Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/DNB Epitome 13

1

 * ✅Dinah Maria Craik
 * George Lillie Craik
 * Richard Crakanthorpe
 * Augustine David Crake
 * William Crakelt
 * Franz Cramer
 * Johann Baptist Cramer
 * John Antony Cramer
 * Wilhelm Cramer
 * John Mockett Cramp

2

 * Sir John Fiennes Twisleton Crampton
 * Sir Philip Crampton
 * Thomas Russell Crampton
 * Victoire Crampton
 * Viscount Cranborne
 * John Cranch
 * Edward Crane
 * Francis Crane
 * John Crane
 * Lucy Crane
 * Nicholas Crane
 * Ralph Crane

3

 * Thomas Crane (divine)
 * ✅Thomas Crane
 * William Crane
 * Lionel Cranfield
 * James Cranford
 * James Cranke
 * ✅Thomas Cranley
 * Thomas Cranley (poet)
 * George Cranmer
 * Thomas Cranmer Thomas Cranmer (1489–1556), archbishop of Canterbury; studied philosophy, logic, and classics at Cambridge; M.A., 1515; forfeited fellowship at Jesus College by marriage; re-elected; D.D.; public examiner in theology; expressed privately an opinion that the establishment of the invalidity of Henry VIII's marriage with Catherine of Arragon would justify a divorce, 1529; propounded these views in a treatise; attended the Earl of Wiltshire, ambassador to Charles V, 1530; returned to England, 1533, being appointed archbishop of Canterbury; gave formal sentence of the invalidity of the king's marriage with Catherine of Arragou, 1533; pronounced King Henry's marriage with Anne Boleyn to be lawful; granted bulls and dispensations; maintained the king's claim to be the supreme head of the church of England; pronounced his marriage with Anne Boleyn null and void, 1536; promulgated ten articles of doctrine, 1536; in conjunction with Cromwell had the supposed relics of St. Thomas of Canterbury investigated, 1638, but did not take part in the suppression of the monasteries; unsuccessfully opposed the Act of the Six Articles for Abolishing Diversity of Opinions 1539; became an instrument for the divorce of Anne of Cleves; did not oppose the bill of attainder against Thomas Cromwell, 1540; conveyed to the king information of the infidelity of his fifth wife, Catherine Howard, 1541; defended theGreat Bible against the criticisms of Bishop Gardiner, 1642; vindicated by Henry VIII against charges of heresy; appointed one of the council to govern during the minority of Edward VI, 1547; supervised the production of the first prayer-book, 1548; deserted the falling Protector Somerset, 1549; made overtures to Melanchthon with the view of promoting union of reformed churches; wrote against transubstautiation; made a revision of the prayer-book, but could not induce the Princess Mary to recognise the new use, which was authorised (1552) by an Act of Uniformity; promulgated forty-two articles of religion (afterwards reduced to thirty-nine), 1552; joined in signing a will of Edward VI excluding the Princess Mary from the succession, 1553; committed to the Tower for disseminating seditious bills against the mass and for having been a partisan of Lady Jane Grey, 1553; released that he might argue in justification of his alleged heresies, 1554; adjudged to be in the wrong at a discussion held at Oxford; formally cited to appear before the pope, 1665; refused to recognise papal jurisdiction; condemned for heresy by Cardinal Pole, recently appointed archbishop of Canterbury; degraded, 1656; signed six documents admitting the supremacy of the pope and the truth of all Roman catholic doctrine except transubstantiation, iu vain; burned at the stake repudiating these admissions, 21 March 1556; compiled a Reformatio Legum Ecclfsiasticnrum 1560, and wrote on Anglican discipline and theology.

4

 * ✅✅David Cranstoun
 * ✅✅George Cranstoun
 * ✅✅Helen D'Arcy Cranstoun
 * ✅James Cranstoun
 * William Henry Cranstoun
 * John Cranwell
 * Baron Cranworth - See Robert Monsey Rolfe]]
 * Richard Crashaw
 * William Crashaw
 * William Cratfield

5

 * William Crathorne
 * Sir Charles Gregan Craufurd
 * James Craufurd
 * John Walkinshaw Craufurd
 * Quintin Craufurd
 * Robert Craufurd
 * ✅Elizabeth, Countess of Craven
 * John Craven
 * Keppel Richard Craven
 * Louisa, Countess of Craven
 * ✅Pauline Marie Armande Aglaé Craven

6

 * Sir William Craven
 * William Craven
 * Earls of Crawford
 * Adair Crawford
 * Ann Crawford
 * ✅✅David Crawford (historian)
 * Edmund Thornton Crawford
 * John Crawford
 * Lawrence Crawford
 * Robert Crawford
 * Thomas Crawford

7

 * Thomas Jackson Crawford
 * William Crawford (historian)
 * William Crawford (prison reformer)
 * ✅William Crawford (artist)
 * William Sharman Crawford
 * Archibald Crawfurd
 * George Crawfurd
 * John Crawfurd
 * Thomas Crawfurd
 * Francis Crawley

8

 * Richard Crawley
 * Robert Thompson Crawshay
 * William Crawshay
 * Peter Creagh
 * Richard Creagh
 * Henry Hope Crealock
 * Sir Edward Shepherd Creasy
 * Thomas Creech
 * William Creech
 * Gary Creed

9

 * Elizabeth Creed
 * John Creed
 * Thomas Creed
 * ✅William Creed
 * ✅Mandell Creighton Supp
 * ✅Robert Creighton
 * Robert Creighton (precentor of Wells
 * Drue Cressener
 * Hugh Cressingham
 * Elizabeth Cresswell

10

 * ✅Cresswell Cresswell
 * Daniel Cresswell
 * Joseph Cresswell
 * ✅Hugh Paulinus Cressy
 * Robert Cressy
 * Andrea Crestadoro
 * ✅Thomas Creswick
 * ✅William Creswick
 * Edward Cresy
 * John Crew

11

 * ✅Nathaniel Crew
 * ✅✅Randolph Crew (cartographer)
 * ✅Ranulphe Crew
 * Thomas Crew (writer)
 * ✅Thomas Crew
 * ✅Isaac Crewdson
 * Jane Crewdson
 * Frances Anne Crewe
 * ✅John Crewe
 * Tom Cribb

12

 * Alexander Crichton
 * Andrew Crichton
 * George Crichton
 * ✅James Crichton
 * ✅James Crichton
 * ✅Robert Crichton (Lord Advocate)
 * Sir Robert Crichton (died 1604)
 * ✅Robert Crichton
 * ✅William Crichton
 * William Crichton (Jesuit)

13

 * ✅Fridericus Cridiodunus
 * John Marten Cripps
 * Sir Nicholas Crisp
 * Samuel Crisp
 * Stephen Crisp
 * Tobias Crisp
 * Gilbert Crispin
 * Joshua Cristall
 * George Critchett (surgeon)
 * Charles Crocker
 * Johann Crocker

14

 * ✅William Crockford
 * Edward Croft
 * ✅✅George Croft (rector)
 * Herbert Croft (Benedictine)
 * ✅Herbert Croft (bishop)
 * ✅Herbert Croft
 * ✅James Croft
 * James Croft (died 1624)
 * John Croft (antiquary)
 * ✅Richard Croft (obstetrician)
 * ✅William Croft

15

 * Zachary Crofton
 * Elizabeth Crofts
 * George Crofts
 * James Crofts
 * William Crofts
 * George Croghan
 * ✅Sir Alexander Croke
 * ✅Charles Croke 119 sub
 * Sir George Croke
 * John Croke (lawyer) 118
 * ✅Sir John Croke 118

16

 * ✅Richard Croke 119
 * Unton Croke
 * Unton Croke 119 sub
 * John Croker
 * ✅John Wilson Croker
 * ✅✅Marianne Croker
 * Temple Henry Croker
 * Thomas Crofton Croker
 * Richard de Crokesley
 * Francis Croll

17

 * James Croll
 * William Crolly
 * George Croly
 * ✅Earls of Cromarty
 * Count Cromarty
 * ✅Alexander Crombie
 * ✅✅James Crombie
 * Edward Crome
 * John Crome
 * John Bernay Crome
 * Robert Hartley Cromek

18

 * George Cromer
 * Samuel Cromleholme
 * Samuel Crommelin
 * Sir Charles John Crompton
 * Hugh Crompton
 * John Crompton
 * Richard Crompton
 * Samuel Crompton
 * William Crompton (Puritan)
 * William Crompton (nonconformist divine)

19

 * ✅Edward Cromwell
 * Henry Cromwell
 * ✅Oliver Cromwell Oliver Cromwell (1699–1658), the Protector ; matriculated from Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, 1616; said to have been a member of Lincoln's Inn; married Elizabeth Bourchier, 1620; M.P. for Huntingdon, 1628; J.P. for Huntingdon, 1630: said to have intended emigrating to America: became a religious enthusiast, 1638; M.P. for Cambridge, 1640; moved the second reading of Strode's bill for reviving the old law of Edward III for annual parliaments, 1640; proposed committee to put the kingdom in a posture of defence, 1642; fought at EdgehiU in the army of Essex, 1642; converted his troop of horse into a regiment, 1643; suppressed a royalist rising at Lowestoft, 1643; recaptured Stamford, 1643; governor of the Isle of Ely, and second in command to the Earl of Manchester, 1643; lieutenant-general, 1644; took part in the siege of Lincoln, 1644; commanded the left wing at the victory of Marston Moor, 1644; urged toleration for differences of religious opinion in the parliamentary army, and demanded the dismissal of Major-general Crawford, an intolerant presbyteriau, but subsequently forgave him; fought at Newbury, 1644; accused the Earl of Manchester of half-hearteduess, who retaliated by charging him with contempt for the Scots and presbyteriaus, 1644; largely helped the remodelling of the army and the passing of theSelf-denying Ordinance which he was excused from obeying, 1644; relieved Tauntou, 1645; fought with success in Oxfordshire and at Naseby, 1645; took part in the sieges of Bridge water, Sher borne, and Bristol, 1645; captured Devizes, Winchester, and Basing House, 1645; thanked by the House of Commons, 1646; assisted in negotiations for surrender of Oxford, 1646; recognised the grievances of the army in its quarrel with parliament, 1647; restored military subordination when commissioner, 1647; supposed to have planned the seizure of Charles I, 1647; his policy based on the assumption that terms might ultimately be arrived at with the king; entered into an engagement with the soldiers for the redress of their wrongs, 1647; induced parliament to vote that no further address should be made to the king, the case seeming hopeless, 1648; accused by Lilburn of apostacy and double-dealing, 1648; subdued a Welsh insurrection, 1648; routed the Scots at Preston, 1648; denounced the treaty made by parliamentwith Charles 1 at Newport, 1648; active in the prosecution of Charles I, 1648; temporary president of the council of state after Charles's execution; opposed the anarchical designs of the levellers 1649; commander-in-chief and lord-lieutenant of Ireland, 1649; stormed Drogheda and Wexford, massacring their garrisons, 1649; compelled to raise the siege of Waterford, 1649; reduced Cahir, Cashel, Kilkenny, and Clonmel, 1660; treated non-combatants with leniency, but forbade the exercise of catholic worship; returned to Encrland, 1660; commauder-iu-chief, 1650; defeated the Scots at Duubar, 3 Sept. 1650; stirred up dissension among the Scots, some of them being convinced by his arguments and humane policy; captured Perth, 1651; defeated the Scots, in whose army was Prince Charles, at Worcester, 3 Sept. 1651; procured the Act of Pardon and Oblivion, 1652; dissolved the Long parliament, which had shown itself unequal to dealing satisfactorily with the complaints of the army, 1652; convoked the Little parliament; dissolved it in consequence of its rejection of a scheme for the appointment and maintenance of the clergy; installed as protector and head of the executive power, 1653; during the aljeyance of parliament issued ordinances, having the force of law until parliament otherwise ordered, providing for the administration of justice in Scotland, the representation of Ireland in the IJriti.-h parliament, and the re-organisation of the church in Kugland ou comprehensive lines, 1653-4; reorganised the court of chaiiivry, recommended the revision of the criminal code, 1657, and appointed new judges; engaged in negotiations for the acquisition of Dunkirk, 1652; signed au advantageous peace with the Dutch States-General, 1654: concluded commercial treaties with Sweden and Denmark, li)6l, the latter country having been recently in open hostility to England; ended a war with Portugal by a commercial treaty, 1653; failed to get unanimous recognition of the authority which had been conferred on him by the army from parliament, 1664: dissolved parliament, the Commons having delayed a vote of supplies, 1656; became the object of conspiracies, which were speedily foiled, 1665; parcelled out the country into twelve divisions, each under the command of a majorgeneral, 1655; imprisoned lawyers for impugning the validity of his ordinances, and dismissed malcontent judges; prohibited the use of the prayer-book, 1665; found himself compelled to prosecute the anabaptists, but protected the quakers and Jews; sent Blake to bombard Tunis, 1655; championed the cause of the persecuted Vaudois, and, by the influence of Cardinal Mazarin, obliged the Duke of Savoy to respect their rights as his subjects, 1665; made a treaty with France against Spain, 1655; at war with the latter country owing to its aggressive Catholicism and exclusive colonial policy; refused the title of king, 1657; installed Protector a second time, that being a style to which the army did not object, as it objected to the royal title, 1657; acquired right to appoint his own successor; concluded offensive and defensive alliance with France, 1657; formed league with Sweden against the Austrian Hapsburgs; dissolved the parliament of 1658 in consequence of its restiveness; again intervened on behalf of the Vaudois; humbled the Spaniards at Dunkirk, 1658; alleged to have prejudiced the interests of trade by friendship for Holland and hostility to Spain, 1659; assailed by plots, Gerard's, 1654, and Sindercombe's, 1657; denounced in a pamphlet entitled Killing no Murder 1657; died of a tertian ague, 3 Sept. 1658; buried in Westminster Abbey, 23 Nov.; disinterred and hung ou the gallows at Tyburn, 30 Jan. 1661.
 * Oliver Cromwell (biographer)
 * Ralph Cromwell
 * ✅Richard Cromwell
 * ✅Thomas Cromwell Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex (1485?-1540), statesman; compelled to leave England when young owing to a misdemeanor; said to have been present at the battle of Garigliano, 1503; escaped to Florence in a state of destitution; much of his early history uncertain in point of date, its obscurity being increased by the fact that he was sometimes called Thomas Smyth; clerk at Antwerp; visited Italy a second time, and introduced himself to Pope Julius II, in company with one Geoffrey Chambers; stated by Cardinal Pole to have been clerk to a Venetian merchant; engaged in money-lending, legal practice, and cloth dressing in England, c. 1513; appointed by Wolsey collector of the revenues of the see of York, 1514; entered parliament, 1523; humoured the king's designs upon France, while deprecating their immediate execution; member of Gray's Inn, 1524; one of the commissioners appointed by the influence of Wolsey to in r're into the state of the smaller monasteries, 1625; wed great harshness when on this commission; receiver-general of Cardinal's College, Oxford; managed all Wolsey's legal business, as his secretary, drawing up the deeds for the foundation of Cardinal's College and Ipswich College; pleaded Wolsey's cause in the House of Commons, 1529; suggested to Henry VIII the policy of making himself head of the church of England, and so facilitating his divorce from Catherine of Arragon; attempted to convert Cardinal Pole to the doctrines of Machiavelli, 1529; privy councillor, 1531: master of the jewels and master of the king's wards, 1532; obtained grant of the lordship of Romney in Newport, South Wales, 1532; medium of communication between Henry VIII and Chapuys, the imperial ambassador; chancellor of the exchequer, 1633; king's secretary, 1534; master of the rolls, 1534; endorsed the frivolous charge of treason against Bishop Fisher, 1534; vicar-general, 1535; commissioned to hold a general visitation of churches, monasteries, and clergy, 1535; chancellor of the university of Cambridge; took a great part in procuring the dissolution of the smaller monasteries 1536; conveyed Anne Boleyn to the Tower, 1536; made lord privy seal and Baron Cromwell of Oakham, 1536; knight of the Garter, 1537; dean of Wells, 1537; appointed to oversee the printing of the bible for five years, 1539; rewarded with confiscated lands of the larger monasteries, 1538-40; lord great chamberlain of England, 1539; negotiated the marriage of Henry VIII with Anne of Cleves, 1539; created Earl of Essex, 1540; accused of treason by the Duke of Norfolk and executed, the king, who was dissatisfied with Anne of Cleves and the German protestant alliance, not interposing, 1540.
 * ✅Thomas Cromwell
 * ✅Thomas Cromwell (antiquary)
 * Saint Cronan

20

 * Robert Crone
 * John Crook (Quaker)
 * Helkiah Crooke
 * Samuel Crooke
 * Thomas Crooke (priest)
 * John Crookshanks
 * William Croone
 * John Crophill
 * James Cropper
 * ✅Andrew Crosbie
 * Allan James Crosby
 * Brass Crosby
 * Sir John Crosby
 * ✅✅Thomas Crosby (Baptist)
 * John Crosdill
 * George Crosfield
 * Thomas Croskery
 * Camilla Dufour Crosland
 * David Crosly
 * John Cross (Franciscan)
 * John Cross (judge)
 * John Cross (painter)
 * Mary Ann Cross
 * Michael Cross
 * Nathaniel Cross
 * Nicholas Cross
 * Thomas Cross (engraver)
 * Andrew Crosse
 * John Crosse (clergyman)
 * John Crosse (antiquary)
 * John Green Crosse
 * Lawrence Crosse
 * Richard Crosse
 * Robert Crosse
 * William Crosse
 * David Crossley
 * Sir Francis Crossley
 * James Crossley
 * ✅Samuel Crossman
 * Lord Crossrig
 * Thomas Croston
 * William Crotch
 * William Crotty
 * Anna Maria Crouch
 * Humphrey Crouch
 * John Crouch
 * Nathaniel Crouch
 * William Crouch
 * William Croune
 * Francis Crow
 * Hugh Crow
 * Mitford Crow
 * Anselm Crowder
 * Sir Richard Budden Crowder
 * Catherine Crowe
 * Eyre Evans Crowe
 * Joseph Archer Crowe
 * William Crowe (bibliographer)
 * William Crowe (clergyman)
 * William Crowe (poet)
 * John Rustat Crowfoot
 * Nicholas Joseph Crowley
 * Peter O'Neill Crowley
 * Robert Crowley
 * John Crowne
 * Alfred Crowquill
 * James Crowther
 * Jonathan Crowther (Methodist)
 * Jonathan Crowther (Wesleyan)
 * Samuel Adjai Crowther
 * Rodney Croxall
 * Samuel Croxall
 * Thomas Croxton
 * Roger of Croyland
 * Francis Rawdon Moira Crozier
 * Alexander Cruden
 * William Cruden
 * George Cruikshank George Cruikshank (1792–1878), artist and caricaturist; son of Isaac Cruikshunk; his earliest important caricatureSir Francis Burdett taken from his house, No. 80 Piccadilly, by warrant of the Speaker of the House of Commons 1810; supplied etchings to The Scourge a satirical periodical, 1811-16, and to "The Meteor 1813-14; produced caricatures of Bonaparte, Joanna Southcott, the purchase of the Elgin marbles, and contemporary events; did much to put an end to the death-penalty for forgery of bank-notes by a cartoon entitled Bank-note not to be Imitated 1818; produced coloured etchings for the Humourist(series of tales), 1819-21, and two volumes of etchings for Grimm's 'Popular Tales 1824-6, by some considered his masterpiece; produced Phrenological Illustrations 1826; substituted wood-engraving for etching, 1828; issued the firs tn umber of the Comic Almanack 1835; engraved for Dickens's Sketches by Boz 1836 and 1837; designed a cover and supplied 126 plates for Bentley's Miscellany 1837-43; illustrated Ainsworth's Tower of London 1840, and Guy Fawkes 1841, alsoAinsworth'sMagazine 1842-4; claimed, without much show of reason, to have suggested to Dickens the story of Oliver Twist and to Ainsworth the general plan of the Miser's Daughter started The Table Book a miscellany, 1845; illustrated for it Thackeray's Legend of the Rhine; published The Bottle a famous picture, 1847, andThe Drunkard's Children 1848, in support of the cause of total abstinence; essayed a new Cruikshank's Magazine which he soon dropped, 1854; ! supplied frontispiece to Lowell's Biglow Papers 1859; issued satirical pamphlet against General W. Napier's aspersions on the British volunteers of 1803, 1860, and another against spiritualistic seances, 1863; exhibited oil paintings at the Royal Academy on humorous subjects, such asMoses dressing for the Fair 1830, and, his magnum oput, a cartoon entitled The Worship of Bacchus: or, the Drinking Customs of Society 1862. In the treatment and moral tone of his drawings he resembled Hogarth.
 * Isaac Cruikshank
 * Isaac Robert Cruikshank
 * William Cumberland Cruikshank
 * William Cruise
 * Jodocus Crull
 * Samuel Crumleholme
 * Henry Crump
 * Samuel Crumpe
 * Lewis Crusius
 * John Cruso
 * Timothy Cruso
 * Clement Cruttwell
 * Richard Cruttwell
 * Thomas Crystal
 * Mark Cubbon
 * ✅✅Joseph Cubitt sub
 * ✅Thomas Cubitt
 * ✅✅William Cubitt
 * ✅William Cubitt (politician)
 * Ambrose Cuddon
 * Richard Cudmore
 * Ralph Cudworth
 * Henry Cuff
 * James Dodsley Cuff
 * George Cuit
 * George Cuitt
 * Robert Culbertson
 * Culen
 * Patrick Cullen
 * Lords Cullen
 * Paul Cullen
 * Robert Cullen
 * William Cullen
 * George Culley
 * Isaac Cullimore
 * Sir Dudley Cullum
 * ✅✅John Cullum
 * Sir Thomas Cullum
 * Sir Thomas Gery Cullum
 * Richard Culmer
 * ✅Nicholas Culpeper
 * Sir Thomas Culpeper the elder
 * Sir Thomas Culpeper the younger
 * Nathanael Culverwel
 * David Culy
 * Dukes of Cumberland
 * Earls of Cumberland
 * ✅Countess of Cumberland
 * Richard Cumberland (philosopher)
 * Richard Cumberland (playwright)
 * Richard Francis George Cumberland
 * Cumine Ailbhe
 * Alexander Cuming
 * Hugh Cuming
 * Alexander Cumming
 * ✅ ✅Sir Arthur Cumming
 * James Cumming (died 1827)
 * ✅James Cumming
 * John Cumming
 * Joseph George Cumming
 * Roualeyn George Gordon-Cumming
 * Thomas Cumming
 * William Cumming (portrait painter)
 * William Cumming (ophthalmologist)
 * Samuel Cunard
 * James Cundy
 * Joseph Cundy
 * Nicholas Wilcocks Cundy
 * Samuel Cundy
 * ✅Thomas Cundy (senior)
 * ✅Thomas Cundy (junior)
 * Cungar
 * William Cuningham
 * Francis Philip Cunliffe-Owen
 * ✅Alexander Cunningham
 * ✅Alexander Cunningham
 * Alexander Cunningham (critic)
 * ✅✅Alexander Cunningham (historian)
 * Sir Alexander Cunningham
 * ✅Sir Alexander Cunningham
 * ✅Allan Cunningham (botanist)
 * ✅Allan Cunningham (author)
 * Sir Charles Cunningham
 * Edmund Francis Cunningham
 * Francis Cunningham
 * James Cunningham (botanist)
 * ✅James Cunningham
 * Sir John Cunningham (lawyer)
 * John Cunningham (poet and dramatist)
 * John Cunningham (historian)
 * ✅✅John William Cunningham
 * Joseph Davey Cunningham
 * ✅Peter Cunningham (priest)
 * Peter Cunningham (writer, born 1816)
 * Peter Miller Cunningham
 * Richard Cunningham
 * Thomas Mounsey Cunningham
 * Timothy Cunningham
 * ✅William Cunningham
 * ✅William Cunningham
 * ✅William Cunningham (theologian)
 * William Cunnington (antiquary)
 * Cunobelinus
 * Sir Arthur Augustus Thur Cunynghame
 * William Cure
 * Sir Charles Cureton
 * Charles Robert Cureton
 * Edward Burgoyne Cureton
 * William Cureton
 * Hippolitus Curle
 * Henry Curling
 * Edmund Curll
 * Walter Curll
 * John Philpot Curran
 * Frances Mary Richardson Currer
 * Frederick Currey
 * ✅✅Sir Frederick Currie
 * ✅✅James Currie
 * Lords Curriehill
 * John Curry
 * Robert Curson
 * Richard Curteys
 * John Curtis (painter)
 * John Curtis (entomologist)

41

 * Patrick Curtis
 * ✅Sir Roger Curtis
 * ✅Samuel Curtis
 * ✅William Curtis
 * Sir William Curtis, 1st Baronet
 * Henry Curwen (journalist)
 * ✅Hugh Curwen
 * ✅John Curwen
 * Thomas Curwen

42

 * Robert Curzon
 * Thomas Cusack
 * Sir William George Cusins
 * John Edwin Cussans
 * Sir Edward Cust
 * Sir John Cust
 * John Cutcliffe
 * Saint Cuthbert
 * Cuthbert
 * Cuthburh
 * Cuthred
 * John Cutler
 * William Henry Cutler
 * Moll Cutpurse
 * Sir Roger Cuttance
 * Francis Cuttinge
 * John Cutts
 * Thomas Cutwode
 * Cwichelm
 * Cybi
 * Cyfeiawg
 * Cymbeline
 * Cynegils
 * Cynewulf
 * Cynewulf
 * Cynric
 * William Cyples
 * Robert Daborne
 * Barons Dacre
 * Baroness Dacre
 * ✅Leonard Dacre

45

 * Arthur Dacres
 * ✅Sir Richard James Dacres
 * Sir Sidney Colpots Dacres
 * William Dade
 * James Dafforne
 * Thomas Daffy
 * Richard Datt
 * Jacques D'Agar
 * Richard Dagley
 * ✅George Charles D'Aguilar

46

 * Michael Dahl
 * Richard Daintree
 * Daircell
 * William Dakins
 * ✅Sir James Charles Dalbiac
 * John Dalbier
 * Isaac Dalby
 * Robert Dalby
 * John de Dalderby
 * David Dale
 * Robert William Dale
 * Samuel Dale
 * ✅Thomas Dale
 * Thomas Dale (physician)
 * ✅Thomas Dale (priest)
 * Thomas Pelham Dale
 * Valentine Dale
 * John Dobree Dalgairns
 * George Dalgarno
 * William Dalgliesh
 * Marquis of Dalhousie
 * Earls of Dalhousie
 * Sir William Dalison
 * Nicholas Thomas Dall
 * George Dallam
 * Ralph Dallam
 * Robert Dallam
 * Thomas Dallam
 * Saint Dallan
 * Alexander Robert Charles Dallas
 * Elmslie William Dallas
 * Eneas Sweetland Dallas
 * George Dallas
 * Sir George Dallas
 * Sir Robert Dallas
 * Robert Charles Dallas
 * Sir Thomas Dallas
 * James Dallaway
 * William Bede Dalley
 * Baron Dalling and Bulwer
 * Sir Robert Dallington
 * John Henry Dallmeyer
 * Alexander Dalrymple
 * ✅Sir David Dalrymple
 * ✅David Dalrymple, Lord Hailes
 * Sir Hew Dalrymple, Lord North Berwick
 * Hew Dalrymple
 * ✅Sir Hew Whitefoord Dalrymple
 * ✅Sir James Dalrymple, 1st Viscount of Stair
 * ✅Sir Sir James Dalrymple, 1st Baronet
 * Sir John Dalrymple
 * John Dalrymple, 2nd Earl of Stair
 * ✅John Dalrymple
 * ✅Sir Sir John Dalrymple, 4th Baronet
 * ✅John Dalrymple, 6th Earl of Stair
 * ✅John Dalrymple (physician)
 * John Hamilton Macgill Dalrymple
 * ✅William Dalrymple (moderator)
 * ✅William Dalrymple (surgeon)
 * ✅John Dalton (poet)
 * John Dalton (captain)
 * ✅John Dalton
 * ✅John Dalton (historian)
 * ✅John Dalton (divine)
 * Laurence Dalton
 * ✅✅Michael Dalton (legal writer)
 * Richard Dalton (librarian)
 * Daniel Daly
 * Denis Daly
 * Sir Dominick Daly
 * Sir Henry Dermot Daly
 * Richard Daly
 * Robert Daly
 * John Graham Dalyell
 * ✅Robert Dalyell
 * ✅Robert Dalyell
 * Sir Robert Anstruther Dalyell
 * Thomas Dalyell
 * Andrew Dalzel
 * Nicol Alexander Dalzell
 * Robert Dalzell
 * Alexander Damascene
 * Anne Seymour Damer