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  1. Edward Lascelles, 1st Earl of Harewood (7 January 1740 – 3 April 1820) was a British landowner, art collector, peer and, before which, member of parliament. [1] He was the son of Edward Lascelles, a senior customs official in Barbados, himself a son of Daniel Lascelles.

  2. Alexander Edgar Lascelles, Viscount Lascelles (born 13 May 1980). He is a chef and heir-apparent to the earldom. Hon. Edward David Lascelles (born 19 November 1982). He obtained Royal Consent to marry Sophie Cartlidge on 2 August 2014 in Harewood House. Edward and Sophie welcomed a son, Sebastian Lascelles, in August 2020. [citation needed]

    • Film and television producer, hereditary peer
  3. As well as playing a role in Edward VIII’s abdication, Lascelles is seen as one of the Establishment men who decided Princess Margaret couldn’t marry Peter Townsend. But despite this crucial role in modern Royal history, the real Lascelles remains slightly out of sight to us. There is no biography.

    • Henry Oliver
  4. Edward Lascelles, 1st Earl of Harewood: Present holder: David Lascelles, 8th Earl of Harewood: Heir apparent: Alexander Lascelles, Viscount Lascelles: Remainder to: the 1st Earl's heirs male of the body lawfully begotten: Subsidiary titles: Viscount Lascelles Baron Harewood: Status: Extant: Seat(s) Harewood House: Former seat(s) Goldsborough ...

  5. Edward Harewood Lascelles (1847-1917), pastoralist and businessman, was born on 3 October 1847 in Bothwell, Van Diemen's Land, son of Edwin Lascelles and his wife Eliza, née Nicholas; he was a grandson of T. A. Lascelles.

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  6. Edward Lascelles, 1st Earl of Harewood (7 January 1740 – 3 April 1820) was a British landowner, art collector, peer and, before which, member of parliament. Edward Lascelles, 1st Earl of Harewood in peer robes. He was the son of Edward Lascelles, a senior customs official in Barbados, himself a son of Daniel Lascelles.

  7. The Lascelles family, now earls of Harewood, had interests in the Caribbean from 1648 until 1975, when the family sold its last plantation. The fullest and most interesting account of their activities is Simon Smith's study Slavery, family and gentry capitalism in the British Atlantic: the world of the Lascelles, 1648-1834 (Cambridge Studies in ...