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  1. Lord John Cavendish (1734–1796), English politician; Lord James Cavendish (1701–1741) Lord Charles Cavendish (1704–1783) Henry Cavendish (1731–1810) scientist, known for the Cavendish experiment; Lord Henry Cavendish (1673–1700) Lord James Cavendish (c. 1678–1751), married to Anne Yale (died 1734), daughter of Elihu Yale

    • 1346; 677 years ago
    • Normandy
  2. Lord James Cavendish FRS (bef. 1707 – 14 December 1751) of Staveley Hall, Derbyshire was a British Whig politician who sat in the English House of Commons and the British House of Commons. He was a son of the 1st Duke of Devonshire and a member of the Cavendish family .

  3. Lord Henry Cavendish (1673–1700), British politician; Lord James Cavendish (died 1741), British soldier and politician; Lord James Cavendish (died 1751) (circa 1707–1751), British politician; Lord Richard Cavendish (1752–1781), member of the Parliament of Great Britain; Lord George Augustus Cavendish (died 1794), British politician

  4. 15 ott 2021 · He looms over Lord James Cavendish, to the left of Yale, and a figure now identified as Yale’s son-in-law William Cavendish, on the right.

    • Nora Mcgreevy
  5. Information. Related objects. Also known as. Lord James Cavendish. primary name: primary name: Cavendish, James. Details. individual; collector; British; Male. Life dates. 1701-1741. Biography. Second son of the second Duke of Devonshire. Great-uncle of the 1st Baron Chesham (q.v.). Colonel involved in War of Jenkins' Ear, later MP for Malton.

  6. The painting has long been thought to mark the successful negotiation of the marriage of Anne (1687–1734), daughter of Elihu Yale, and Lord James Cavendish (aft. 1673–1751), younger brother of William, second Duke of Devonshire (1672–1729).

  7. Defeated at the election of 1710, Cavendish declined to stand in 1713 despite solicitations to join his interest to that of James Stanhope*. He was returned in 1715, being classified on a list of the new Parliament as a Whig, and continued to sit until accepting office in 1742. He died on 14 Dec. 1751, aged 73. 5.