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Philip de Carteret, 8th of St Ouen (14xx-1500) Philippe de Carteret III (1620-between 1663 and 1675)) Philippe de Carteret IV (1650-1693) Charles de Carteret (1679-1715) Rear-Admiral Philip Carteret, Seigneur of Trinity; Sir Philip Carteret Silvester; Capt. William George Square De Carteret (Part of the body recovery mission from the Titanic ...
Philip Carteret was the son of Philippe de Carteret II.He succeeded to the Seigneurie of Sark on the death of his father in 1643.. During the English Civil War, Carteret was lieutenant to his kinsman George Carteret, and was knighted on the beach of St Aubin's Bay in Jersey by the exiled Charles, Prince of Wales in 1645.
Robert de Berkeley "Robert the Observer or Temporiser" c. 1165 –1220 3rd Feudal Baron of Berkeley: Thomas I de Berkeley "Thomas the Observer or Temporiser" c. 1170 –1243 4th Feudal Baron of Berkeley: Maurice de Berkeley "Maurice the Resolute" 1218–1281 5th Feudal Baron of Berkeley: Baron Berkeley (1st creation by writ), 1295: Thomas de ...
The English annexed the Dutch province of New Netherland in 1664, and lands west of Long Island and Manhattan Island were awarded to two Lords Proprietors, John Berkeley and George Carteret (cousin of Philip). In 1665, Carteret (or "Cartaret") was appointed by them to take possession of the newly acquired territory which been renamed the ...
Sir Philippe de Carteret, 3rd Seigneur of Saint Ouen, (1205-1285) was the Seigneur of Saint Ouen of Saint Ouen's Manor during the reign of King Edward I. [1] He inherited the title from his father Sir Philippe de Carteret, 2nd Seigneur of Saint Ouen, who was unsuccessful in his attempts to regain the family's Norman holdings that were lost under King John.
Monument to Elizabeth Carteret (1665–1717), wife of Sir Philip Carteret, 2nd Baronet, formerly in Westminster Abbey, now at Haynes Park in Bedfordshire. The inscription is on the thin diagonal slab held by a putto. Sir Philip Carteret, 2nd Baronet (c. 1650 – 1693), also known as Philippe de Carteret IV, was the 5th Seigneur of Sark from ...
On the commencement of the Civil War, he retired from the Navy, and withdrew with his family to Jersey, where his uncle, Sir Philippe de Carteret, was the Bailiff and Lieutenant-Governor. The Island descended into conflict in 1643, with George and his uncle fighting on the side of the Royalists.
The first such governor to be appointed was Philip Carteret. The goal of the document was to entice more settlers to farm in New Jersey, so that the two proprietors could earn more profit by collecting quit-rents, annual fees paid on granted lands. To encourage such settlement, they allowed religious freedom, which was not available under the ...