cochrane
 * Sir James Cochrane
 * ✅Sir John Cochrane (Royalist)
 * ✅Sir John Cochrane of Ochiltree
 * John Dundas Cochrane
 * John George Cochrane
 * Robert Cochrane
 * Thomas Cochrane
 * Thomas John Cochrane
 * ✅William Cochrane
 * Thomas Oswald Cockayne
 * James Pattison Cockburn
 * Patrick Cockburn
 * William Cockburn
 * Alexander James Edmund Cockburn
 * Sir William Cockburn
 * Edward Cocker
 * Henry Cockeram
 * Charles Robert Cockerell
 * Frederick Pepys Cockerell
 * Samuel Pepys Cockerell
 * John Cockerill
 * William Cockerill
 * William Cockin
 * George Cookings
 * John Cockis
 * Sir James Cockle
 * Arthur Herbert Cocks
 * Roger Cocks
 * Thomas Cockson
 * Henry Cockton
 * Henry Coddington
 * ✅William Coddington
 * Christopher Codrington
 * Sir Edward Codrington
 * Sir Henry John Codrington
 * Robert Codrington (translator)
 * Thomas Codrington
 * Sir William John Codrington
 * Saint Coemgen
 * Coenred
 * Charles Edward de Coetlogon
 * Charles Coffey
 * Edward Coffin
 * Edward Pine Coffin
 * Sir Isaac Coffin
 * Isaac Campbell Coffin
 * John Pine Coffin
 * Robert Aston Coffin
 * Eliezer Cogan
 * Thomas Cogan (1545?-1607)
 * ✅Thomas Cogan
 * William Cogan
 * Henry Coggeshall
 * Ralph of Coggeshall
 * Jeremiah Coghlan
 * John Cok
 * Aston Cokayne
 * George Cokayne
 * Sir John Cokayne
 * ✅✅Sir Thomas Cokayne
 * Thomas Cokayne (died 1638)
 * Sir William Cokayne
 * Daniel Parker Coke
 * ✅Sir Edward Coke Sir Edward Coke (1552–1634), judge and law writer, commonly called Lord Coke or Cooke; educated at Norwich and (1567) Trinity College, Cambridge; at Clifford's Inn, London, 1571; barrister of the Inner Temple, 1578; soon obtained good practice: reader of Lyon's Inn, 1579: advanced by Burghley's influence; recorder of Coventry, 1585; recorder of Norwich, 1586; recorder of London, 1592; M.P., Aldborough, 1589; M.P., Norfolk, and speaker of the Bouse of Commons, 1593: solicitor-general, 1592: attorney-general, to Francis Bacon's disappointment, 1594; married, to spite Bacon, Burghley's granddaughter, Lady Elizabeth Cecil, widow of Sir William Hatton, 1598: began publishing his law reports, 1600: entertained Queen Elizateth at Stoke Pogis, 1601; showed great rancour in the trials of the Earl of Essex, 1600, Ralegh, 1603, and the gunpowder plotters, 1605; chief-justice of common pleas, 1606; opposed James I's claim to tax imports and exports, 1606; decided that the post-nati persons bom in Scotland after the union of the crowns were English subjects, 1607; resisted Archbishop Bancroft's claim, which James I favoured, to exempt the church from the jurisdiction of the common law courts, 1606-9; decided against the king's authority to make law by proclamation, 1610; resisted Archbishop Abbot's attempt to have ecclesiastical causes decided by the court of high commission, 1611: compelled, through.Bacon's influence, and against his own wish, to accept the chief-justiceship of the king's. bench, 1613; privy councillor, 1613; opposed the practice of consulting the judges extra-judicially, 1615; favoured the courts of common law iu their endeavour to curtail the powers of the chancellor, 1615; refused to obey James I's order to stay proceedings in the commendam case: showed uncourtly desire to ascertain the truth in Sir Thomas Overtuiry'a rnso, 1615; suspended, partly through Bacon's representations to James I, from the privy council ami judicial functions, 1616; ordered to expunge from his 4 Reports opinions unfavourable to the king's prerogative: dismissed from the chief-justiceship, 1616; separated from his wife, in consequence of a violent quarrel as to the marriage of their daughter, 1617; recalled to the privy council, 1617: employed on several commission? of inquiry; M.P., Liskeard, 1620-2; vigorously attacked the monopolies: advocated war with Spain; incensed James I by speaking against the Spanish marriage and denouncing interference with the liberties of parliament; on the committee to impeach Bacon; imprisoned in the Tower, 1622; M.P., Coventry, 1624: M.P., Norfolk, 1625-6; opposed Charles I's demand for subsidies, 1625; precluded from parliamentary action by being pricked sheriff of Buckinghamshire, 1626; M.P., Buckinghamshire, 1628; spoke strongly against the Duke of Buckingham, illegal taxation, and illegal imprisonment; lived afterwards in retirement at Stoke Pogis. His papers were seized by order of Charles I, and detained till 1641. Of Coke'sReports the first eleven parts were published 1600-16, the unfinished twelfth and thirteenth parts not till 1656-9. His Booke of Entries appeared in 1614. The First part of the Institutes of the Laws of England (Coke upon Littleton) appeared in 1628, the second part in 1645, and the third and the unfinished fourth part in 1644.
 * ✅George Coke
 * Jeremiah Coke
 * ✅Sir John Coke
 * Roger Coke
 * ✅Thomas Coke (bishop)
 * ✅Thomas William Coke
 * ✅✅John Coker (clergyman)
 * Sir John Colbatch
 * John Colbatch
 * Sir John Colborne
 * Henry Colburn
 * Thomas Frederick Colby
 * Baron Colchester
 * Colchu
 * ✅John Henry Colclough
 * Cadwallader Colden
 * Geoffrey de Coldingham
 * Francis Coldock
 * John Coldstream
 * ✅John Coldwell
 * ✅Abdiah Cole
 * Charles Nalson Cole
 * Sir Christopher Cole
 * Sir Galbraith Lowry Cole

32

 * George Cole (painter)
 * ✅George Vicat Cole
 * ✅Henry Cole (priest)
 * ✅Henry Cole
 * Humfray Cole
 * John Cole (antiquary)
 * Ralph Cole
 * Thomas Cole (dean)
 * Thomas Cole (minister)
 * ✅William Cole (Puritan)

33

 * Sir William Cole
 * William Cole
 * William Cole
 * William Cole
 * William Cole (antiquary)
 * William Cole
 * William Cole
 * Henry Thomas Colebrooke
 * Sir William Macbean George Colebrooke
 * Peter de Colechurch
 * Charles Coleman
 * Edward Coleman
 * ✅Edward Coleman (martyr)
 * Thomas Coleman
 * Walter Coleman
 * William Higgins Coleman
 * Frances Ellen Colenso
 * John William Colenso
 * John Colepeper
 * Thomas Colepeper
 * William Colepeper
 * Barons Coleraine
 * Derwent Coleridge
 * Hartley Coleridge
 * Henry James Coleridge
 * Henry Nelson Coleridge
 * Herbert Coleridge
 * James Duke Coleridge
 * John Coleridge
 * Sir John Duke Coleridge
 * Sir John Taylor Coleridge
 * Samuel Taylor Coleridge Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834), poet and philosopher; youngest child of John Coleridge (17191781); educated at Christ's Hospital, 1782-90; read Flotmus and argued on points of metaphysics; schoolfellow and friend of Charles Lamb; courted Mary Evans, a schoolfellow's sister; read Greek, medicine, and metaphysics; sizar, 1791, and scholar, 1793, of Jesus College, Lambndge; read desultorily; spent much time in conversation; adopted extreme views in politics and religion; went back to London, 1793; enlisted in the 15th dragoons,   as Silas Tomkyn Comberback, 1793; bought out by his brothers, 1794; said to have contributed to the Morning Chronicle 1793-5; returned to Cambridge, 1794; met Robert Southey in Oxford, and visited Wales: engaged himself to Sara Fricker at Bristol; joined Southey, Robert Lovell, and other pantisocrats in their scheme to found a communistic colony on the Susquehanna, Pennsylvania; wrote the first act of the Fall of Robespierre (published, 1794); left Cambridge, 1794; borrowed money of Joseph Cottle, bookseller, of Bristol; lectured against Pitt, 1795; married Sara Fricker, 1795; published his first volume ofPoems 1796; canvassed in Birmingham, Sheffield, Manchester, and other towns, for subscribers to the Watchman newspaper, which failed (May 1796) at its tenth number; preached occasionally in Unitarian chapels; began to take laudanum, 1796; maintained by Thomas Poole at Nether Stowey, preaching in Unitarian chapels at Taunton and Bath, 1796-7; visited Wordsworth, 1797; joined Wordsworth in writing Lyri. cal Ballads(published 1798), contributingThe Ancient Mariner wrote the first part ofChristabel* and Kubla Khan 1797; contributed occasional poems and articles to theMorning Post 1798-1802: went to Shrewsbury as Unitarian minister, 1798, and met William Hazlitt; accepted two annuities of 7bl. each from Josiah and Thomas Wedgwood, on condition of devoting himself to literature; furnished with funds by the Wedgwoods to visit Germany, 1798-9; published his translation of Schiller's Wallenstein 1800: settled at Keswick, 1800; wrote the second part of Christabel 1800; a slave to opium, 1803; visited Malta, 1804-5, and Rome, 1805-6; confirmed in 751. annuity by the will of Thomas Wedgwood (d. July 1805); first met Thomas De Quincey. at Bridgewater, 1807; lectured, very indifferently, at the Royal Institution, 1808: left his family at Keswick and became dependent on Wordsworth at Grasmere, 1809; canvassed for subscribers to theFriendnewspaper; published the Friend August 1809 to March 1810; contributed to the London Courier 1809, 1811, and 1814; his 751. annuity from Josiah Wedgwood stopped, 1811; lectured in London on Shakespeare and other poets, 1810-11, 1812, and 1813; his Remorseacted with success at Drury Lane, 1813; left his family dependent on Southey, allowing his wife his 751. annuity and quartering himself on his friends; lectured on Shakespeare and Milton, at Bristol, 1813; his shivery to opium now undisguisable: domiciled with John Morgan at Calne, Wiltshire, 1813-16; domiciled with James Gillman, at Highgate, 1816-34; published his autobiography, Biographia Literaria 1817; last lectured in London, 1818; pensioner of Society of Literature, 18241830: publishedAids to Reflection 1825; alion* of London literary circles; visited Germany, 1828; took a leading part in the introduction of English thinkers to the results of German thought; published his collected Poetical and Dramatic Works 1828.
 * Sara Coleridge
 * William Hart Coleridge
 * Cowper Phipps Coles
 * Elisha Coles
 * Elisha Coles
 * Elisha Coles
 * Gilbert Coles
 * John Coles
 * Sir Henry Colet
 * ✅John Colet
 * Henry Coley
 * Abraham Colfe
 * Isaac Colfe
 * John Colgan
 * Lord Colinton
 * Frederick William Collard
 * William Frederick Collard
 * Thomas Richardson Colledge
 * Stephen College
 * Abraham Colles
 * ✅John Collet (artist)
 * John Colleton (divine)
 * Sir George Pomeroy Collet
 * John Collet
 * Samuel Colliber
 * Arthur Collier
 * Sir Francis Augustus Collier
 * Sir George Collier
 * Giles Collier
 * ✅Jeremy Collier
 * Joel Collier
 * John Collier
 * John Payne Collier
 * Robert Porrett Collier
 * Thomas Collier
 * Catherine Collignon
 * Charles Collignon (physician)
 * ✅Charles Colling
 * Robert Colling
 * John Collinges
 * Peter Bernardine Collingridge
 * Samuel Collings
 * John Collington
 * Cuthbert Collingwood
 * George Collingwood
 * ✅Roger Collingwood
 * Anthony Collins
 * Arthur Collins
 * Charles Allston Collins
 * Charles James Collins
 * David Collins
 * Greenvile Collins
 * Hercules Collins
 * John Collins (physician)
 * ✅John Collins (mathematician)
 * John Collins
 * John Collins
 * John Collins
 * John Collins
 * John Collins
 * Mortimer Collins
 * Richard Collins
 * Richard Collins
 * ✅Samuel Collins (theologian)
 * ✅Samuel Collins
 * Samuel Collins
 * Samuel Collins
 * Samuel Collins
 * Samuel Collins
 * Thomas Collins (poet)
 * William Collins
 * William Collins
 * William Collins
 * William Lucas Collins
 * William Wilkie Collins
 * James Collinson
 * John Collinson (clergyman)
 * Peter Collinson
 * Richard Collinson
 * Septimus Collinson
 * John Day Collis
 * John Collop
 * Joseph Collyer
 * Joseph Collyer
 * Mary Collyer
 * William Bengo Collyer
 * Colman
 * Ela Colman
 * Saint Colman
 * George Colman
 * George Colman
 * Walter Colman
 * Dominic Paul Colnaghi
 * Paul Colnaghi
 * Philip Howard Colomb
 * ✅Paul Colomiès
 * Adam de Colonia
 * Lord Colonsay
 * John de Coloribus
 * John Colpoys
 * Archibald Campbell-Colquhoun
 * Janet Colquhoun
 * John Colquhoun
 * John Colquhoun
 * John Campbell Colquhoun (psychical researcher)
 * ✅✅John Campbell Colquhoun
 * Patrick Colquhoun
 * Patrick Macchombaich Colquhoun
 * John Colson
 * Lancelot Colson
 * ✅Edward Colston
 * John Colt
 * Maximilian Colt
 * Charles Caleb Colton
 * John Colton
 * Columba
 * Saint Columban
 * George Colvile
 * Sir James William Colvile
 * Alexander Colvill
 * Alexander Colville (judge)
 * Alexander Colville (episcopalian)
 * Charles Colville
 * Elizabeth Colville
 * ✅✅James Colville (judge)
 * John Colville
 * William Colville
 * John Russell Colvin
 * Daniel Colwall
 * Sir David Colyear
 * Thomas Colyngham
 * Andrew Combe
 * Charles Combe
 * George Combe
 * Taylor Combe
 * Thomas Combe
 * William Combe
 * ✅Thomas Comber
 * Thomas Comber (dean of Durham) Nicholas Comberford
 * Viscount Combermere
 * John Comerford
 * Saint Comgall
 * Robert de Comin
 * Comman
 * Commius
 * Roger Compotista
 * ✅Henry Compton Henry Compton (1632–1713), bishop of London; younger son of Spencer Compton, second earl of Northampton; possibly served in the civil war; nobleman of Queen's College, Oxford, 1649-52; travelled in Italy; possibly served in Flanders; cornet in the horse guards, 1660; M.A. Cambridge, 1661; incorporated at Christ Church, Oxford, 1666; rector of Cottenham, Cambridgeshire; advanced in the church by his family influence and the favour of Danby; master of St. Cross, Winchester, 1667; canon of Christ Church, Oxford, and D.D., 1669; bishop of Oxford, 1674; translated to London, 1675; dean of the Chapel Royal, 1675; privy councillor, 1676; procured the banishment of Joannes Lyserus; religious instructor of Princesses Mary and Anne; his hopes of the see of Canterbury frustrated by the opposition of the Duke of York, 1677; assisted the persecuted French protestants, 1681; strongly opposed repeal of Test Act, 1685; dismissed from the privy council and the deanery of the Chapel Royal, 1685; suspended from episcopal functions for refusing to inhibit John Sharp at the king's order, 1686; agreed to support William of Orange, 1687; joined the revolutionary committee, 1688; signed the invitation to William, 30 June 1688; reinstated in his see, 1688; joined the bishopsprotest against James II's illegal acts, October and November 1688; conveyed Princess Anne to Nottingham; marched, as colonel of a regiment, to Oxford; welcomed William in London, December 1688; ordered omission of prayers for James II and the Prince of Wales, 1689; voted for declaring the throne vacant; reinstated as privy councillor and dean of the Chapel Royal; crowned William and Mary, April 1689; acted as primate during Bancroft's suspension, 1689-90; supported the toleration bill, 1691; lord almoner, 1702; voted for Sacheverell, 1710; collected foreign plants; spent his revenues in charity; published translations from French and Italian, 1666-77, and Letters and Charges to his clergy, 1679-1701.
 * ✅Henry Compton (actor)
 * Sir Herbert Abingdon Draper Compton
 * ✅Spencer Compton
 * ✅Spencer Compton
 * ✅Spencer Joshua Alwyne Compton
 * Thomas Compton
 * ✅William Compton (courtier)
 * ✅William Compton (army officer)
 * Alexander Comrie
 * Alexander Comyn
 * John Comyn
 * John Comyn
 * John Comyn
 * John Comyn
 * John Comyn
 * Sir Robert Buckley Comyn
 * Walter Comyn
 * Sir John Comyns
 * Conaeus
 * John Conant
 * John Conant
 * Matthew Concanen
 * William de Conches
 * John Condé
 * Henry Condell
 * Henry Condell