Many descendant of the family have served in the British army, and held offices in church and state. The Very Reverend Theophihs Brocas, D.D., was a scion of the family. Labrune there established himself as a merchant. Fonnereau : three members of this family, descended from a Huguenot refugee�Zachary Philip, Thomas, and Martin�sat in Parliament successively for Aldborough in 1768, 1773, and 1774. Auriol, Peter : a refugee from Lower Languedoc, who rose to eminence as a London merchant. [135] Now known as Old St Chad's, the remains of the church building and its churchyard are on the corner of Princess Street, College Hill and Belmont. Sir Walter Scott incorrectly makes the Countess to have been a Roman Catholic. Nearby National Trust properties include Attingham Park, former home of the Noel-Hill family, Barons of Berwick, and the last remaining Town Walls Tower which dates from the 14th century. Many of his countrymen had to visit the provinces with the view of ascertaining eligible places of settlement. For further notice of Lord Ligonier, see p. 240. A famous Hebrew scholar. Du Cros, John : a refugee from Dauphiny. But as regards the child who had escaped to England, he was brought up in the household of the Duke of Bolton. He subsequently occupied the chair of theology in the university of Saumur until his death, which occurred in 1658. The present representative of the family is the Rev. The only one who remained in this country was Moses, who pursued the calling of an engraver, in London, in which he acquired considerable reputation. Two of his sons served with distinction in the English army; the elder, of the regiment of La Melonniere, was killed at the Boyne. Onwhyn : see Unwin Ouvry, James: a refugee from the neighbourhood of Dieppe about the period of the Revocation. Two of the scions of this family, Pierre and David, being Protestants, fled at the Revocation, the former to Holland, and the latter to England, both adopting, according to the usual custom, the name of the family estate. The last Count Guyon entered the Austrian service, and distinguished himself in the Hungarian rebellion of 1848. In 1623, Louis XIII. Robert Clive was MP for Shrewsbury, and also the mayor.[129]. Different towns had their own recipes and shapes of the Simnel cake. The Angles, under King Offa of Mercia, took possession in 778. and XV.� The late Albany Fonblanque was for many years editor of the Examiner. Carle, Peter : a native of Valleraugue in the Cevennes, born 1666; died in London 1730. His descendants still flourish at Antrim, Belfast, and Dublin. King Francis was a hearty King and loved a royal sport. He escaped from France at the Revocation, and, having taken holy orders, he was appointed by the Crown to the deanery of Killala and vicarage of St. Anne�s, Dublin. Des Roches was less fortunate; he was detected under the disguise in which he was about to fly; he was flogged, maltreated, stripped of all the money he had, put into chains, and cast into a dungeon. Among his descendants are names which have Since been of note in literature, science, and art, both in England and in the United States of America. Following the Greyfriars Bridge is the English Bridge, historically called Stone Bridge, which was rebuilt in the 1920s. Jacques Boileau, fifth Baron, counsellor of Nismes, born 1657, died in prison in France, after a confinement of ten years and six months, for his adherence to the Protestant religion. He died in the following year. We find one of his descendants, Captain George Brissac, a director of the French Hospital in London in 1773. Henri Basnage was one of the most able and eloquent advocates in the Parliament of Rouen. The family made many alliances with English families of importance. Others of the same name�Guillot and Gillett�of like French extraction, settled in England, where their descendants are still to be found at Birmingham (everybody knows the �Gillott pens�) and Sheffield, as well as at Glastonbury, Exeter, and Banbury. It exemplifies the manner in which the French colony clung together,�though perhaps it is only a coincidence,�that by the marriage of the widow of the Rev. Another emigrant of the same name was Pierre Grostete du Butsson. Maittaire, Michael : a celebrated philologist, linguist, and bibliographer,�one of the masters of Westminster School at the beginning of the eighteenth century. Latouche, a refugee in London, but unconnected with the above, was the author of an excellent French grammar. Lock became internationally recognised as a high scoring fighter ace of the Royal Air Force in the Second World War with 26 victories before his death in combat at the age of 21. [183], Shrewsbury has a comprehensive network of on-road and traffic-free cycle routes. the big list of words >> phonemicchart.com. Romilly : for notice of this family see p. 327. LA Pierre : a Huguenot family of Lyons. His son was Daniel Bonnell, merchant, of London, father of Samuel Bonnell, who served his apprenticeship with Sir William Courteen (a Flemish refugee), and established himself as a merchant at Leghorn. In his youth he studied at Sedan and afterwards at Oxford and Leyden. [48], A 2005 report on prison population found that HM Prison Shrewsbury was the most overcrowded in England and Wales. He was admitted a member of the College of Physicians, and obtained an extensive practice in London, where he died. Hazard or Hasaert, Peter : a refugee in England from the persecutions in the Low Countries under the Duke of Parma. The statue of Charles was sold by Parliament for old metal, when it was purchased by Jean Rivet, supposed to be another refugee, and preserved by him until after the Restoration.�A refugee named Le Sueur was minister of the French church at Canterbury. For this he was hanged in effigy, and his house at Villiers-Le-Bel was razed to the ground. Sporting Salopians include footballers Danny Guthrie of Newcastle United[133] and Shrewsbury Town youth academy graduates and England goalkeeper Joe Hart[134] and Wales midfielder David Edwards. His grandson, William, was colonel of engineers in the army of William III., and in 1715 his eldest son represented the borough of Thomastown, and afterwards the County Kilkenny, in the Irish House of Commons. Dugcure, Francis : scion of an ancient family in Languedoc. His grandson, Sir James Laroche, Bart., also sat for the same borough in 1768. Charles James Durand, Captain of the Bengal Staff Corps, has favoured us with the above particulars. The River Severn separates the western, southern and eastern suburbs from the town centre and northern suburbs. Above the main entrance are two statues bearing the Greek inscriptions "Philomathes" and "Polymathes". His satiric humour lost him the friendship of his patrons, and provoked the enmity of Louis XIV., who ordered his arrest. Pechel, Samuel De : lord of La Buissonade, near Montauban. He died in 1766, and was interred in St. Anne�s churchyard, Dublin. He was a voluminous writer on classical subjects. Gra-verol was aveluminous author. 694.] Laval, Etienne-Abel : author of a History of the Reformation and of the Reformed Churches of France, and minister of the French church in Castle Street, London, about the year 1730. The present head of the family is Sir G. S. Brooke Pechell, Bart. There were Hamons in Baccaville and Rouen who claimed descent from the great Hamon Dentatus, Earl of Corbell, in that historic province. He became a wellknown manufacturer at Bow; and afterwards assumed the English name of James. One of this name was a large occupier of land in �French Drove,� so called because farmed principally by French colonists; and the farm to this day continues to be occupied by one of his descendants. His eldest son, also called Daniel, emigrated to Maryland, US., where he settled in 1753. He was expelled from Paris, where he was one of the ministers of the great Protestant church of Charenton, at the Revocation. According to the United Kingdom Census 2001, the population of the town of Shrewsbury was 67,126. The first settler in England was Augustin, who came over at Revocation. Sir John was the first governor of the Bank of England; he was also a commissioner of the Admiralty. Misson, Maximilien ; one of the Protestant judges in the �Chamber of the Edict,� at the Parliament of Paris. The Pechel family, however, greatly prospered in England. [184] In 2008 the town was awarded Cycling Town status by Cycling England;[185] as a result, it benefited from £1.8 million of grant funding from the Department for Transport between 2008 and 2011. [28], Shrewsbury's monastic gathering was disbanded with the Dissolution of the Monasteries and as such the Abbey was closed in 1540. Bourdillon, Jacob : an able an eloquent pastor of several French churches in London. [150] The new complex replaced the old theatre, the Music Hall, which itself has been refurbished and expanded in preparation for its current use as home to Shrewsbury Museum and Art Gallery (opened 2014). But his eldest son, Jacques Basnage, was the most eminent member of the family. Pegorier, Caesar : a native of Roujan, in Languedoc, minister of the church of Senitot, in Normandy, until the Revocation, when he fled into England. His descendants have been directors of the French Hospital at different times. [108] Methodists,[109] Baptists[110] and the United Reformed Church are also represented, alongside newer church groups including Elim Pentecostal[111] and two Newfrontiers, which are: [112][113] Shrewsbury Evangelical Church meets in the former Anglican parish church of St Julian at the Wyle Cop end of Fish Street. Estienne Riou, who was born after his father�s death, left France with his uncle Matthieu Labrune, when only eleven years old, and took refuge with him at Berne in Switzerland. He settled as a teacher of music at Dublin, where he died. He founded Shrewsbury Abbey as a Benedictine monastery in 1083. the Ganga the Nile c canals e.g. His great-grandson Peter, also a London merchant, was sheriff of London in 1684, and created a baronet in 1723. His descendants have filled various public offices of importance. The Golden Cross is reputed to be the oldest licensed public house in Shrewsbury and records show that it was used as an inn as far back as 1428. Isaac Gosset, for many years vicar of Windsor and Datchet, and chaplain to four successive sovereigns. : there were many refugees of this name, some of whom were long settled at Canterbury. In 1698, the uncle and nephew left Berne and came to London, accompanied by Pastor Bermondsey, formerly pastor of Vernoux. His grandson was the last pastor of the French church at Lisburn, and afterwards rector of Annahilt, in Ireland. 285-7. [132] Notable music historian Charles Burney was born and educated in the town. substancial - Free ebook download as Text File (.txt), PDF File (.pdf) or read book online for free. While abroad on foreign service, the captain�s family resided at Lichfield, to which his wife belonged�Arabella Clough, daughter of one of the vicars of the cathedral. [81] Riverside provides further retail accommodation for stores including Wilko. Petit, Le Sieur : an officer in the Red Dragoons of the Prince of Orange on his expedition to England. Rainfall averages 76 to 100 cm (30 to 39 in), influenced by being in the rainshadow of the Cambrian Mountains from warm, moist frontal systems of the Atlantic Ocean, which bring generally light precipitation in autumn and spring. Both sons became officers in the army; one saw much service in Flanders, was brigade-major at Fontenoy and Dettingen, and subsequently became major-general and colonel of the 66th Regiment. The same year he married Elizabeth, daughter of James Casamayor, Esq., by whom he has two sons�Robert George, and Casamayor William, the former of whom is captain in the Grenadier Guards. It is from this branch that Mr. Plimsoll, M.P., the friend of the merchant seamen, is descended. Gabriel, Gabrielle : a Huguenot family of this name settled in London after the Revocation of the Edict. The gravestone prop of Ebenezer Scrooge (played by George C. Scott) that was used in the movie is still present in the graveyard of St Chad's Church. Labilliere : the ancestor of the family, Peter de Labilliere, fled from France at the Revocation. His son Benjamin succeeded his father as minister of Charenton, and was head of the Protestant assembly held at Rochelle, in 1622. De Brosses : One of the descendants of the distinguished refugee of this name officiated as secretary of the Bank of England under the name of Bros. His son is a barrister on the Oxford circuit. The family appears to have been originally from Picardy, where the name Leffroy is still to be found. The NWRR will involve the construction of a new bridge over the River Severn, upstream from the town centre. Martin�s Lane, who was also from Orthez. One of the ministers of the French church at Bristol was a M. Pain. Mettayer, John : minister of the Patente in Soho; afterwards minister of the French church at Thorpe-le-Soken, where he died in 1707. Ezekiel G. Varennes was recently a surgeon in Essex. After further study the three brothers became Protestants; two took refuge in England, the third in Holland. Frederic Ouvry, treasurer of the Society of Antiquaries, belongs to the family; also Francisca I. Ouvry, author of Henri de Rohan, or the Huguenot Refugee, and other works. Like his ancestors, he was a Protestant, and suffered serious persecutions at the Revocation. After twenty-seven years of very distinguished and honourable service, Captain Riou�� the gallant good Riou��was killed while commanding the �Amazon� frigate at the battle of Copenhagen, April 2nd, 1801. A Roman Catholic branch of the Gaussens, who remained in France, still holds large property in the neighbourhood of Montpellier; and many members of the family have distinguished themselves in the French military and diplomatic services. Nicholas became a prosperous London merchant. [14], Nearby is the village of Wroxeter, 5 miles (8 km) to the south-east. The second, Edward, entered the navy at twelve years old, and in 1776 was appointed to the �Discovery,� which accompanied the �Resolution� (Captain Cook) round the world. Morell, Daniel ; born in a village in Champagne about the period of the Revocation; he lost his parents,supposed to have been murdered, at an early age. Alexander was colonel of the 4th Foot, and rose to be lieutenant-general. Vallentin : the De Vallentins of Eschepy, in Normandy, were among the refugees who settled in London after the Revocation. In the autumn of 2000 large swathes of the town were underwater, notably Frankwell, which flooded three times in six weeks. Pierre du Moulin belonged to another branch of the family. The present representatives are G. B. Teulon, Esq., of Bandon; Thomas, a major in the army; and Charles Peter, a barrister.�Anthony Teulon, of Greenwich, married Marie de la Roche, and left descendants. But in 1681, when the persecution of the Protestants set in with increased severity, Rousseau was excluded from the Academy because of his being a Huguenot. A. M. Carre officiated as reader in the French church at Hammersmith; and another of the same name was minister of La Patente, London. The only surviving member of the family is a Surgeon-Major in the British army. Paget, Valerain : a refugee from France after the massacre of St. Bartholomew, who settled in Leicestershire and founded a flourishing family, the head of which is Thomas Paget, Esq., of Humberstown. Saurin, Jacques : for notice of, as well as other members of the family, see pp. Two of them served as officers in William III.�s Guards. Maury, Matthew : a refugee gentleman from Castle Mauron in Gascony, who settled in Lenten for a time. He entered the corps of engineers in the army of William, and fought at the Boyne. The non-graduate Clive received an honorary degree as DCL from Oxford University in 1760, and in 1764 he was appointed Knight of the Order of the Bath. More recently, such as in 2005 and 2007 but not 2020, flooding has been less severe, and the defences have generally held back floodwaters from the town centre areas. Blondel, James Augustus : a distinguished refugee physician in London, as well as an able scholar. [86], Although a less prominent brewing centre than at Burton-on-Trent, beer made in Shrewsbury was celebrated as early as about 1400 when the bard Iolo Goch praised the supply of "Crwg Amwythig" dispensed at the Sycharth palace of Owain Glyndŵr. He was the author of several works,�the best known being his Relation des Tourmens que l� on fait souffrir aux Protestans qui sont sur les Galeres de France, published at London in 1708. Several members of them succeeded in escaping into Holland, and afterwards proceeded to Ireland, settling in Lisburn. He died in 1625, leaving behind him a son, John, who studied medicine at Oxford and became fellow of the College of Physicians of Dublin in 1627. When Daniel Morell and Stephen Conte grew up to manhood, they entered the army of William III., and fought under him through the Irish campaigns. He died in London, 1727. At the Revocation he took refuge in England, where he was appointed canon and treasurer to the Cathedral of Salisbury. Arriva also operate county services both independent of and on behalf of Shropshire County Council. Eynard : a refugee family of Dauphiny. One of the families settled at Bristol. [9], The British Army's Light Infantry has been associated with Shrewsbury since the 17th century when the first regiments were formed and many more regiments have been raised at Shrewsbury before being deployed all over the world from the American Revolutionary War to the current conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. 227-33, 265, 311. The original name of De Bailleul has undergone many transmutations,� passing through Balieu, Balieul, Bayly, Bailly, and ultimately arriving at Bayley. It was mainly owing to his exertions that the Conditioning of Silk, as practised in all continental cities, was established in London. There are still numerous D�Espards in the south of France. 23. Wittenrong, Jacob ; a Protestant refugee from Ghent, in Flanders, who practised in London as a notary. He was for some time minister of the Artillery Church, Spitalfields, and afterwards of the Tabernacle. As a result, a number of grand edifices, including the Ireland's Mansion (built 1575) and Draper's Hall (1658), were constructed. His two sons were clergymen, an d other members of the family have been officers in the army. One of his sons was minister of La Nouvelle Patente, London, in 1696. Angeln was the home of one tribe, and the name still clings to the spot whence some of our forefathers sailed on their … Another member of this family was Gabriel Cramer, of Geneva, the celebrated mathematician. He published eleven learned historical works in his lifetime, some of which passed through many editions. There is a glover of the same name in Yeovil, who claims to be of like French descent. For a long time he preached to the people in the mountain gorges of the Cevennes. He ultimately took the name of Chamier, having been left sole heir to Anthony Chamier, the descendant of another refugee. In he took the degree of M.A. Mesnard, Jean : one of the pastors of the Protestant church of Charenton at Paris, from which he fled into Holland at the Revocation. He was killed at the battle of Villa Viciosa, Spain, in 1710. 26. [76] According to the same census, the ethnic composition of the town is largely white, at 98.5% of the total population. for Kendal for Robin Hood’s coat [Finny, ‘Medieval Games,’ 105]. The name was changed to Barbone, or Barebone. Louis, on the other hand, who had officiated as Camden professor of history at Oxford during the Commonwealth, was turned out of his office on the Restoration, and retired to Westminster, where he continued for the rest of his life an extreme Presbyterian. Vicose, Guy De , Baron de la Court: a Protestant noble, who suffered frightful cruelties during the dragonhades. Despite this, Shrewsbury thrived throughout the 16th and 17th centuries; largely due to the town's fortuitous location, which allowed it to control the Welsh wool trade. Jean Louis was a celebrated general in the English service; he was created Lord Ligonier and Baron Inniskillin. His maternal grandfather, D. S. Demainbray, was at the head of the Kew Observatory, as King�s Observer, in which office he was succeeded by Professor Rigaud�s father. On arriving at maturity he became an ordained minister of the French Protestant Church; and was appointed to a cure at Genuillac, in Lower Languedoc. [157] Inspired by Shrewsbury's links to Charles Darwin, this exhibition showcased the theme of evolution through the eyes of international photographers. Jean-Louis Cramer held the rank of captain in the English army, and served with distinction in the Spanish campaign. His granddaughter Margaret became the wife of the Rev. He was naturalized along with Peter Bagneol, Daniel Loucoult, and others. The absolute minimum of −25.2 °C (−13.4 °F)[61] was recorded in 1981. [154], The town appears in the Brother Cadfael novels by Ellis Peters (pen name of Edith Pargeter). Passavant, Jean-Ulric : a refugee from Strasburg, where he was born in 1678. They became sieurs of Chambson, one of them subsequently officiating as judge-royal of Villeneuve. Samuel Robert, the second son, who succeeded to the family estate in Hefts, was also High-Sheriff of the county; he died in 1818, and left issue, Robert William Gaussen, Esq., of Brookman�s Park, the present representative of the family, who was High-Sheriff in 1841. Guill, George : a refugee from the neighbourhood of Tours. M. De Lavalade was forty years pastor of the French church there. He afterwards went to Ireland, where he held the living of Navan, and was appointed Dean of Tuam. Say : a French Protestant family of Languedoc, of whom several members settled in England. James: were remarkable men in their time�the one as a theologian, the other as a physician. Peter Barre married Miss Raboteau, also a refugee. Tyron, Peter : a wealthy refugee from Flanders, driven out by the persecutions of the Duke of Alva. Andre fled with his family, travelling by night only,�his two youngest children swung in baskets across a horse or mule. One of his sons, Sainte-Helene, took refuge in London, where he died in 1697. It was also in this period that Edward VI gave permission for the foundation of a free school, which was later to become Shrewsbury School. See p. 288. Male, from whence he sailed for Guernsey, and afterwards reached London in October, 1685. Several of their descendants emigrated to New England (U.S.); and from one of them came John Pierpont, the celebrated American poet, born at Newhaven in 1785. At the most recent general election, in 2017, Daniel Kawczynski of the Conservative Party was elected with a majority of 6,627. Shrewsbury Unitarian Church was founded in 1662. He was killed at Belleville in 1432, and buried with the highest honours.� Shakespeare, in his play of Henry V., alludes to him as a �devil,� i.e. He was destined for the ministry from an early age. He contrived to escape into Holland, where he entered the service of William III. From him, by the mother�s side, was descended the late General Perronet Thompson, author of the Cornlaw Catechism and numerous other works. The tradition in the family�which survives in the Falconers, his descendants�is, that he died of grief on the death of Charles I. The original emigrant fled from France at the Revocation, leading his grandchild, a little boy, by the hand. He had several sons, of whom Peter-Caesar established the branch of the family which ultimately settled in England; while Samuel-Peter continued the descent in Holland. Delaune : a refugee family from Normandy, who took refuge in England as early as 1599, when a Delaune officiated as minister of the Walloon Church in London. He came to England in 1680, and became atutorin the Trevor family; afterwards he accepted a clerkship in the Exchequer, which he held for twenty-eight years. Sheffield Wednesday and Scotland striker Steven Fletcher was born in the town, where his serviceman father was stationed. Basnage : Few families in France have produced so many persons of literary distinction and moral worth, as the Basnages. Collot De Liescury : a refugee officer from Noyon, who escaped from France through Switzerland into Holland at the Revocation, and joined the army of William of Orange. He commanded an independent company at the siege of Derry. He afterwards entered Parliament, where he distinguished himself by his eloquence and his opposition to the American Stamp Act. For further notice see p. 320. Shrewsbury has a park & ride bus scheme in operation and three car parks on the edge of town are used by many who want to travel into the town centre. Bertrand Olier was Capitoul of Toulouse as early as 1364. They built a factory and dwelling-house at the head of Leith Walk. Drelincourt, Peter : son of Charles Drelincourt, one of the ablest preachers and writers among the French Protestants. He studied at Eton and Oxford. He arrived in England, and there found his wife, bereft of her children. His family fled into England, where their descendants still exist. By intermarriages his descendants are connected with the families of Hamon, Champagne, Bouherau (Burrowes), Des Voeux, etc. He was a highly distinguished divine, and for his valuable services in promoting the arts and manufactures of Ireland, he was presented with the freedom of the city of Dublin in a gold box, accompanied by a suitable address. The village of Coelogon is some ten miles from Loudeac, and the chateau, where the family lived, is now in ruins. Foret, Marquis De La: a major-general in the British army, who served in the Irish campaign of 1699. 28. His first published work was a fine medal of the King, exhibited in Evelyn, with the artist�s name and the date 1628. His daughter afterwards married the Rev. He was the originator of the Westminster French Charity School, founded in 1747, for the education of children of poor French refugees. Bucer, Martin : a refugee from Alsace; one of the early reformers, an eloquent preacher as well as a vigorous and learned writer. The most affluent areas of the town are generally to the south and west, around the grounds of Shrewsbury School, and the Copthorne area. The monks, observing that he no longer attended confession and mass, reproached him for his conduct. Gerevaise, Louis: a large hosiery merchant at Paris, elder of the Protestant church there. Bosquet, Andrew : a refugee from Languedoc, who escaped into England after suffering fourteen years� slavery in the French King�s galleys. It is believed that the family originally came from the neighbourhood of Lille, where there are still many of the same name; and that they joined the Walloon colony, which in the first place settled at Sandtort in Yorkshire, but migrated from thence to Thorney Abbey during the wars of the Commonwealth. The French Government having refused his body Christian burial, in consequence of his being the son of a Protestant refugee, the body was embalmed and sent to England to be buried. Be was pastor of the church of New Patente in 1728; of the Artillery in 1728; and of the Savoy, and probably Spring Gardens, in 1741. La Primaudaye : a noble Protestant family of Anjou. Shrewsbury is the county's public transport hub; it has road and rail links to the rest of the county and country. Anthony entered the British army, and served with distinction, dying in 1739. Shrewsbury is the second most populous civil parish in England (only Weston-super-Mare has a greater population) with a population of approximately 72,000. The name, originally Von Blume, was changed to Antes, which it still bears; and there is no doubt but that it is from this family that the very marked engineering talent which has distinguished many of the descendants of Benjamin La Trobe, both in England and America, is derived. Shropshire Council have their headquarters at the Shirehall, on Abbey Foregate. One of his sons is Captain Frederick Chamier, the novelist and nautical annalist. Their descendants still survive in Ireland. He married one of the Morell family. Havinggone into France to look after a manufactory of pipes which he had established at Rouen, he was detected encouraging the Protestants there to stand fast in the faith. Another brother, Abraham, was also a director and governor of the bank. Logier, Jean-Bernard : a refugee musician, inventor of the method of musical notation which bears his name. Pierrepont, Antoine and Etienne : descended from a noble Norman family, who took refuge in England after the Revocation. The present head of the family is�Majendie, Esq., of Hedingham Castle. shropshirelive.com,[163]. Peter Paul Dobree Regius Professor of Greek at the University of Cambridge. At the mother�s death, the maternal uncle of the children claimed to bring them up, and to set aside their father, because of his being a Protestant; and the magistrates of Caen ordered Le Fanu to give up the children accordingly. William was made a baronet in 1711; and Jacob was created a peer, under the title of Viscount Folkestone, in 1747. Roussell, Isaac : a French Protestant refugee from Quilleboeu, in Normandy, who fled into England in 1699. [164] Shrewsbury cakes (or biscuits) are typically crisp and brittle creations that may incorporate fruit. On the revival of the persecutions in France, Samuel took refuge in England, was appointed minister of the French church in London in 1591, and afterwards of the Walloon church at Canterbury in 1595. Du Soul, Moses : a refugee from Tours, known in England as a translator and philologist, about the beginning of the eighteenth century.
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