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         Savile Sir Henry:     more detail
  1. RERUM ANGLICARUM SCRIPTORES POST BEDAM PRAECIPVI, EX VETUSTISSIMIS CODICIBUS MANUSCRIPTIS NUNC PRIMUM IN LUCEM EDITI. by Henry, Sir Savile, 1601-01-01
  2. The Annals and History of Cornelius Tacitus; His Account of the Ancient Germans, and the Life of Agricola. Made English by Several Hands, with Political Reflections from Monsieur Amelot de la Houssay; and Notes of the Learned Sir Henry Savile, Rickius, and Others, Three-Volume Set by Cornelius Tacitus, 1716
  3. A libell of Spanish lies: fovnd at the sacke of Cales, discoursing the fight in the West Indies, twixt the English nauie being fourteene ships and pinasses, ... and of the death of Sir Francis Drake. With by Henry Savile, Bernaldino Delgadillo de Avellaneda, 2010-09-07

1. Savile
Sir Henry Savile. Born 30 Nov 1549 in Bradley (near Halifax), Yorkshire,England Died 19 Feb 1622 in Eton, Berkshire, England. Click
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Savile.html
Sir Henry Savile
Born: 30 Nov 1549 in Bradley (near Halifax), Yorkshire, England
Died: 19 Feb 1622 in Eton, Berkshire, England
Click the picture above
to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Henry Savile entered Brasenose College Oxford in 1561 and he was elected a Fellow of Merton College Oxford in 1565. He graduated with an B.A. in 1566 and an M.A. in 1570. On 10 October 1570 he began to lecture at Oxford on Ptolemy 's Almagest and we are fortunate in that his lecture notes for this course have survived. We shall now describe the content of these lectures more fully. The lectures are far more than Ptolemy 's text with added explanation. Savile introduced his students to the new ideas of Regiomontanus and Copernicus . He mentions both classical authors of mathematics, giving their biographies, and the leading mathematicians of the day whose works he had clearly studied. In the introduction to the lectures Savile gives his views on why students should study mathematics. The study of mathematics, argues Savile, turns a student into an educated, civilised human being. As an example he quotes the classical story of Aristippus who, on being shipwrecked on Rhodes, realised that the inhabitants were civilised when he saw a mathematical figure drawn in the sand. It is worth noting, however, that twenty years later, when Savile was trying to make sure his subject received proper funding, he argued for mathematics because of its practical uses.

2. SAVILE, SIR HENRY
von Savigny (18141875), was Prussian minister of foreign affairs in 1849
http://58.1911encyclopedia.org/S/SA/SAVILE_SIR_HENRY.htm
document.write(""); SAVILE, SIR HENRY
von Savigny (18141875), was Prussian minister of foreign affairs in 1849. He represented Prussia in important diplomatic transactions, especially in 1866. Savigny belongs to the so-called historical school of jurists, though he cannot daim to be regarded as its founder, an honour which belongs to Gustav Hugo. In the history of jurisprudence Savigny’s great works are the Rechi des Besilzes and the Beruf anserer Zeit für Gesetlgebung above referred to. The former marks an epoch in jurisprudence. Professor Jhering says: SAVILE, SIR HENRY (1549—1622), warden of Merton College, Oxford, and provost of Eton, was the son of Henry Savile of Bradley, near Halifax, in Yorkshire, a member of an old county family, the Saviles of Methley, and of his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Robert Ramsden. He was educated at Brasenose College, Oxford, where he matriculated in 1561. He became a fellow of Merton in 1565, proceeded B.A. in 1566, and 1 See Windscheid, Lehrbuch des Pandekienrechis, i. 439. A brother, THOMAS SAVILE (d. 1593), was also a member of Merton College, Oxford, and had some reputation as a scholar.

3. SAVILE, SIR GEORGE
savile, sir henry (1549—1622), warden of Merton College, Oxford, and provost ofEton, was the son of henry savile of Bradley, near Halifax, in Yorkshire, a
http://57.1911encyclopedia.org/S/SA/SAVILE_SIR_GEORGE.htm
document.write("");
SAVILE, SIR GEORGE
SAVI, PAOLO (1798—1871), Italian geologist, was born at Pisa. Assistant-lecturer on zoology at the university of his native city when twenty-two years of age, he’ was appointed professor in 1823, and lectured also on geology. He devoted great attention to the museum of the university, and formed one of the finest natural history collections in Europe. He was regarded as the father of Italian geology. His first paper related to the Bonecaves of Cassano (1825). He studied the geology of Monte Pisano and the Apuan Alps, explaining the metamorphic origin of the Carrara marble; he also contributed essays on the Miocene strata and fossils of Monte Bambolo, the iron-ores of Elba and other subjects. With Giuseppe Meneghini (1811—1889) he published memoirs on the stratigraphy and geology of Tuscany (185o—1851). He became eminent also as an ornithologist, and was author of a great work on the birds of Italy. He died in May 1871. SAVIGLIANO, a town of Piedmont, Italy, in the province of Cuneo, 32 m. S. of Turin by rail, 1053 ft. above sea-level. Pop. (1901) 9895 (town), 17,340 (commune). It has important ironworks, foundries, locomotive works and silk manufactures, as well as sugar factories, printing works and cocoon-raising establishments. It retains some traces of its ancient walls, demolished in 1707, and has a fine collegiate church (S. Andrea, in its present form comparatively modern), and a triumphal arch erected in honour of the marriage of Charles Emmanuel I. with Catherine of Austria.

4. OSB MSS FILE
savile, sir henry, BARONET, 15791632. savile, sir WILLIAM, 1612-1644
http://webtext.library.yale.edu/xml2html/beinecke.osbfls.nav.html
OSB MSS FILE
OSBORN MANUSCRIPT FILES: "S"
Click text below to navigate Finding Aid
PROVENANCE
CITE AS RESTRICTIONS ON ACCESS PROCESSING NOTES ... DESCRIPTION OF THE FILES Collection Series "S" S, LORD S., C. S., D. ... SYNGE, EDWARD, ABP. OF TUAM, 1659-1741

5. (Henry SAVILE - Hannah SAWYER )
henry savile (sir) (ABT 1502 ) John savile (sir) (ABT 1478 - 1504) Margaretsavile (ABT 1508 - ) Adela SAVOY (ABT 1092 - 1154) Agnes SAVOY (Countess
http://www.genpc.com/gen/files/index/ind0645.html
Genealogy Index of Persons
Henry SAVILE (Sir) (ABT 1502 - )
John SAVILE (Sir)
(ABT 1478 - 1504)
Margaret SAVILE
(ABT 1508 - )
Adela SAVOY
(ABT 1092 - 1154)
Agnes SAVOY (Countess)
(ABT 1138 - 1177)
Amadeus SAVOY (III)
(ABT 1100 - 1 Apr 1148)
Amadeus IV Count SAVOY (Count)
(1197 - 24 Jun 1253)
Beatrice of SAVOY
(ABT 1224 - 10 May 1259)
Humbert III Count SAVOY
(1 Aug 1136 - 4 Mar 1188)
Louis Prince of SAVOY ([Count/Geneva])
(5 Jun 1436 - Aug 1482)
Maud SAVOY
(ABT 1120 - 4 Dec 1157) Thomas I Count SAVOY (Count) (20 May 1177 - 20 Jan 1233) John SAWBORN ((Sanborn) SAWEN SAWYER (Mr) (ABT 1647 - 1769) SAWYER (Mr) (ABT 1711 - ) Benjamin SAWYER (7 Mar 1685 - ) Benjamin SAWYER (27 Oct 1686 - 1725) Daughter SAWYER (ABT 1684 - 26 Mar 1685) Edmund SAWYER (ABT 1540 - ) Edward SAWYER (1607 - 31 May 1703) Frances SAWYER (Mr) (24 Mar 1658 - 25 Jan 1659) Frances SAWYER (Miss) (24 Mar 1658 - 7 Feb 1659) Frances SAWYER (Miss) (3 Nov 1670 - 28 Aug 1683) Gideon SAWYER (Mr) (15 Dec 1719 - 26 Dec 1806) Hannah SAWYER (23 Feb 1653 - 25 Jan 1659) UP (Samuel SABIN - SISSON ) BACK ( SARAH - Elizabeth SAVILE ) NEXT (Hannah SAWYER - Tirza SAWYER ) SURNAMES HOME All of these files are a WORK in PROGRESS not all have been personally verified by me.

6. References For Savile
Institutes 58 (1995), 152179. sir henry savile, Dictionary of NationalBiography L (London, 1897), 367-370. henry savile, in J Fauvel
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Savile.html
References for Henry Savile
Articles:
  • O L Dick (ed.), Aubrey's Brief Lives (London, 1962), 328.
  • R Goulding, Henry Savile and the Tychonic world system, J. Warburg and Courtauld Institutes
  • Sir Henry Savile, Dictionary of National Biography L (London, 1897), 367-370.
  • Henry Savile, in J Fauvel, R Flodd and R Wilson (eds.), Oxford figures : 800 years of the mathematical sciences (Oxford, 2000), 51-56. Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
    History Topics
    ... Anniversaries for the year
    JOC/EFR January 2000 School of Mathematics and Statistics
    University of St Andrews, Scotland
    The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/References/Savile.html
  • 7. Sir Henry Savile, KNT
    of Translators, was the renowned scholar afterwards known as sir henry savile. But the matter is put beyond doubt by
    http://members.tripod.com/~Bible_Study/translators/hsavile.html
    SIR HENRY SAVILE, KNT
    Some have doubted whether the “Mr. Savile,” on the list of Translators, was the renowned scholar afterwards known as Sir Henry Savile. But the matter is put beyond doubt by Anthony Wood and others. Savile was born at Bradley, in Yorkshire, November 30th, 1549, “of ancient and worshipful extraction.” He graduated at Brazen Nose College, Oxford; but afterwards became a Fellow of Merton College. In 1570, he read his ordinaries on the Almagest of Ptolemy, a collection of the geometrical and astronomical observations and problems of the ancients. By this exercise he very early became famous for his Greek and mathematical learning. In this latter science, he for some time read voluntary lectures. In his twenty-ninth year, he travelled in France and elsewhere, to perfect himself in literature; and returned highly accomplished in learning, languages, and knowledge of the world and men. He then became tutor in Greek and mathematics to Queen Elizabeth, whose father, Henry VIII., is said by Southey to have set the example of giving to daughters a learned education. It is to her highest honor, that when she had been more than twenty years upon the throne, she still kept up her habits of study, as appears by this appointment of Mr. Savile. In 1686, he was made Warden of Merton College, which office he filled with great credit for six and thirty years, and also to the great prosperity of the institution. Ten years later, he added to this office, that of Provost of Eton College, which school rapidly increased in reputation under him. “Thus,” as Fuller says, “this skilful gardener had, at the same time, a nursery of young plants, and an orchard of grown trees, both flourishing under his careful inspection.” He was no admirer of geniuses; but preferred diligence to wit. “Give me,” he used to say “the plodding student. If I would look for wits, I would go to Newgate; there be the wits!” As might be expected, he was somewhat unpopular with his scholars, on account of the severity with which he urged them to diligence.

    8. Sir Henry Savile, KNT
    sir henry savile, KNT. sir henry savile also founded two professorships at Oxford,with liberal endowments; one of geometry, and the other of astronomy.
    http://members.tripod.com/bible_study/translators/hsavile.html
    SIR HENRY SAVILE, KNT
    Some have doubted whether the “Mr. Savile,” on the list of Translators, was the renowned scholar afterwards known as Sir Henry Savile. But the matter is put beyond doubt by Anthony Wood and others. Savile was born at Bradley, in Yorkshire, November 30th, 1549, “of ancient and worshipful extraction.” He graduated at Brazen Nose College, Oxford; but afterwards became a Fellow of Merton College. In 1570, he read his ordinaries on the Almagest of Ptolemy, a collection of the geometrical and astronomical observations and problems of the ancients. By this exercise he very early became famous for his Greek and mathematical learning. In this latter science, he for some time read voluntary lectures. In his twenty-ninth year, he travelled in France and elsewhere, to perfect himself in literature; and returned highly accomplished in learning, languages, and knowledge of the world and men. He then became tutor in Greek and mathematics to Queen Elizabeth, whose father, Henry VIII., is said by Southey to have set the example of giving to daughters a learned education. It is to her highest honor, that when she had been more than twenty years upon the throne, she still kept up her habits of study, as appears by this appointment of Mr. Savile. In 1686, he was made Warden of Merton College, which office he filled with great credit for six and thirty years, and also to the great prosperity of the institution. Ten years later, he added to this office, that of Provost of Eton College, which school rapidly increased in reputation under him. “Thus,” as Fuller says, “this skilful gardener had, at the same time, a nursery of young plants, and an orchard of grown trees, both flourishing under his careful inspection.” He was no admirer of geniuses; but preferred diligence to wit. “Give me,” he used to say “the plodding student. If I would look for wits, I would go to Newgate; there be the wits!” As might be expected, he was somewhat unpopular with his scholars, on account of the severity with which he urged them to diligence.

    9. Savile
    Biography of henry savile (15491622) sir henry savile. Born 30 Nov 1549 in Bradley (near Halifax), Yorkshire, England
    http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Savile.html
    Sir Henry Savile
    Born: 30 Nov 1549 in Bradley (near Halifax), Yorkshire, England
    Died: 19 Feb 1622 in Eton, Berkshire, England
    Click the picture above
    to see a larger version Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
    Henry Savile entered Brasenose College Oxford in 1561 and he was elected a Fellow of Merton College Oxford in 1565. He graduated with an B.A. in 1566 and an M.A. in 1570. On 10 October 1570 he began to lecture at Oxford on Ptolemy 's Almagest and we are fortunate in that his lecture notes for this course have survived. We shall now describe the content of these lectures more fully. The lectures are far more than Ptolemy 's text with added explanation. Savile introduced his students to the new ideas of Regiomontanus and Copernicus . He mentions both classical authors of mathematics, giving their biographies, and the leading mathematicians of the day whose works he had clearly studied. In the introduction to the lectures Savile gives his views on why students should study mathematics. The study of mathematics, argues Savile, turns a student into an educated, civilised human being. As an example he quotes the classical story of Aristippus who, on being shipwrecked on Rhodes, realised that the inhabitants were civilised when he saw a mathematical figure drawn in the sand. It is worth noting, however, that twenty years later, when Savile was trying to make sure his subject received proper funding, he argued for mathematics because of its practical uses.

    10. Untitled
    sir John and Isobel had a son 10. henry savile b. 13 of Dodworth, Tankersley Elland. He married Elizabeth de Thornhill b.1300 at Thornhill.
    http://members.tripod.com/~midgley/savile.html
    Savile Sevile, Seville, Shevile, Sayvell, Sayvile, Seyville,Savil, Saville, Savile.
    of West Yorkshire
    T
    he name probably originated from Sevielle, Normandy in the 1100's i.e. after The Conquest.
    However others suggest that the Saviles' arrived with The Conquest, many French-Norman families made this claim, some even had the monks falsify the 'evidence later. The Battle Abbey Roll does not mention the Savile's. 1. John Savile b. 1150 Savile Hall, Savile Town? had a son : 2. John Savile b. 1170 at Savile Hall, d 1225, married Alice de Aldwarre . They had a son : 3. Henry Savile b. 1190 d. 1225, he married Agnes de Golcar , they had a son : 4. Thomas Savile b. 1200 at Newstead Yorkshire, married de Tankersley This brought the Tankersley Estates into the family. They had a son : 5. John Savile b.1250 at Savile Town.He married Agnes de Rochdale they had a son : 6. John Savile b. 1280 of Tankersley, Elland [part of Wakefield Manor ] and Thornhill [part of the Honour of Pontefract ]. He married Isobel de Lathorne. Isobel was the daughter of Robert Lathorne and Agnes Golcar ? Agnes' parents were John Glover and Albreda de Lizours.

    11. Bodleian Library: Western Manuscripts To C.1500: MSS. Savile
    manuscripts from the collection of sir henry savile (15491622) History of the collection A brief history of the collection may be found preceding the first of the Summary Catalogue entries cited above.
    http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/medieval/mss/savile.htm
    MSS. Savile:
    manuscripts from the collection of Sir Henry Savile (1549-1622)
    Contents
    Catalogues
    Summary Catalogue , vol. II pt. 2, pp. 1094-114; V, pp. 185-97.
    History of the collection
    A brief history of the collection may be found preceding the first of the Summary Catalogue entries cited above. In due course we hope to make a copy of the text available here. Western manuscripts to c
    Western manuscripts

    Bodleian Library
    ... Oxford University

    12. Malcolm Bull's Trivia Trail : Page S
    savile, sir henry savile, sir henry 15681617 Aka Long Harry savile –a nickname given to distinguish him from other saviles at Oxford.
    http://www.halifax-today.co.uk/specialfeatures/triviatrail/s.html
    S
    A B C D ... Z Entries for St are sorted as Saint Individual Saints are discussed in a separate Foldout Individual are discussed in a separate Foldout
    s
    Abbreviation for son which may be found in documents
    s
    In old documents, a non-initial and non-final letter s was written as a long s . For example: mi f taken mistaken
    mi f tre f s mistress
    my f elf myself
    la f t last
    pari f h parish
    per f ons persons
    but: sad sad
    summer summer
    This looks something like not f but without the full cross bar, and possibly just a short horizontal stroke from the side of the letter. The long s is, of course, pronounced like a regular s
    s
    Both s and were symbols for the shilling , a unit of currency before decimalisation . The abbreviation comes from the Latin solidus , a Roman gold coin
    Sabbath school
    A Sunday school
    The privilege of the lord of the manor to hold a court and to impose fines
    Sack
    A dry white Spanish wine
    Sacrobosco
    Sadler, Michael Thomas
    [1780-1835] Linen exporter and Methodist social reformer of Leeds. When MP for Aldborough in 1831, he introduced the Ten Hours Bill
    Halifax. Manufacturers of woodworking machinery, founded in 1875. The Canal Works closed in 1958

    13. References For Savile
    References for the biography of henry savile and Courtauld Institutes 58 (1995), 152179. sir henry savile, Dictionary of National Biography L (London, 1897), 367-370.
    http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/References/Savile.html
    References for Henry Savile
    Articles:
  • O L Dick (ed.), Aubrey's Brief Lives (London, 1962), 328.
  • R Goulding, Henry Savile and the Tychonic world system, J. Warburg and Courtauld Institutes
  • Sir Henry Savile, Dictionary of National Biography L (London, 1897), 367-370.
  • Henry Savile, in J Fauvel, R Flodd and R Wilson (eds.), Oxford figures : 800 years of the mathematical sciences (Oxford, 2000), 51-56. Main index Birthplace Maps Biographies Index
    History Topics
    ... Anniversaries for the year
    JOC/EFR January 2000 School of Mathematics and Statistics
    University of St Andrews, Scotland
    The URL of this page is:
    http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/References/Savile.html
  • 14. Malcolm Bull's Trivia Trail : Page E
    Eland, sir Hugh de 1?1? Son of henry de Eland, he was succeeded by his sonsir John de Eland, Isobel de 1?-1? Married sir John savile of New
    http://www.halifax-today.co.uk/specialfeatures/triviatrail/e.html
    E
    A B C D ... Z
    Eadon, John
    Transported for administering an illegal oath at a Luddite meeting at St Crispin Inn in 1812
    Eaglescliff
    Halifax
    Ealand
    Variant spelling of Elland recorded in 1613. This spelling can be seen on a milestone at Norland church
    Earl
    The oldest English title of the same descent as the continental titles translated as Count , and, for a long time, this was the highest-ranking hereditary title below that of king. English earls under the Norman kings enjoyed great power. The word comes from the Norse jarl . The wife of an earl is a countess See Titles
    Earl of Halifax
    See George Savile
    Earls of Warren
    Early-closing day
    In 1983, it was decided to abandon the half-day closing tradition in Halifax, although some businesses still retain the old practice. Town Early-closing day Brighouse Tuesday Elland Tuesday Halifax Thursday Hebden Bridge Tuesday Mytholmroyd Tuesday Sowerby Bridge Wednesday Todmorden Tuesday The phenomenon of late-night shopping has not yet reached Calderdale, and most shops are closed by 5:00 p.m. See Holiday Shopping hours
    Brow Mills, Hipperholme. Worsted spinners

    15. Richard Eedes, Giles Tomson, Henry Savile
    Some have doubted whether the Mr. savile, on the list of Translators, was therenowned scholar afterwards known as sir henry savile, but the matter is put
    http://www.jesus-is-lord.com/transl12.htm
    RICHARD EEDES GILES TOMSON This good man was a native of "famous London town." In 1571, he entered University College, Oxford and, in 1580, was elected Fellow of All Souls' College. A few years later, he was out in a shower of appointments, "with his dish right side up." He was, at that lucky season, made divinity lecturer in Magdalen College; chaplain to Queen Elizabeth, as was his friend, Dr. Richard Eedes; Prebendary of Repington; Canon residentiary of Hereford; and Rector of Pembridge in Herefordshire. He was a most eminent preacher. He became Doctor in Divinity in 1602; and was, in that year, appointed Dean of Windsor. In virtue of this latter office, he acted as Registrar of the most noble Order of the Garter. Dr. Tomson took a great deal of pains in his part of translation of the Bible, which he did not long survive. He was consecrated Bishop of Gloucester, June 9th, 1611; and a year after, June 14th, 1612, he died, at the age of fifty-nine, "to the great grief of all who knew the piety and learning of the man." Man is like the flower, whose full bloom is the signal for decay to begin. It is singular that Bishop Tomson never visited Gloucester, after his election to that see. HENRY SAVILE Some have doubted whether the "Mr. Savile," on the list of Translators, was the renowned scholar afterwards known as Sir Henry Savile, but the matter is put beyond doubt by Anthony Wood and others. Savile was born at Bradley, in Yorkshire, November 30th, 1549, "of ancient and worshipful extraction." He graduated at Brazen Nose College, Oxford; but afterwards became a Fellow of Merton College. In 1570, he read his ordinaries on the Almagest of Ptolemy, a collection of the geometrical and astronomical observations and problems of the ancients. By this exercise he very early became famous for his Greek and mathematical learning, in this latter science, he for some time read voluntary lectures.

    16. Malcolm Bull's Trivia Trail : Foldout
    sir henry savile He went to Merton College, Oxford, and became a scholar and benefactor, and tutor of mathematics, Greek and Latin to Queen Elizabeth I. At Oxford, he was a student of geometry and astronomy.
    http://www.halifax-today.co.uk/specialfeatures/triviatrail/mms27.html
    Sir Henry Savile
    Born at Bradley Hall Stainland , son of Henry Savile He went to Merton College, Oxford, and became a scholar and benefactor, and tutor of mathematics, Greek and Latin to Queen Elizabeth I At Oxford, he was a student of geometry and astronomy. In 1619, Savile founded a Chair of Geometry at Oxford because geometry is almost totally unknown and abandoned in England . After giving the first lectures himself, he asked Briggs to take the post. He was said to be the most learned man of the times, and published many translations from Latin and Greek. He was knighted by James I in 1604. After a disagreement between the University and local builders in 1608, he brought masons John Akroyd and John Bentley from Halifax to build the Fellows' Quadrangle at Merton College, and to finish his extensions to the Bodleian Library. He worked as a translator on the New Testament of the Authorised Version of the Bible He was steward of the Honour of Pontefract and a rival of Sir Richard Tempest in the Wakefield-Pontefract feud He died at Eton College , and he was buried in the chapel there Malcolm Bull 2002 / MBTraining@aol.com / Revised 1st November 2002 / mms27 / 3

    17. File 67: Ancestors Of Paul Bailey MCBRIDE
    References YorkshireV. sir John savile Pedigree r. Husworth,York, Eng. Children henry savile. References YorkshireV.
    http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~pmcbride/rfc/gw67.htm
    Ancestors of Paul Bailey MCBRIDE
    [Contents] [Bottom] [Next] [Previous] ... Pedigree Son of Edward SANBORN There is some disagreement about his given name. REF Sanborn3. Elmer Corliss Samborn claims that Richard Sanborn is the father of Lt. John Sanborn. This claim has been discredited by others. This info comes from Dick Marston. b. c. 1579, Herriard, Hampshire, Eng. d. Eng. Married Ann BATCHELDER Children:
  • John SANBORN Lt. (1620-1692) m. Mary TUCK References: HamptonTH Walter SANBORN Pedigree Son of _ SANBORN (1390-) and Elizabeth CRICKLADE Held Fernham and Lushill manors, but probably lived at Southcot House, near Reading, Berkshire. He held this manor in right of his wife. b. c. 1420 d. BEF 1494 Married Margaret DREW Children:
  • Nicholas SANBORN (1450-) m. Elizabeth BROCAS References: William de SANCTA CRUCE Pedigree Married Agnes de MARKHAM Children:
  • Sir Robert MARKHAM (1322-) m. Isabel CAUNTON References: YorkshireP Barnette Paganus de SANCTAMARIA Pedigree REF YorkshireP. Principal owner of Rawmarsh (de Rubro Marisco). Children:
  • Sibill de SANCTAMARIA m.
  • 18. Line 944: Ancestors Of Paul Bailey MCBRIDE
    Daughter and heir. m. sir John savile Kt. son of sir John savile and MargaretRISHWORTH daughter of henry RISHWORTH ch *henry Next Generation; 31.
    http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~pmcbride/rfc/l944.htm
    Ancestors of Paul Bailey MCBRIDE
    [Contents] [Bottom] [Next] [Previous] ... [Mail]
    Line 944

    19. RE: Book Beloning To Henry Savile
    sir. henry, Sotheby Wilkinson, dec. 1860/feb. 1861. Hazlitt, 'roll of honour,'lists simply sir henry savile, provost of eton. good luck on your quest.
    http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/byform/mailing-lists/exlibris/2000/07/msg00154.ht
    Table of Contents Search
    Date Prev Date Next ... Thread Index
    RE: Book beloning to Henry Savile
    Dear Susan - I don't know which works you consulted, but perhaps the following might be useful:
    DeRicci, 'english collectors', p.25 mentions Gilson's article in the Transactions of the Bibliog. Soc. 1908 on the library of Henry Savile of Banks and says the BM has 2 ms lists of his library.
    Hazlitt, 'roll of honour,' lists simply sir henry savile, provost of eton.
    good luck on your quest. Norman
    At 09:40 AM 7/12/00 -0700, you wrote:
    Susan Glover Godlewski
    Curator of Rare Books
    Rare Books and Manuscripts Department
    700 Boylston Street
    Boston MA 02116
    (617) 536-5400, ext. 429 -Original Message- From: JohnWindle@aol.com [SMTP:JohnWindle@aol.com] Sent: Thursday, June 22, 2000 2:55 PM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Book beloning to Henry Savile REPLIES BACK TO ME PLEASE AND NOT TO THE LIST I have a copy of Pulton's Kalendar 1608 signed Henry Savile Jul 20 1609 in the original calf with the initials HS blind-stamped on both covers. As he

    20. Provosts
    1561, Richard Bruerne (election annulled). 1561–1596, William Day. 1596–1622,sir henry savile. 1622–1623, sir Thomas Murray. 1624–1639, sir henry Wotton.
    http://www.etoncollege.com/eton.asp?di=1362

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