Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/DNB Epitome 20


 * ✅Arthur Forrest
 * ✅Ebenezer Forrest
 * ✅Henry Forrest
 * ✅John Forrest (redirect to John Forest)
 * ✅Robert Forrest
 * ✅Theodosius Forrest
 * ✅Thomas Forrest (see Forret)
 * Thomas Forrest (translator)
 * ✅✅Thomas Forrest (navigator)
 * ✅William Forrest
 * ✅Alfred Henry Forrester
 * ✅Charles Robert Forrester
 * ✅David Forrester (divine)
 * ✅✅Joseph James Forrester
 * Thomas Forrester (divine)
 * ✅✅Thomas Forrester (theologian)
 * ✅Thomas Forret
 * ✅William de Forz, 3rd Earl of Albemarle
 * ✅William de Forz, 4th Earl of Albemarle
 * Edward Forsett
 * Josiah Forshall
 * Benjamin Forster
 * Benjamin Meggot Forster
 * ✅Edward Forster the Elder
 * Edward Forster (writer)
 * ✅Edward Forster the younger
 * George Forster
 * Henry Pitts Forster
 * Johann Georg Adam Forster
 * John Forster
 * John Forster
 * John Cooper Forster
 * Nathaniel Forster
 * Nathaniel Forster
 * ✅Richard Forster
 * Sir Robert Forster
 * Simon Andrew Forster
 * Thomas Ignatius Maria Forster
 * Thomas Forster
 * Thomas Forster
 * Thomas Furly Forster
 * William Forster
 * William Forster (1739–1808)
 * William Forster (1764–1824)
 * William Forster (1788–1824)
 * ✅William Forster (philanthropist)
 * William Edward Forster
 * Alexander John Forsyth
 * James Forsyth
 * Joseph Forsyth
 * Robert Forsyth
 * Thomas Douglas Forsyth
 * ✅✅William Forsyth (merchant)
 * ✅William Forsyth (horticulturist)
 * ✅✅William Forsyth (writer)
 * ✅William Forsyth (QC)
 * Baron Fortescue of Credan
 * Sir Adrian Fortescue
 * Sir Anthony Fortescue
 * ✅Chichester Samuel Fortescue
 * Sir Edmund Fortescue
 * Sir Faithful Fortescue
 * George Fortescue
 * Sir Henry Fortescue
 * James Fortescue
 * ✅Sir John Fortescue (judge)
 * ✅Sir John Fortescue of Salden
 * Sir Nicholas Fortescue
 * Sir Nicholas Fortescue
 * Richard Fortescue
 * Thomas Fortescue
 * William Fortescue
 * Earl of Forth
 * Charles Drury Edward Fortnum
 * Samuel Fortrey
 * Robert Fortune
 * Thomas Dudley Fosbroke
 * ✅Edward Foss
 * Sir Augustus John Foster
 * Henry Foster
 * James Foster
 * John Foster (canon)
 * ✅John Foster, 1st Baron Oriel
 * ✅John Foster (essayist)
 * ✅John Foster (architect)
 * John Leslie Foster
 * Sir Michael Foster
 * Myles Birket Foster
 * Peter Le Neve Foster
 * Sir Robert Foster
 * ✅Samuel Foster
 * Thomas Foster (painter)
 * Thomas Campbell Foster
 * Vere Henry Lewis Foster
 * Walter Foster
 * William Foster
 * Martin Fotherby
 * Anthony Fothergill
 * Anthony Fothergill
 * George Fothergill
 * Jessie Fothergill
 * John Fothergill
 * John Milner Fothergill
 * Samuel Fothergill
 * Andrew Foulis
 * Andrew Foulis
 * Sir David Foulis
 * Henry Foulis
 * Sir James Foulis
 * James Foulis
 * James Foulis
 * Sir James Foulis
 * Sir James Foulis
 * Robert Foulis
 * Peter Foulkes
 * Robert Foulkes
 * Sir Andrew Fountaine
 * John Fountaine
 * Lord Fountainhall
 * John Fountains
 * John Fountayne
 * Henry Fourdrinier
 * Paul Fourdrinier
 * Peter Fourdrinier
 * Sealy Fourdrinier
 * Daniel Fournier
 * Francis Fowke
 * John Fowke
 * Phineas Fowke
 * Abraham Fowler
 * ✅✅Christopher Fowler (minister)

14

 * ✅Edward Fowler
 * ✅Henry Fowler
 * ✅John Fowler (Catholic scholar)
 * ✅John Fowler (agricultural engineer)
 * ✅Sir John Fowler, 1st Baronet
 * ✅Richard Fowler
 * ✅Robert Fowler
 * ✅Sir Robert Nicholas Fowler
 * ✅William Fowler (makar)
 * ✅William Fowler (artist)

15

 * ✅George Fownes
 * ✅Richard Fowns
 * Caroline Fox
 * Charles Fox
 * Charles Fox
 * Sir Charles Fox
 * Charles Fox
 * Charles James Fox Charles James Fox (1749–1806), statesman : third son of Henry Fox, first baron Holland; while at Eton was taken by his father to Paris and Spa, and encouraged to indulge in dissipation; studied (1764-6) at Hertford College, Oxford, and afterwards travelled; M.P., Midhurst, 1768; made his mark by anti-Wilkesite speeches, j 1769; became a lord of the admiralty under North, 1770; made himself unpopular by speeches against the j liberty of the press; resigned, 1772; opposed Royal Marriage Bill; rejoined the ministry as a lord of the treasury within ten mouths, but acted independently, and was dismissed by the king, 1774; resided in Paris, 1774, and gambled heavily in London; joined Johnson'sclub i obtained some financial relief by death of his father and elder brother in the same year (1774); took leading part in opposing North's American policy, 1774; supported the repeal of the tea duty, 1774; moved for a committee on the war, 1776; continued to attend during the secession of the Rockingham whigs; attacked Lord George Germain (1716-1785), 1777; rejected ministerial overtures and definitely attached himself to the Rocking- j ham party, 1778; attacked the admiralty warmly; advocated the cause of Keppel, 1779; wounded in a duel with William Adam (1751-1839); spoke in favour of triennial parliaments, 1780; took a leading part in debates on economical reform, and made three hoursspeech in supportof Roman catholic relief; in spite of great pecuniary distress refused to be bribed by the emoluments of office; returned with Rodney for Westminster, 1780; attacked the financial policy of North, 1781, and on the news of the surrender of Yorktown moved an amendment to the address; resumed his attacks on the navy, 1782, and much reduced the ministerial majority; appointed foreign secretary, Rockingham being premier, 1782; brought in the measures which created Grattan's parliament; thwarted in his foreign policy by Shelburne, the other secretary of state; resigned when Shelburne became premier, May 1782; sought reconciliation with Shelburne whigs; formed i coalition with North (April 1783), becoming joint-secretary of state with him under the Duke of Portland; obtained ! parliamentary grant for his friend the Prince of Wales, and introduced measure to reform government of India by j the creation of a supreme council of seven and a commercial board of assistantnlirectors nominated by parliament for four years; defeated on the matter in the House of Lords by the personal influence of the king; dismissed with his colleague (December 1783); enabled by his possession of a majority in the Commons to defeat Pitt's East India Bill, and for three months to defer a dissolution by delaying grants of supply; elected for Kirkwall, 1784; at same time re-elected for Westminster, 1784, although the return of the writ was delayed for two sessions; formed connection with Mrs. Annitstead, whom he married in 1796; opposed Pitt's commercial treaties with ! Ireland, and (1787) with France, but supported his reform I proposals; attacked Warren Hastings, 1786-7, and moved I an impeachment on the Benares charge; as one of the managers of the proceedings opened the Benares charge in a speech of nearly five hours, 1788; spoke against the abatement of the impeachment by dissolution of parliament, 1789; supported motions for the removal of dissentersdis- j abilities, 1788-9; moved repeal of corporation and test i acts, 1790; claimed for the Prince of Wales an inherent j right to the regency, 1788-9, during George Ill's first illness (in spite of the deception which led him to deny j in parliament, 1787, the Prince of Wales's marriage with I Mrs. Fitzherbert); opposed Pitt's policy on the Eastern question, the French revolution, and the treason and sedition bills of 1795-6; carried a measure giving juries full powers in libel actions, 1792; seldom attended parliaim-nt for the next five years, but spent some time on his 'History of the Revolution of 1688(published after his death), and in literary correspondence with Gilbert Wake-; field; his name erased from the privy council for i    giving the toast Our sovereign, the people 179R; toured in tin- Netherlands and France, and interviewed Buonaparte, 1802; made three hoursspeech in favour of peace, 1803; on Addingtou's resignation was proposed as member of a coalition ministry with Pitt and the Grenvilles, but was excluded by the king, 1 804; spoke in favour of catholic emancipation, 1805; opposed motion for public honours to Pitt, 1806; as foreign secretary under Lord Greuville revealed plot to assassinate Napoleon, and opened negotiations with France: moved the abolition of the slave trade a few days before his death.
 * Charles Richard Fox
 * Ebenezer Fox
 * Edward Fox
 * ✅Elizabeth Vassall Fox
 * Francis Fox
 * George Fox
 * George Fox
 * George Fox
 * Henry Fox
 * Henry Edward Fox
 * Henry Richard Vassall Fox
 * Henry Stephen Fox
 * Henry Watson Fox
 * John Fox
 * John Fox
 * John Fox
 * Luke Fox
 * Richard Fox
 * Robert Fox
 * Robert Were Fox
 * Samuel Fox
 * Simeon Fox

18

 * Sir Stephen Fox
 * Timothy Fox
 * William Fox
 * Sir William Fox
 * William Johnson Fox
 * William Tilbury Fox
 * Wilson Fox
 * ✅John Foxe John Foxe (1516–1687), martyrologist ; native of Boston: sent to Oxford at the expense of a citizen of i Mvriitry and of John Harding or Hawarden, afterwards principal of Brasenose; fellow of Magdalen College. ford, 1539; M.A., 1545; intimate with Alexander Nowell, Latimer, and Tindal; resigned fellowship, 1546, being unwilling to conform to the statutes in religious matters; tutor successively to Thomas Lucy of Charlecote and to the children of Henry Howard, earl of Surrey: published protestant pamphlets; ordained deacon by Ridley, 1550; preached at Reigate; retired to the continent, 1554: issued at Strasburg his Commentarii (earliest draft of hisActes and Monuments; joined the Geneva party at Frankfort; on the expulsion of Knox removed to Basle, 1555; employed as a reader of the press by Oporinus (Herbst), who published hisChristus Triumphans 1556, his appeal to the English nobility for religious toleration, 1557, and the first issue of Kerum in ecclesia gestarum... commeutarii 1569; on his return to England lived first with his pupil Thomas, duke of Norfolk, and afterwards at Waltham and in Grub Street; ordained priest by Grindal, 1560; joined John Day the printer , 1564, who, in 1563, had printed the English version of Foxe's Rerum in ecclesia gestarum... commentarii as Actes and Monuments popularly known as The Book of Martyrs *; canon of Salisbury and lessee of the vicarage of Shipton, 1563; objected to the surplice and to contributing to the repair of Salisbury Cathedral; preached at Paul's Cross A Sermon on Christ Crucified 1570, frequently reprinted; published Reformatio Legum 1671, and an Anglo-Saxon text of the gospels; attended his former pupil, the Duke of Norfolk, at his execution, 1572; buned in church of St. Giles Cripplegate. Four editions of theActes and Monuments(1563, 1570, 1576, and 1583) appeared in the author's lifetime; of the posthumous issues that of 1641 contains a memoir of Foxe, attributed to his son, but of doubtful authenticity. The accuracy of the work was impugned by Nicholas Harpsfield, by Robert Parsons, and by Jeremy Collier in theEcclesiastical History (1702-14), and by S. R. Maitland. Foxe's papers, used by Strype in his works,were bought by Edward Harley, earl of Oxford, and are now in the British Museum.
 * ✅Richard Foxe
 * Samuel Foxe

19

 * Simeon Foxe
 * Thomas Foxe
 * Nathaniel Foy
 * Henry Joseph Fradelle
 * William Fraigneau
 * Sir Alexander Fraizer
 * John Frampton
 * Mary Frampton
 * Robert Frampton
 * Tregonwell Frampton
 * William Framyngham
 * Charles Elmé Francatelli
 * Abraham France
 * François Louis Thomas Francia
 * James Francillon
 * Alban Francis
 * Anne Francis
 * Enoch Francis
 * Francis Francis
 * George Grant Francis
 * George William Francis
 * James Goodall Francis
 * ✅John Francis (sculptor)
 * John Francis (publisher)
 * Philip Francis (translator)
 * ✅Philip Francis (politician) Sir Philip Francis (1740–1818), reputed author of Letters of Junius; son of Philip Francis; educated at St. Paul's School with Woodfall, Junius's publisher; junior clerk in office of secretary of state, 1756; became intimate with John Calcraft the elder and Robert Wood, secretary of the treasury; by Wood's influence appointed secretary to General Edward Bligh, 1758, and to Lord Kinnoull in Portugal, 1760, and amanuensis to Pitt, 1761-2; copied part of correspondence between Egremont and Bedford in autumn of 1762, referred to by Junius; while first clerk at the war office, 1762-72, contributed to the press under pseudonyms; retired from the war office owing to some disagreement with Barrington, but on the latter's recommendation became one of the four newly appointed councillors of the governor-general of India, 1774; opposed Warren Hastings, charging him with corruption in the case of Nand Kumar (or Nuncomar); quarrelled with his ally, Clavering; wounded in a duel with Hastings, 1779; left India with large fortune, 1780; M.P. for Isle of Wight, 1784, Bletchingley, 1790, and Appleby, 1802: helped Burke to prepare charges against Hastings, and assisted managers of his impeachment, 1787; a founder of Society of Friends of the People 1793; made elaborate speech upon India, 1805; quarrelled with Fox for refusing to appoint him viceroy; intimate with Prince Regent; created K.C.B.; identified by John Taylor with Junius 1816; published many political pamphlets. The evidence for the identification of Francis with Junius (first letter, 1768, last, 1773) rests upon the acquaintance of Junius wwith war office affairs, his displeasure at the removal of Francis, and private letters to the publisher Woodfall, displaying anxiety to conceal authorship of public letters expressing it; correspondence between silences of Junius and absences from London of Francis; expert evidence of Chabot and Netherclift identifying handwriting; similarity of political attitude; Francis's conduct when challenged with authorship, and moral resemblance. Against the Franciscan theory is the denial of that authorship by Pitt and Woodfall, and the almost incredible malignity of Junius towards some of Francis's friends and benefactors.
 * ✅✅Thomas Francis (16th-century physician)
 * Franciscus à Sancta Clara

22

 * ✅Richard Franck (captain)
 * Thomas Francklin
 * William Francklin
 * ✅Mark Frank (theologian)
 * ✅Sir Edward Frankland
 * Jocosa Frankland
 * ✅Richard Frankland (tutor)
 * Thomas Frankland (annalist)
 * ✅Sir Thomas Frankland, 5th Baronet
 * Eleanor Anne Franklin
 * ✅Jane Franklin

23

 * Sir John Franklin Sir John Franklin (1786–1847), arctic explorer; midshipman in the Polyphemus at Copenhagen, 1801; assisted Matthew Flinders in his observations in the South Pacific; took part in Commodore Sir Nathaniel Dance's engagement with Linois, 1804; at Trafalgar in the Bellerophon; wounded in the Bedford near New Orleans, 1815; commanded the Trent in Buchan's arctic expedition, 1818; headed expedition of 1819-22, which traversed North America from Fort York, at the mouth of the Nelson river, to the mouth of the Coppermine, where it embarked on the Arctic Sea and sailed eastward, returning through the Barren Grounds to Fort Providence and York after terrible privations; elected F.R.S. and promoted to post rank on his return; conducted a second expedition, 1825-7, which, by way of New York. Lake Huron, the Great Bear Lake, and the Mackenzie river, reached Garry Island in the Arctic Sea, and, after wintering at Fort Franklin (Great Bear Lake), divided, the whole expedition ultimately reaching Montreal; knighted, 1829; hon. D.O.L. Oxford, 1829; commanded Rainbow frigate on coast of Greece, 1830-3; as lieutenant-governor of Van Diemen's Land did much to humanise the convicts, 1837-43; started with the Erebus and Terror on his last expedition, May 1846, to make Behring's Strait from Cape Walker; last sighted at the entrance of Lancaster Sound on 26 July 1845. Supplies were sent out under Sir John Richardson (1787-1865), 1847, and many relief expeditions followed. Ommanney discovered traces of ships and provisions on Beechey Island, 1850, and further intelligence, with relics, was obtained from the Eskimos by Rae, 1854. Subsequently Sir Leopold McCliutock. in Lady Franklin's yacht, the Fox, came upon boats, skeletons, and a paper stating that the ships had been deserted, 22 April 1848, after nineteen months in the ice, that Franklin had died 11 June 1847, and that the rest, under Orozier, had reached 69 37N.,98 41W. Accounts of his first two expeditious were published by Franklin (1823 and 1828), who has since been recognised as the discoverer of the north-west passage.
 * Robert Franklin
 * William Franklyn
 * Augustus Wollaston Franks
 * Sir John Franks
 * Thomas Harte Franks
 * John Fransham (draper)
 * ✅✅John Fransham
 * ✅Sir Alexander Fraser (died 1332)
 * Sir Alexander Fraser, 8th Lord of Philorth
 * Alexander Fraser (see Frazier)
 * ✅Alexander George Fraser
 * ✅Alexander Fraser (painter)
 * ✅Alexander Fraser, 16th Baron Saltoun
 * Alexander Mackenzie Fraser
 * Andrew Fraser
 * Archibald Campbell Fraser
 * Donald Fraser
 * James Fraser (of Brae)
 * James Fraser (orientalist)
 * ✅James Fraser (minister)
 * ✅✅James Fraser (publisher)
 * ✅James Fraser (bishop)
 * James Baillie Fraser
 * James Stuart Fraser
 * John Fraser (abbot)
 * John Fraser (died 1711)
 * ✅John Fraser (botanist)
 * ✅Sir John Fraser (British Army officer)
 * ✅John Fraser (poet)
 * Louis Fraser
 * Patrick Fraser
 * Robert Fraser
 * Robert William Fraser
 * ✅Simon Fraser, 11th Lord Lovat Simon Fraser, twelfth Baron Lovat (1667?-1747), Jacobite intriguer; graduated at King's College, Aberdeen, 1683; accepted commission in regiment of Lord Murray (afterwards Duke of Atholl)on the assurance that treachery to the government of William III was intended; secured by violent means the eventual succession to estates of his cousin, Lord Lovat; being disappointed of a marriage with his cousin, Lord Lovat's daughter (who claimed the title), he imprisoned her uncle and suitor's father, and forcibly married her mother; outlawed for high treason, 1698; assumed title of Baron Lovat, 1699; obtained from William III pardon for offences against the state, but had previously visited the exiled James II at St. Germain, 1700; outlawed for his outrage on the Dowager Lady Lovat, 1701; fled to France, 1702; pretended conversion to Romanism, and promised Louis XIV to assist him in invading Scotland; returned to Scotland with a letter from Mary of Modena, and endeavoured to compromise Atholl and others in a Jacobite plot; suspected by the highlanders for his relations with Queensberry; returned to France, where he was imprisoned; escaped with Major Fraser, 1713; arrested in London, but when released rallied his clan to the government, 1715; received a full pardon and the life-rent of the Lovat estates, 1716, and after much litigation a recognition of his title, 1733; sheriff of Inverness and commander of one of the newly raised highland companies; for the promise of a dukedom joined association of 1737 to invite the Young Pretender to Scotland; deprived of regimental command and office of sheriff; though lukewarm in his support of Prince Charles Edward, 1745, was seized in his castle as hostage for the fidelity of the clan; escaped to Loch Muilly and afterwards to Loch Morar; arrested and brought to London; beheaded for high treason. Treating as invalid his union vith the Dowager Lady Lovat, he was twice marr.ed during her lifetime, and was succeeded by sons of each wife.
 * ✅Simon Fraser of Balnain
 * ✅Simon Fraser of Lovat
 * ✅Simon Fraser, the younger of Lovat
 * Simon Fraser (1738–1813)
 * ✅William Fraser (bishop)
 * ✅William Fraser, 12th Lord Saltoun
 * ✅William Fraser (British India civil servant)
 * William Fraser (educationalist)
 * ✅Sir William Fraser (historian)
 * Sir William Augustus Fraser
 * Abraham Fraunce
 * Simon Fraxinetus
 * Andrew Frazer
 * Sir Augustus Simon Frazer
 * William Frazer
 * ✅Edmund Freake
 * John Freake
 * ✅Charlotte Ulrica Catherina Frederica
 * Saint Frederick
 * Colonel Frederick
 * Augustus Frederick
 * ✅Louis Frederick
 * John Free
 * Alfred Robert Freebairn
 * Robert Freebairn
 * James Freeburn
 * ✅William Freeke
 * Francis Freeling
 * George Henry Freeling
 * Edward Augustus Freeman
 * John Freeman
 * John Freeman
 * ✅Philip Freeman
 * ✅Ralph Freeman (lawyer)
 * Samuel Freeman (engraver)
 * Thomas Freeman
 * William Peere Williams Freeman
 * Martha Walker Freer
 * Sir John Freind
 * John Freind
 * Robert Freind
 * William Freind
 * William Freind
 * John Freke
 * William Freke
 * Sir Thomas Francis Fremantle
 * Thomas Francis Fremantle
 * Sir William Henry Fremantle
 * George Russell French
 * Gilbert James French
 * John French
 * Nicholas French
 * Peter French
 * Thomas Valpy French
 * William French
 * William Frend
 * Viscount Frendraught
 * Bartholomew Frere
 * Sir Henry Bartle Edward Frere Sir Henry Bartle Edward Frere, commonly called Sir Bartle Frere, first baronet (1815-1884), statesman; nephew of John Hookbam Frere; educated at Bath and Haileybury; entered Bombay civil service, 1834; assisted Henry Edward Goldsmid in investigating and reforming land-assessment; resident at Sattara, 1846, and commissioner upon its annexation, 1847, to which he was opposed; as chief commissioner of Sind, 1850-9, conciliated dispossessed amirs and opened up the country by means of public works; during the mutiny sent almo-t the whole of his armed force to the relief of the Punjab; thanked by parliament; K.C.B.; first nonBengal civilian appointed to the viceroy's council, 1859; Lord Canning's confidential adviser; as governor of Bombay, 1862-7, instituted the municipality and checked speculation, but was criticised for his conduct with regard to the Bombay Bank; returned to England as member of the council of India, 1867; G.C.S.I.; D.C.L. Oxford; LL.D. Cambridge; president of the Geographical Society, 1873, of the Asiatic Society, 1872; P.O.; sent to Zanzibar to negotiate suppression of slave trade, 1872; privy councillor; accompanied the Prince of Wales to India, 1875; created G.C.B. and a baronet, 1876; governor of the Cape, and first high commissioner of South Africa, 1877; dismissed the cabinet and tried to conciliate the Kaffirs, but was obliged to make war on them, peace being made, 1878; Hiade demands on Cetewayo which resulted in the Zulu war, 1879, when he was held to have exceeded his instructions, censured by the government, and superseded in the high-commisHionership; supported Shepstone on the Transvaal question, but after a conference with the Boers promised to urge the redress of some of their grievances, 1879; recalled, 1880, in spite of great popularity in South Africa; defended himself by the publication of correspondence relating to his recall and inAfghanistan and South Africa 1881; replied to charges of Mr. Gladstone in Midlothian; wrote also memoir of his uncle Hookham Frere prefixed to the Works of J. H. Frere
 * James Hatley Frere
 * John Frere
 * John Hookham Frere
 * Philip Howard Frere
 * William Frere
 * Simon du Fresne
 * Anthony Freston
 * George Freville
 * ✅Accepted Frewen
 * John Frewen (divine)
 * Thomas Frewen
 * Richard Frewin
 * Fridegode
 * Frideswide
 * Sir John Friend
 * George Arthur Fripp
 * Fraser Frisell
 * James Hain Friswell
 * John Frith
 * Mary Frith
 * Frithegode
 * Sir Martin Frobisher
 * Bridge Frodsham
 * ✅✅Charles Frost (antiquary)
 * ✅✅George Frost (landscape painter)
 * John Frost
 * John Frost
 * John Frost
 * ✅John Frost (Chartist)
 * Percival Frost
 * William Edward Frost
 * Walter Froucester
 * James Anthony Froude James Anthony Froude (1818–1894), historian and man of letters; brother of Richard Hnrrell Froude and of William Froude; educated at Westminster and Oriel College, Ox ford; B. A., 1842; chancellor's English essayist; Devon fellow of Exeter College, 1842; M.A., 1843; wrote life of St. Neot for Newman's Lives of the English Saints 1844; marked his breach with orthodoxy, 1849, by publication of Nemesis of Faith a copy of which was publicly burned by William Sewell ; resigned his fellowship from annoyance; made ! acquaintance of Carlyle, 1849, and subsequently became his chief disciple; publishedHistory of England from Fall of Wolsey to Defeat of Spanish Armada 12 vols., 1856-70; editor of Eraser's Magazine 1860-74; rector of St. Andrews, 1868; published The English in Ireland in Eighteenth Century 1872-4; lectured in United States, 1872; travelled in South Africa, 1874-6, with object of ascertaining what were the obstacles to confederation of South African States; conducted an unsuccessful political campaign in Cape Colony and Orange Free State in favour of federation, 1875; member of Scottish universities commission, 1876; sole literary executor of Carlyle, 1881; published Carlyle'sReminiscences 1881,Letters and Memorials of Jane Welsh Carlyle 1883, History of first Forty Years of Carlyle's Life 1882, and History of Carlyie's Life in London 1884; honorary LL.D. Edinburgh, 1884; visited Australia, 1884-5; published Oceana, or England and her Colonies 1886; visited West Indii-s, 1886-7, and published English in West Indies 1888; regius professor of modern history at Oxford, 1892-4. His lectures were published as Life and Letters of Erasmus 1894,English Seamen in Sixteenth Century 1895, and 'Council of Trent 1896. As a writer of English prose Froude had few equals in the nineteenth century, though the value of his historical scholarship is matter of controversy.
 * Richard Hurrell Froude
 * William Froude
 * Philip Frowde
 * Sir Thomas Frowyk
 * Caroline Fry
 * Edmund Fry
 * Elizabeth Fry
 * Francis Fry
 * ✅John Fry (regicide)
 * John Fry (bookseller)
 * Joseph Fry
 * William Thomas Fry
 * Thomas Frye
 * Edward Fryer
 * John Fryer
 * John Fryer
 * John Fryer
 * John Fryer
 * Leonard Fryer
 * ✅John de Fryton
 * ✅William Fulbeck
 * George Williams Fulcher
 * Francis Fulford
 * William Fulke
 * John Fullarton
 * ✅William Fullarton
 * Andrew Fuller
 * ✅Francis Fuller
 * ✅Francis Fuller
 * Isaac Fuller
 * John Fuller
 * John Fuller
 * Joseph Fuller
 * Nicholas Fuller

39

 * ✅Samuel Fuller (priest)
 * ✅Thomas Fuller
 * ✅Thomas Fuller
 * Thomas Fuller (physician)
 * ✅William Fuller (dean)
 * ✅William Fuller (bishop)
 * William Fuller


 * Lady Georgiana Charlotte Fullerton
 * ✅William Fullwood
 * ✅William Fulman

40

 * Ulpian Fulwell
 * Christopher Fulwood
 * Thomas Furlong
 * Benjamin Furly
 * Philip Furneaux
 * Tobias Furneaux
 * Jocelin of Furness
 * Richard Furness
 * Saint Fursa
 * John Fursdon
 * Henry Fuseli
 * Sir Herbert Jenner Fust
 * Thomas Fych
 * Andrew Fyfe
 * Andrew Fyfe
 * William Baxter Collier Fyfe
 * ✅✅Charles Alan Fyffe
 * Martin Fynch
 * John Fyneux
 * Henry Dison Gabell
 * Mary Ann Virginia Gabriel
 * William Gage
 * John Gadbury
 * James Gadderar
 * John of Gaddesden
 * William Gadsby
 * Francis Gage
 * George Gage
 * Sir Henry Gage
 * John Gage
 * John Gage
 * ✅Joseph Edward Gage
 * Thomas Gage
 * Thomas Gage
 * Sir William Hall Gage
 * William Gager
 * John Gagnier
 * Usher Gahagan
 * William Gahan
 * Geoffrey Gaimar
 * Thomas Gainsborough
 * William Gainsborough
 * Thomas Gainsford
 * John Gairdner
 * William Gairdner (physician)
 * ✅Thomas Gaisford
 * Robert Galbraith
 * Galdric
 * Dunstan Gale
 * George Gale
 * John Gale
 * Miles Gale
 * ✅Roger Gale
 * Samuel Gale
 * Theophilus Gale
 * Thomas Gale
 * Thomas Gale
 * John Galensis
 * William Galeon
 * Henry le Galeys
 * Galfridtjs
 * Galgacus
 * John Anthony Galignani
 * William Galignani
 * Saint Gall
 * Richard Gall
 * James Gallagher
 * Saint Gallan
 * Antonio Carlo Napoleone Gallenga
 * ✅Baron Gallen-Ridgeway
 * John Ernest Galliard
 * Giovanni Andrea Battista Gallini
 * Sir Archibald Galloway
 * Joseph Galloway
 * Patrick Galloway
 * Thomas Galloway
 * Henry Gally
 * Viscount Galmoy
 * John Galpine
 * Sir Alexander Tilloch Galt
 * John Galt
 * Douglas Strutt Galton
 * Mary Anne Galton
 * Earl of Galway
 * David Gam
 * Edward John Gambier
 * ✅James Gambier
 * ✅James Gambier
 * John Gamble
 * John Gamble
 * John Gambold
 * Gameline
 * Joseph Sampson Gamgee
 * Robert George Gammage
 * James Gammon
 * Hannibal Gamon
 * Robert Gandell
 * Peter Gandolphy
 * James Gandon
 * Henry Gandy
 * James Gandy
 * John Peter Gandy
 * Joseph Michael Gandy
 * Michael Gandy
 * William Gandy
 * Samuel Gabbet
 * Edward Garbett
 * James Garbett
 * ✅✅Herks Garbrand
 * ✅✅John Garbrand (prebendary)
 * ✅John Garbrand (writer)
 * Tobias Garbrand
 * Tobias Garbrand
 * Theodore Gardelle
 * Alexander Garden
 * Alexander Garden
 * ✅ ✅Francis Garden, Lord Gardenstone
 * ✅ ✅Francis Garden (theologian)
 * George Garden (minister)
 * James Garden
 * ✅ ✅Lord Gardenstone
 * Allen Francis Gardiner
 * Arthur Gardiner
 * Bernard Gardiner
 * George Gardiner
 * James Gardiner
 * James Gardiner
 * James Gardiner
 * Marguerite Gardiner
 * Richard Gardiner
 * Richard Gardiner
 * Robert William Gardiner
 * Samuel Gardiner
 * Stephen Gardiner Stephen Gardiner (1483?–1565), bishop of Winchester; educated at Trinity Hall, Cambridge; fellow; doctor of civil law, 1520, of canon law, 1521; Rede lecturer, 1624; tutor to Duke of Norfolk's son; master of Trinity Hall, 1525-49, re-elected, 1553; private secretary to Wolsey; obtained Clement VII's consent to a second commission in the royal divorce question, 1527; attempted to obtain from Cambridge opinions favourable to the divorce, 1530; though taking up a 'middle course compiled reply to Catherine's counsel at Borne; after Wolsey's fall acted as secretary to Henry VIII till 1534: bishop of Winchester, 1531; ambassador in France, 1631-2; prepared reply of the ordinaries to the House of Commonsaddress to the king, stoutly defending his order; member of the court which invalidated Queen Catherine's marriage, 1633; signed renunciation of obedience to Roman jurisdiction, and pnblished oration, De vera Obedientii repudiating it, aud   maintaining supremacy of secular princes over the church, 1535; chancellor of Cambridge University. i:,jn,i: opposed Cromwell and Cranmer; fell temporarily out of favour; after the fall of Cromwell bad supix-im- ioliiii-al influence, inpiring the six articles, 1539; -on.-tanil.-in ployed in negotiations with the emperor; Impi the Tower during the greater part of the reipn m IIward VI on auc-oimt of his opposition to doctrinal changes, and (1561) deprived of his see: reinstated and made lord chancellor on Mary's accession; procured (1654) re-enactment of De Haeretico Comburendo and took part against Bradford and Rogers, but tried to save Cranmer and Northumberland, and protected Thomas Smith and Peter Martyr; opposed the Spanish marriage, but advocated great severity towards Elizabeth, whom he caused to be declared illegitimate by act of parliament; published controversial works against Martin Bucer and Latin letters to John Cheke on the pronunciation of Greek, 1656.
 * Thomas Gardiner
 * Sir Thomas Gardiner
 * William Gardiner
 * William Gardiner
 * William Nelson Gardiner
 * Mrs Gardner
 * Alan Gardner
 * Daniel Gardner
 * George Gardner
 * John Gardner
 * Thomas Gardner
 * William Gardner
 * William Linnaeus Gardner
 * John Gardnor
 * Richard Gardnor
 * Alexander Gardyne
 * Theophilus Garencières
 * George Gargrave
 * Thomas Gargrave
 * Augustine Garland
 * John Garland
 * Francois Xavier Garneau
 * Thomas Garner