Lord Nelson-class battleships laid down 1905 & completed 1908 : 4 twin mounts and 2 single mounts.
The Lord of the Rings | Nelson Mandela | Willie Nelson | Lord Byron | Nelson | Lord Chancellor | Lord | Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson | Lord Mayor of London | Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales | Alfred, Lord Tennyson | Lord Kitchener | Lord Chamberlain | Lord President of the Council | Lord Lieutenant of Ireland | Nelson, New Zealand | Lord Chancellor of Ireland | Lord & Taylor | Lord Mayor | Lord Deputy of Ireland | Ricky Nelson | Lord of the Manor | Nelson Rockefeller | Lord's Resistance Army | Horatio Nelson | Lord's Prayer | Lord Peter Wimsey | Lord's Cricket Ground | Lord Nelson | Nelson Riddle |
Lord Nelson might have cast a jaundiced eye on such an attitude, but surely those brave boat owners who persevere in completing their own brightwork varnishing project will feel that they have "gained the most splendid and decisive victory", albeit one that was perhaps "dearly purchased".
Lowe completed the construction of the house and its gardens and named it after Lord Nelson, who was known as the Duke of Bronte (a town in Sicily).
A piece of history in and of itself, the Mallory Cup was originally gifted by the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire to the family of Lord Nelson in appreciation of his command over the English fleet that defeated Napoleon in the Battle of the Nile.
Thesiger's uncle Sir Frederic Thesiger was naval Aide-de-Camp to Lord Nelson at the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801.
In 1761 he had married Sarah Roddam and in 1791 their daughter Sarah married Cuthbert Collingwood, a Royal Navy officer who in 1805, as Vice Admiral Collingwood, was second-in-command to Lord Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar.
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He was the father-in-law of Admiral Lord Collingwood, second-in-command to Lord Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar.
Lord Nelson and his entire fleet sheltered in the harbour of Marmaris in 1798, en route to Egypt to defeat Napoleon's armada during the Mediterranean campaign.
He directed a wide array of popular features in a variety of genres, including comedy, drama, literary adaptations – including Robert Louis Stevenson's The Suicide Club (1914) and a version of William Shakespeare's As You Like It entitled Love in a Wood (1916) – and biographical profiles of such luminaries as Florence Nightingale and Lord Nelson.
Nelson-Ward was the son of a clergyman who was a grandson of Lord Nelson through his daughter Horatia.
Captain Thomas Hardy, one of Lord Nelson's commanders at the Battle of Trafalgar, lived in the village.
The book includes vignettes of a number of historical personages, notably the Prince Regent, Lord Nelson, Sir John Lade, Lord Cochrane and Beau Brummell.
For a period during the 19th century, its parish priest was Philip Ward, husband of Lord Nelson's daughter Horatia.
Lady Prudence and Gerald Maitland then organise the tableau, with tableaux of "Anthony and Cleopatra", "Lord Nelson and Lady Hamilton" and "Columbus and Queen Isabella".
The hypothetical speaker is usually, by convention, called "Tom" (or "he" or "she"), unless some other name is needed for the pun (as in the Marie Curie and Lord Nelson examples above).
The house was owned at one time by Sir William Hamilton, Ambassador to the Court of Naples, whose (second) wife was Emma, Lady Hamilton, Lord Nelson's paramour.
Nelson's Band of Brothers, Lord Nelson's captains at the Battle of the Nile
An ensign from the French Généreux of 8.2 by 16 m (26.9 by 52.5 ft) was captured by HMS Foudroyant in 1800, and presented by its captain, one time Flag Captain of Lord Nelson, to the City of Norwich.
Captain Richard Bowen (1761–1797) James Bowen's younger brother, a British naval commander on the ship HMS Terpsichore, served under Lord Nelson, and was killed at the battle of Santa Cruz de Tenerife.
Lord Nelson was married on 28 July 1845 at St George Hanover Square church to Lady Mary Jane Diana Agar, daughter of the second Earl of Normanton and granddaughter of the eleventh Earl of Pembroke.
In the House of Lords Lord Nelson supported the Protectionist Tories under Lord Derby, and served as party chief whip in the Lords.
Famous guests who have stayed at the Lord Nelson Hotel include the Rolling Stones, Anne Murray, Keith Urban, the White Stripes, Jerry Seinfeld, Ozzy Osbourne, and Paul McCartney.
The Lord Nelson inspired the fictional hotel featured in the award winning 1998 novel The Museum Guard by Howard Norman.
His parents named him Lord Nelson in honor of the British admiral and hero, Lord Horatio Nelson.