Difference between revisions of "Hay, James (London)"

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|Source=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography; J.B. Paul, The Scots Peerage: A History of the Noble Families of Scotland, 9 vols (Edinburgh, 1904-1914), v, 218-9
 
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1st earl of Carlisle. Made gentleman of privy chamber and soon elevated to the bedchamber. Sent as an ambassador to France (1603), spending much of the 1620s as an extraordinary ambassador in France. Knighted before being naturalized as an English citizen (1604). Made English baron as Baron Hay of Sawley, Yorkshire (1615); Viscount of Doncaster (1618). Returned to London 1629. Died at the Strand, Westminster, and buried in St Paul’s Cathedral.
 
1st earl of Carlisle. Made gentleman of privy chamber and soon elevated to the bedchamber. Sent as an ambassador to France (1603), spending much of the 1620s as an extraordinary ambassador in France. Knighted before being naturalized as an English citizen (1604). Made English baron as Baron Hay of Sawley, Yorkshire (1615); Viscount of Doncaster (1618). Returned to London 1629. Died at the Strand, Westminster, and buried in St Paul’s Cathedral.

Latest revision as of 13:49, 7 May 2014

Dates 1603-1629
Location London
Vocation Courtier
Place of Birth Fife
Marriage Honora Denny (d.1614); 2nd wife Lucy Percy
Issue 2 children
Place of birth Source Oxford Dictionary of National Biography; J.B. Paul, The Scots Peerage: A History of the Noble Families of Scotland, 9 vols (Edinburgh, 1904-1914), v, 218-9

1st earl of Carlisle. Made gentleman of privy chamber and soon elevated to the bedchamber. Sent as an ambassador to France (1603), spending much of the 1620s as an extraordinary ambassador in France. Knighted before being naturalized as an English citizen (1604). Made English baron as Baron Hay of Sawley, Yorkshire (1615); Viscount of Doncaster (1618). Returned to London 1629. Died at the Strand, Westminster, and buried in St Paul’s Cathedral.