• Major William Norman Ramsay (1782–1815) was a Scottish officer in the British Royal Horse Artillery who fought in the Napoleonic Wars, and was noted for...
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  • and politician William Norman Ramsay (1782–1815), Scottish cavalry officer in the British Army, killed in action at Waterloo William Ramsay (Royal Navy officer)...
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  • Thumbnail for Clan Ramsay
    of Scotland, William de Ramsay of Dalhousie was a member of the king's council. During the Wars of Scottish Independence, William Ramsay appears on the...
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    cannon-balls, just south of the church marking the grave of Major William Norman Ramsay of Waterloo fame (see separate article Order of battle of the Waterloo...
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  • Thumbnail for Gordon Ramsay
    Gordon James Ramsay OBE (/ˈræmzi/; born (1966-11-08)8 November 1966) is a British celebrity chef, restaurateur, television presenter, and writer. His restaurant...
    155 KB (13,410 words) - 21:18, 28 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Order of battle of the Waterloo campaign
    campaign) (in German), archived from the original on 17 July 2012 Siborne, William (1844), History of the War in France and Belgium, in 1815 (2nd ed.), London:...
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  • Thumbnail for St Michael's Church, Inveresk
    cannon-balls, just south of the church marking the grave of Major William Norman Ramsay of Waterloo fame (see Order of battle of the Waterloo Campaign)...
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    of their duke, William the Conqueror, led to the Norman conquest of England at the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Norman and Anglo-Norman forces contributed...
    74 KB (8,555 words) - 08:45, 14 August 2024
  • the North Sea and Humber Estuary) by his brother-in-law William the Conqueror after the Norman Conquest. Odo was stripped of his English lands after being...
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  • William Norman Birkett, 1st Baron Birkett, PC (6 September 1883 – 10 February 1962), was a British barrister, judge, politician and preacher who served...
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  • Thumbnail for David Ramsay (historian)
    David Ramsay (April 2, 1749 – May 8, 1815) was an American physician, public official, and historian from Charleston, South Carolina. He was one of the...
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  • Thumbnail for Morris Travers
    Morris William Travers, FRS (24 January 1872 – 25 August 1961) was an English chemist who worked with Sir William Ramsay in the discovery of xenon, neon...
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    Dalhousie Castle (category Clan Ramsay)
    the chieftains of Clan Ramsay. The patriarch of the clan was Simundus de Ramesie (Simon of Ramsey), an English knight of Norman descent from the Huntingdonshire...
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    p. 41. ISBN 978-1-139-49409-0. Douglas, David C. (1964). William the Conqueror: The Norman Impact Upon England. Berkeley: University of California Press...
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  • Archibald Henry Maule Ramsay (4 May 1894 – 11 March 1955) was a British Army officer who later went into politics as a Scottish Unionist Member of Parliament...
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  • John Ramsay, 1st Lord Bothwell (c. 1464 – 9 September 1513), also known as Sir John Ramsay of Trarinzeane, was a Scottish peer and courtier. He was the...
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  • artillery carried on mules. Robe was one of the four officers of William Norman Ramsay's Troop of Horse Artillery struck down near La Haye Sainte, at the...
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  • Thumbnail for Norman Lockyer
    Terrestrial helium was found about 27 years later by the Scottish chemist William Ramsay. In his work on the identification of helium, Lockyer collaborated with...
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    Party Politics 1832–1841, 210–15; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 184; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 12; 69–72. Lowe, Norman (2017). Mastering Modern British...
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  • brief and unhappy marriage, she came to England in 1929; her husband Norman Ramsay was under investigation in South Africa. After touring with an opera...
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  • Thumbnail for J. Norman Collie
    He left to join University College London (UCL) as an assistant to William Ramsay. His early work was the study of phosphonium and phosphine derivatives...
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  • Edinburgh. Other children with his wife Mary included William Ramsay L’Amy (1850-1903), Norman Ramsay L’Amy (1854-1855) and Simpson MacLeod L’Amy (b.1860)...
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  • Thumbnail for Philip Snowden, 1st Viscount Snowden
    national level alongside both Keir Hardie, Professor Arnold Lupton and Ramsay MacDonald. Snowden married Ethel Annakin, a campaigner for women's suffrage...
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  • Thumbnail for William T. Sampson
    William Thomas Sampson (February 9, 1840 – May 6, 1902) was a United States Navy rear admiral known for his victory in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba...
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  • Thumbnail for Ely Cathedral
    Ely Cathedral (category English churches with Norman architecture)
    "The architecture and sculpture of Ely Cathedral in the Norman period". In Meadows, Peter; Ramsay, Nigel (eds.). A History of Ely Cathedral. Woodbridge:...
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    The Fastest 400m in History". Žiga P. Škraba. Retrieved 4 August 2024. Ramsay, George (26 February 2024). "Canadian teenager Christopher Morales Williams...
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    (who had also become beneficiaries of the fund).: 99  The prime minister Ramsay MacDonald then set up a fund for Wain's sisters and also arranged civil...
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    Ramsey Clark (redirect from Ramsay Clark)
    Bush, its officials Dan Quayle, James Baker, Dick Cheney, William Webster, Colin Powell, Norman Schwarzkopf, and "others to be named" of "crimes against...
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  • Thumbnail for William Joyce
    William Brooke Joyce (24 April 1906 – 3 January 1946), nicknamed Lord Haw-Haw, was an American-born fascist and Nazi propaganda broadcaster during the...
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  • Thumbnail for Neon
    the British chemists Sir William Ramsay (1852–1916) and Morris Travers (1872–1961) in London. Neon was discovered when Ramsay chilled a sample of air until...
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