Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles/DNB Epitome 63

Rama-Sitva Historical Definition

1

 * ✅Charles Wordsworth 1
 * ✅Christopher Wordsworth 7
 * ✅Christopher Wordsworth 9
 * ✅✅Dorothy "Dora" Wordsworth See Edward Quillinan
 * John Wordsworth (scholar) 8 sub
 * ✅William Wordsworth William Wordsworth (1770–1850), poet; born at Cockermouth, Cumberland; sou of John Wordsworth (1741-83), an attorney of Cockermouth; educated at grammar school at Hawkshead, and St. John's College, Cambridge: made walking tour on continent, 1790: B.A., 1791; travelled in France, where he fostered his inclinations towards the principles of liberty, 1792; published Evening Walk* and Descriptive Sketches 1793; became acquainted with Coleridge, c. 1795, and published with himLyrical Ballads 1 798 (enlarged 2nd edit. 1800); lived at Goslar, Germany, 1798-9, beginning the Prelude and writing poems to Lucy: settled with his sister Dorothy at Grasmere, 1799, and there remained till end of his life; married, 1802, Mary Hutchinson (b. 1770); made tours in Scotland, 1801 and 1803, and began cordial friendship with Sir Walter Scott, 1803; published poems, including odes toDuty* and onIntimations of Immortality * Miscellaneous Sonnets and sonnets dedicated toLibert 1807; occupied Rydal Mount, Grasmere, 1818-50; held office of distributor of stamps for county of Westmoreland, c. 1813-42; again toured in Scotland, 1814; published The Excursion 1814, and Peter Bell and The Waggoner 1819; placed on commission of peace for Westmoreland, 1819; travelled on continent, 1820, 1823, and 1828, to Ireland, 1829, Scotland (visiting Scott at Abboteford, and writing Yarrow Revisited), 1831, Isle of Man and Scotland, 1833, and on the continent with Henry Crabbe Robinson, 1837; hon. D.C.L. Durham, 1838, and Oxford, 1839; resigned place in stamp office and received pension from civil list, 1842; succeeded Southey as poet laureate, 1843; buried in Grasmere churchyard. Wordsworth's aim as a poet was to find fit utterance for the primary and simple feelings, but his revolt against the artificial style of the previous school led him not infrequently to trivialities. His Poetical and Prose Works, together with Dorothy Wordsworth's Journals edited by Professor Knight, appeared, 1896. 12
 * ✅✅John Worgan 27
 * ✅John Worlidge 28
 * ✅✅Thomas Worlidge 28
 * ✅✅Thomas Wormald 30
 * ✅✅Ralph Nicholson Wornum 31

2

 * ✅James Worsdale 32
 * ✅Charles Worsley 32
 * ✅Edward Worsley 33
 * ✅Henry Worsley 34 sub
 * ✅ ✅Sir Henry Worsley 34
 * ✅Israel Worsley 35
 * ✅Philip Stanhope Worsley
 * ✅✅Richard Worsley
 * ✅William Worsley (dean)
 * ✅Charles Frederick Worth

3

 * ✅Richard Nicholls Worth
 * ✅William Worth
 * ✅Hugh Worthington
 * ✅John Worthington
 * ✅Thomas Worthington (Douai)
 * ✅Thomas Worthington (Dominican)
 * ✅William Worthington (clergyman)
 * ✅Stuart Wortley
 * ✅Francis Wortley
 * ✅Edward Wortley-Montagu

4

 * ✅Mary Wortley-Montagu
 * ✅Baron Wotton - Charles Kirkhoven, 1st Earl of Bellomont
 * ✅Anthony Wotton
 * ✅Sir Edward Wotton
 * ✅Edward Wotton stub to expand
 * ✅Edward Wotton
 * ✅Henry Wotton
 * ✅Nicholas Wotton
 * ✅Thomas Wotton (1521-1587)
 * ✅Thomas Wotton (d. 1766)

5

 * ✅William Wotton
 * ✅William Woty
 * ✅Peter Woulfe
 * ✅Stephen Woulfe
 * ✅Francis Wrangham
 * ✅Albert Henry Wratislaw
 * ✅Sir Frederic Charles Lascelles Wraxall
 * ✅Nathaniel William Wraxall
 * ✅Sir Cecil Wray, 13th Baronet

6

 * ✅Christopher Wray
 * ✅Christopher Wray (MP)
 * ✅Daniel Wray
 * ✅Sir Drury Wray
 * ✅Sir John Wray
 * ✅Sir Christopher Wren Sir Christopher Wren (16W-1723), son of Christopher Wren (1591-1668), who was dean of Windsor, 1636-58; born st East Knoyle; of Westminster  School and Wadham College, Oxford: 1LA, 16M; fellow of All Souls College l6t-l: rofessor of astronomy at    wit    of Sonomy at Oxford 1WI-7I: D.C.L. Oxford and LL.D. Cambridge, 1661; Initiated experlmeute on sob)eot of variations of the barometer: devoted much attention to anatomical and medical subjects; prompt member of the circle which was incorporated as the Royal Society, SreTup preamble of the eWter, 1MO, was prer"1680-2, and made original oommunicatioi  t.vtutv,  Lf)  built ( Sbeklontan , London5te7"ar; ! * ** w general and principal architect for the whole city: appointed sole deputy to Denham as surveyor general of royal work?, 1(569, and succeeded Deuham on bis death later in yi-ar: eni-d in pullin-r down anl it-building St. Paul's Cathedral, 1668; completed flrst design for new cathedral, 1673, but was compelled, after a start had been made, to abandon it: obtained roval approval, 1675, of design which he modified into that of* present existing cathedral (choir opened for service, 1697): dismissed from superintendence, the work being reported as finished, 1716: made designs for rebuilding of Temple Bar, 1670-2, and various works in the Temple: comptroller of works in Windsor Castle, 1684; M.P., Plymptou, 1685, Windsor in Convention parliament, 1689, Weymouth, 1701; built fifty-two churches in London, among the most notable of which were (1670-5) St. Benet Fink, St. Mary-at-Hill, St. Mary-le-Bow, St. Stephen Walbrook, and St. Dionis Backchurch( 1675-80), 8U Ann and St. Agnes, St. Bride, St. Lawrence, and St. S within, (1680-5) All Hallows, Thames Street, St. Antholin, St. Clement Danes, St. James, Garlickhithe, St. James, Westminster, St. Martin. Ludgate, St. Mary Magdalene, Old Fish Street, and St. Peter, Cornhill, (1685-90) St. Andrew, Holboru, St. Mary, Lothbury, and St. Mary Abchun-h, (1690-5) St. Michael Royal, St. Augustiu and St. Faith (spire), St. Mary Somerset (tower), St. Vedast (the steeple), (1700) steeple of St. Dunstan-iu-the-Eust, (1704) steeple of Christ Church, Newgate Street, (1705) and that of St. Magnus; steeple of St. Michael, Cornhill, built from his designs in 1722; was appointed surveyor to Westminster Abbey, 1698, and executed repairs and designs for additions, including the western towers (which, however, were completed with new details by his successors); built Monument commemorating fire of London, 1671-8, library of Trinity College, Cambridge, 1677-92, Chelsea Hospital, 1682, Marlborough House, London, and numerous additions to Hampton Court Palace; superseded iu office of surveyor general, 1718; buried in St. Paul's Cathedral. His portrait by Sir Godfrey Kneller is in the National Portrait Gallery.
 * Christopher Wren (1675–1747) Son of Sir Christopher Wren
 * ✅Matthew Wren
 * ✅Matthew Wren (writer)
 * ✅Benjamin Wrench

7

 * ✅ ✅Ralph Wrenn
 * ✅ ✅Bourchier Wrey (d. 1696) grandfather of Bourchier Wrey
 * ✅Bourchier Wrey
 * ✅ ✅Abraham Wright (1611–1690)
 * ✅Christopher Wright
 * ✅ ✅Edward Wright (1558?–1615)
 * ✅✅Edward Richard Wright
 * ✅Fortunatus Wright
 * ✅Frances Wright
 * ✅George Newenham Wright

8

 * ✅Ichabod Charles Wright
 * ✅ ✅James Wright
 * ✅Sir James Wright
 * ✅John Wright (1568– 1605)) conspirator
 * ✅ ✅John Wright (1805–1843) poet
 * ✅✅John Wright (1770-1844)
 * ✅ ✅John Masey Wright
 * ✅John Michael Wright
 * ✅✅John Wesley Wright
 * ✅John William Wright
 * ✅✅Joseph Wright (1756-1793)
 * ✅Joseph Wright
 * ✅✅Laurence Wright
 * ✅✅Lawrence Wright
 * ✅✅Leonard Wright
 * ✅✅Sir Nathan Wright
 * ✅Mrs Patience Wright
 * ✅Peter Wright
 * ✅Richard Wright (1735-1775?)
 * ✅Richard Wright (1764-1836)
 * ✅Robert Wright (1553?-1596)
 * ✅Robert Wright (1556-1624)
 * ✅Robert Wright (1560-1643)
 * ✅Robert Wright (1621-1674)
 * ✅Sir Robert Wright (d.1689)
 * ✅Samuel Wright
 * ✅Thomas Wright (fl. 1604)
 * ✅Thomas Wright (d.1624?)
 * ✅Thomas Wright (1711-1786),
 * ✅Thomas Wright (1792-1849)

11

 * ✅✅Thomas Wright (philanthropist) (1789-1875)
 * ✅Thomas Wright (antiquarian) (1810-1877)
 * ✅Thomas Wright (geologist) (1809-1884)
 * ✅✅Waller Rodwell Wright
 * ✅William Wright (Jesuit)
 * ✅William Wright (botanist)
 * ✅✅William Wright (surgeon)
 * ✅William Wright (orientalist)
 * ✅William Wright (missionary)
 * ✅Lord Wrightsland

12

 * ✅Charles Wriothesley
 * ✅Henry Wriothesley
 * ✅Henry Wriothesley Henry Wriothesley, third EARL OP SOUTHAmpton (1573–1624), Shakespeare's patron ; son of Henry Wriothesley, second earl of Southampton; M.A. St. John's College, Cambridge, 1589; entered Gray's Inn; became patron of John Florio; presented to Queen Elizabeth, 1590; patron of the poets, including Shakespeare, who dedicated to him Venus and Adonis 1593, and Lucrece 1694, and probably enjoyed relations of close intimacy with him; sometimes identified with the anonymous friend and patron described by Shakespeare in his sonnets (published, 1609, but circulated in manuscript earlier), the rival in the patron's esteem (see the Sonnets) perhaps being Barnabe Barnes; involved himself in intrigue with Elizabeth Veruou, one of the queen's waiting- women, 1595, and withdrew from court, 1596; volunteer under Essex in expeditions to Cadiz, 1596, and Azores, 1597; accompanied Sir Robert Cecil on embassy to Paris, 1598; secretly married Elizabeth Vernou and incurred Queen Elizabeth's displeasure; went with Essex to Ireland, 1699, and became involved in Essex's conspiracy; ordered performance at Globe Theatre, London, 7 Feb. 1601, of Shakespeare's Richard II to excite public feeling by presenting on the stage the deposition of a king, and took part in unsuccessful outbreak under Essex,  8 Feb.; imprisoned in Tower of London and condemned to death, but his punishment commuted to imprisonment for life; released by James I, 1603, and made K.G. and captain of Isle of Wight and Oarisbrooke Castle; recreated Earl of Southampton, 1603; joined the queen's council, 1604; helped to equip Weymouth's expedition to Virginia, 1605; member of Virginia Company's council, 1609, and treasurer, 1620-4; member of East India Company, 1609; incorporator of North-west Passage Company, 1612, and of Somers Island Company, 1615; volunteer in war in Oleves, 1614; privy councillor, 1619; joined opponents of Buckingham; took command of troop of English volunteers in Low Countries, and died of fever at Bergen-op-Zoom.
 * ✅John Wriothesley
 * ✅Thomas Wriothesley
 * ✅Sir Thomas Wriothesley
 * ✅Thomas Wriothesley
 * ✅✅Clement Writer
 * ✅John Wroe
 * ✅✅Richard Wroe

14

 * ✅✅Henry Wroth
 * ✅Lady Mary Wroth
 * ✅Sir Robert Wroth
 * ✅Thomas Wroth (politician, 16th century)
 * ✅Thomas Wroth (politician, 17th century)
 * ✅William Wroth
 * ✅William de Wrotham
 * ✅Sir John Wrottesley
 * ✅Sir John Wrottesley
 * ✅ ✅Sir Walter Wrottesley

15

 * ✅✅Richard Wroughton
 * ✅✅Wulfhelm
 * ✅✅Wulfhere
 * ✅✅Ralph Wulford
 * ✅✅Wulfred
 * ✅✅Wulfric
 * ✅✅Wulfstan of Winchester
 * ✅✅Wulfstan d.1023, archbishop of York
 * ✅Wulfstan II d. 1095, bishop of Worcester
 * ✅✅Wulfwig
 * ✅✅Benjamin Dean Wyatt
 * ✅Francis Wyatt
 * ✅✅Henry Wyatt (courtier)
 * ✅✅Henry Wyatt (artist)
 * ✅✅James Wyatt
 * ✅John Wyatt
 * ✅✅John Wyatt
 * ✅✅Matthew Cotes Wyatt
 * ✅Sir Matthew Digby Wyatt
 * ✅✅Richard James Wyatt
 * ✅✅Thomas Wyatt (1503?-1542)
 * ✅Thomas Wyatt the Younger (1521-1564)
 * ✅✅Thomas Wyatt (1799-1859)
 * ✅✅Thomas Henry Wyatt
 * ✅✅William Wyatt (scholar)
 * ✅Jeffry Wyatville
 * ✅✅Perceval Wyburn --> Perceval Wiburn
 * ✅Cyril Wyche
 * ✅✅Sir Peter Wyche (d.1643)
 * ✅✅Sir Peter Wyche (1628–1699)
 * ✅✅Richard de Wyche (Richard of Chichester)(1197 – 1253
 * ✅✅William de Wycheham
 * ✅✅William Wycherley
 * ✅✅John Wyck (Jan Wyck) (1652-1700)
 * ✅✅John Wycliffe John Wycliffe (d. 1384), religious reformer and theologian; born at Hipswell; probably fellow of Balliol College, Oxford, and subsequently (in 1361) master; probably not identical with John Wyclif, who was appointed warden of Canterbury Hall, Oxford, 1365, and who was perhaps at Merton College, Oxfonl, and rector of Mayfield: vicar of Flllingham; prebendary of Westbury, 1361; held benefice of Ludgershall, 1368; wrote, 1366 or 1376, controversial tract. Determinatio quedam de Dominio contra unum monachum; graduated doctor c theology, c. 1372; received as canon of Lincoln li from Pope Gregory XI to keep Westbury prebend after obtaining prebend at Lincoln, 1373; as ambassador to treat with papal legates non-observance of statute of provisors an 1374; rector of Lutterworth, e. 1374; gained farour of Duke of Lancaster and Henry, lord Percy, by hia opinions    on him, 1177; again tried, at r,.:;-., hit aewrtion thai the aooWl llomun pontiff. nu l.v t t,,,t,!v I d bynbjMteand laymen) *iHrite4 bybfc boMMtv  ,-. k -:..:  'poor preacher and the tranriaUon of Uw bote Mb*  into KnglUh for the fir* tin*, hlmwtf tramtoUn* the tin, probably the whole New TnUramil and portbty of the Old Testament, the work being lUei byJoba  Purvey and completed by him before 1400; peremptorily rejected trmnMhetentbtfon. e. 1S. and w*.  forbidden to tench hU doctrine In Oxford UnlTerelty.  1S81, while a court, mmnoMl by the rehbtobop, ISM.  condemned them of hi* which Implied that he held that all authority, wcnter and ecckriMtk*!, WM God, and wan forfeited when the pan MI or of It WM in -tut.- of mortal *in, that he denied the doctrine of tmosubstantialon, on which the power of Uie prtothood fiiiMlamoiititlly baaed, and that beoondtl In all It* forniK: left Oxford, where, in i occlesianical command*, he wa* not tm ami rvtirwl to Lutterworth, occapylng pr.-a.hmg, translating Uie bible, and writing controrental pamphlet*; buriiil at Liutrworth. but hU body dlin ii-rr.d. 142K, and thrown Into the river Swift. He WM famous M a philosopher before be became famous M a theologian, and famotu M a theologian before be became a herwlarch, and the connection between his philosophy andhiB theology WM neither external nor aceidenUL He discovered in nominalism the teat of all theological error, and his practical religious teaching wa above all thing* The more important of hit motion* have been pnbl ; L (in early life) De Logic* De ComportiWXIII Quwtione. logic, et puilowphW De Ente PnedicamtnUli: 1 1. ( up to 1K9) De Incejnatioae VerbUDe Dominio Divlno De Dominio OiTittY    ethical. "The more important of hit Latin works (which with two exception* have been published by the W : I. (in en *    De Ecclesia De Offlcio Pa*torall ( pablUbed byLechler. 1863), nnd DC Offlcio Regis; III. (from 1179)Dialogm* orSpeculum Ecclc*ie MlliUntU," De EucuarUtia I    Simonia De ApontaaiA De gclicum an.l Trinlogtu (published by 'Select English Works of Wyclif edited by T. Ai appeared 1869-71. and KnglUh Work* of Wyclif hitherto imprinted by F. D. Matthew, 1880 (Early English Text Society).
 * ✅✅William Wycumbe
 * ✅✅Osborn Wyddel


 * William of Wydford
 * Robert Wydow
 * Robert Wyer
 * Joseph Wyeth
 * Charles Lennox Wyke
 * William of Wykeham
 * ✅William Wykeham
 * Thomas de Wykes
 * James Wyld
 * James Wyld
 * Henry Wylde
 * John Wylde
 * Robert Wylde
 * Alexander Wylie
 * James Wylie
 * James Aitken Wylie
 * William Howie Wylie
 * John William Shaw Wyllie


 * Sir William Wyllie
 * Charles Wyndham
 * Francis Wyndham
 * Sir George O'Brien Wyndham
 * Henry Penruddocke Wyndham
 * Sir Hugh Wyndham
 * Sir John Wyndham
 * Robert Henry Wyndham
 * Thomas Wyndham
 * Sir Wadham Wyndham
 * Sir William Wyndham
 * Edwin Richard Windham Wyndham-Quin
 * Windham Thomas Wyndham-Quin
 * Baron Wynford
 * Charles Watkin Williams Wynn
 * Charlotte Williams-Wynn
 * ✅Henry Watkin Williams Wynn
 * John Wynn
 * ✅Richard Wynn
 * Watkin Williams Wynn
 * William Wynn
 * Edward Wynne
 * Ellis Wynne
 * ✅John Wynne
 * John Huddlestone Wynne
 * Warren Richard Colvin Wynne
 * William Watkin Edward Wynne
 * Thomas Wynnyffe
 * Andrew Wynter
 * Sir William Wynter
 * Andrew of Wyntoun
 * Robert Henry Wynyard
 * Ninian Wynzet
 * Alfred Benjamin Wyon
 * Benjamin Wyon
 * George Wyon
 * Joseph Shepherd Wyon
 * Leonard Charles Wyon
 * Thomas Wyon
 * Thomas Wyon
 * William Wyon
 * William Wyrcester
 * William Wyrley
 * Napoleon Alfred Bonaparte Wyse
 * Sir Thomas Wyse

24

 * ✅William Charles Bonaparte Wyse
 * Francis Wythens
 * ✅Christopher Wyvill (baronet)
 * ✅Christopher Wyvill
 * Christopher Wyvill (Royal Navy officer)
 * ✅Thomas Yalden
 * ✅Elihu Yale
 * Thomas Yale
 * Edward Yallop
 * Felix Yaniewicz

25

 * ✅Robert Yarington
 * Earls of Yarmouth
 * Countess of Yarmouth
 * Andrew Yarranton
 * William Yarrell
 * Edmund Yates
 * Elizabeth Yates
 * Frederick Henry Yates
 * James Yates (poet)
 * James Yates (minister)
 * John Yates
 * Joseph Yates (judge)
 * Joseph Brooks Yates
 * ✅Mrs Mary Ann Yates
 * ✅Richard Yates (actor)
 * ✅✅Richard Yates (antiquary)
 * William Yates
 * Francis Yaxley
 * Peter of Yckham
 * Lacy Walter Giles Yea
 * Sir John Yeamans
 * Robert Yeamans
 * Sir George Yeardley
 * John Yeardley
 * Ann Yearsley
 * James Yearsley
 * Thomas Yeates
 * Grant David Yeats
 * Arthur Yeldard
 * John Yelloly
 * Barry Yelverton
 * ✅Christopher Yelverton
 * ✅Henry Yelverton (attorney-general)
 * Sir William Yelverton
 * William Charles Yelverton
 * James Lucas Yeo
 * Richard Yeo
 * ✅✅James Yeowell
 * Baron Yester
 * Henry de Yevele
 * Hugh Ynge
 * William Yolland
 * John Yong
 * Charles Duke Yonge
 * Sir George Yonge
 * ✅James Yonge (translator)
 * ✅James Yonge (surgeon)
 * ✅James Yonge (physician)
 * ✅John Yonge
 * ✅John Yonge (New College)
 * Nicholas Yonge
 * Thomas Yonge
 * Walter Yonge
 * Sir William Yonge
 * Dukes of York
 * Duchess of York
 * Cardinal of York
 * ✅✅Sir John York
 * Laurence York
 * Richard of York
 * Sir Richard York
 * Rowland York
 * William of York
 * Charles Yorke
 * Sir Charles Yorke
 * Charles Philip Yorke
 * Charles Philip Yorke
 * Henry Redhead Yorke
 * James Yorke
 * Joseph Yorke
 * Sir Joseph Sydney Yorke
 * ✅Philip Yorke
 * ✅Philip Yorke
 * Philip Yorke
 * ✅Philip Yorke
 * Philip James Yorke
 * William Youatt
 * Thomas Youlding
 * Henry Youll
 * Andrew Young
 * Anthony Young
 * Sir Aretas William Young
 * Arthur Young
 * Arthur Young
 * Bartholomew Young
 * Charles George Young
 * Charles Mayne Young
 * Edward Young:
 * Sir George Young
 * George Young
 * George Renny Young
 * Sir Henry Edward Fox Young
 * James Young
 * James Young
 * ✅John Young (Regius Professor)
 * ✅John Young (bishop)
 * John Young
 * John Young
 * John Young
 * Sir John Young
 * John Young
 * John Radford Young
 * Matthew Young
 * ✅Patrick Young
 * Peter Young (tutor)
 * Robert Young (forger)
 * Robert Young
 * ✅Thomas Young
 * ✅Thomas Young
 * ✅Thomas Young Thomas Young (1773–1829), physician, physicist, and Egyptologist; acquired at early age great knowledge of ancient and modern languages: studied at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London, 1793; elected member of Royal Society, 1794, in recognition of paper, 1793, in which he attributed accommodating power of eye to a muscular structure of the crystalline lens; proceeded to Edinburgh and Gbttingeu; created doctor of physic, Gbttingen, 1796; fellow commoner at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, 1797; opened practice as physician in London, 1799; professor of natural philosophy at Royal Institu  of Sir Peter Young; M.A. St. Andrews, 1603; in- tion, editor of the Journals and superintendent of the    corporated at Oxford; appointed chaplain of All Souls  College, Oxford, 1605; employed at court as correspondent  with foreign rulers, the diplomatic language being then  Latin; librarian successively to Prince Henry, James I,  and Charles I; prebendary of Chester Cathedral, 1613;  incorporated M.A. Cambridge, 1620; prebendary and  treasurer of St. Paul's Cathedral, 1621, and Latin secretary,  1624; rector of Hayes, 1623; sequestered, 1647; entrusted  with revision of Alexandrian codex of Septuagint (his  annotationes being printed in vol. vi. of Brian Walton's  'Polyglot Bible 1657), and other Greek manuscripte.     house, 1801; resigned professorship, 1803: foreign secretary to Royal Society, 1802-29; M.B. Cambridge, 1803; M.D., 1808; F.R.O.P., 1809; censor, 1813 and 1823, and Croonian lecturer, 1822 and 1823; physician to St. George's Hospital, London, 1811-29; superintendent of Nautical Almanac and secretary of reconstituted board of longitude,- 1818: retired. from practice, 1814. Memoir by him On the Mechanism of the Eye Phil. Trans 1801), contained the first description and measurement of astigmatism, and a table of optical constants of the eye in close agreement with modern determinations. He first explained colour sensation as due to the presence in the retina of structures which correspond to the three colours red, green, and violet respectively. He expounded in his paper 0n the Theory of Light and Colours(t*. 1801) his doctrine of interference of light, marking an  epoch in the history of the subject, and in his * Btsay on Cohesion of Fluids (ib. 1H4) gave the theory of capillary action brought forwunl imk-pcn.lently ( 1H05) by Laplace, and now known by hi mum l- rriil.-rcl valuable assistant in trandattaC the demotic text of theRosetta stone, and coittribiiteil the article onEgyptto the Encyclopaedia Hritanuica 1818, publinhing aluoAn Account of Remit Discoveries In Hieroglypuical Literature and Egyptian Antiquities 18*3, and -Enchorial Egyptian Di.-tionary appended to Egyptian Grammar  by Henry Tattam, 1830.
 * William Young
 * William Young
 * Sir William Young
 * ✅William Young (politician)
 * Elizabeth Younge
 * Richard Younge
 * Elizabeth Younger
 * ✅John Younger
 * William of Ypres
 * George Udney Yule
 * Henry Yule
 * Robert Yule
 * Zadkiel
 * Joseph Zaehnsdorf
 * Enoch Zeeman
 * George Gustavus Zerffi
 * Christian Friedrich Zincke
 * Foster Barham Zincke
 * Gerard Zoest
 * John Zoffany
 * Jan Franz Van Zoon
 * William Zoone
 * Henry Zouch
 * Thomas Zouch
 * Baron Zouche
 * Alan la Zouche
 * ✅Edward la Zouche
 * ✅Richard Zouche
 * ✅William la Zouche
 * Francesco Zuccarelli
 * Federigo Zuccaro
 * Antonio Pietro Zucchi
 * Giuseppe Zucchi
 * John Hermann Zukertort
 * Frederick Nassau de Zuylestein
 * Frederick Nassau de Zuylestein
 * William Henry Zuylestein
 * William Nassau de Zuylestein, 4th Earl of Rochford
 * William Nassau de Zuylestein, 2nd Earl of Rochford