John Cheyne (priest)
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John Cheyne (priest)
John Cheyne may refer to: * Sir John Cheyne (speaker) (died 1414), Speaker of the House of Commons * John Cheyne (MP for Buckinghamshire) (died c.1447), MP for Buckinghamshire (UK Parliament constituency), Buckinghamshire, 1413, 1415, 1425 and 1427 * Sir John Cheyne (builder of Chenies Manor) in Chenies, Buckinghamshire c.1460 * Sir John Cheyne (died 1468), c.1390–1468), MP for Buckinghamshire (UK Parliament constituency), Buckinghamshire, 1421 to 1445 * John Cheyne (died 1585), Member of Parliament for Chipping Wycombe (UK Parliament constituency), Chipping Wycombe * John Cheyne (by 1510–67), Member of Parliament for Dover, Winchelsea and Berkshire * John Cheyne, Baron Cheyne (c.1442–1499), Master of the Horse to Edward IV of England * John Cheyne (physician) (1777–1836), British physician, surgeon and author * Sir John Cheyne (advocate) of Tangwick QC KC LLD (1841–1907), Scottish advocate See also

*John Cheney (other) *John Chaney (other) {{hndis, ...
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John Cheyne (speaker)
Sir John Cheyne or Cheney (died 1414) was a Member of Parliament and briefly the initial Speaker of the House of Commons of England in the Parliament of October 1399, summoned by the newly acclaimed Henry IV. In 1372, he married Margaret, daughter of William, Lord Deincourt and the widow of Robert, Lord Tiptoft which brought him wealth and status. He became an esquire in the king's household and was knighted in 1378. He took part in a number of diplomatic missions and became MP for Gloucestershire in 1390, 1393, 1394 and 1399. On the last occasion he was elected Speaker, but stood down on the ostensible grounds of ill-health, but may have been persuaded to do so by the influence of Thomas Arundel, archbishop of Canterbury, who was appalled by his election and warned the clergy that Cheyne was an inveterate enemy of the contemporary church. The revolution of 1399 made for strange bedfellows. Under Henry IV, he continued to be employed on diplomatic missions, including a two-y ...
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John Cheyne (MP For Buckinghamshire)
John Cheyne may refer to: * Sir John Cheyne (speaker) (died 1414), Speaker of the House of Commons * John Cheyne (MP for Buckinghamshire) (died c.1447), MP for Buckinghamshire, 1413, 1415, 1425 and 1427 * Sir John Cheyne (builder of Chenies Manor) in Chenies, Buckinghamshire c.1460 * Sir John Cheyne (died 1468), c.1390–1468), MP for Buckinghamshire, 1421 to 1445 * John Cheyne (died 1585), Member of Parliament for Chipping Wycombe * John Cheyne (by 1510–67), Member of Parliament for Dover, Winchelsea and Berkshire * John Cheyne, Baron Cheyne (c.1442–1499), Master of the Horse to Edward IV of England * John Cheyne (physician) (1777–1836), British physician, surgeon and author * Sir John Cheyne (advocate) of Tangwick QC KC LLD (1841–1907), Scottish advocate See also * John Cheney (other) *John Chaney (other) John Chaney may refer to: Government * John Chaney (judge) (born 1953), Judge in the Supreme Court of Western Australia * John Chaney (congressman ...
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Buckinghamshire (UK Parliament Constituency)
Buckinghamshire is a former United Kingdom Parliamentary constituency. It was a constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of England then of the Parliament of Great Britain from 1707 to 1800 and of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1801 to 1885. Its most prominent member was Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli. Boundaries and boundary changes This county constituency consisted of the historic county of Buckinghamshire, in south-eastern England to the north-west of the modern Greater London region. Its southern boundary was the River Thames. See History of Buckinghamshire for maps of the historic county and details about it. The county returned two knights of the shire until 1832 and three 1832–1885. The place of election for the county was at the county town of Aylesbury. Aylesbury replaced Buckingham as the county town in 1529. The county, up to 1885, also contained the borough constituencies of Amersham (originally enfranchised with 2 seats from 1300, revi ...
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John Cheyne (builder Of Chenies Manor)
John Cheyne may refer to: * Sir John Cheyne (speaker) (died 1414), Speaker of the House of Commons * John Cheyne (MP for Buckinghamshire) (died c.1447), MP for Buckinghamshire, 1413, 1415, 1425 and 1427 * Sir John Cheyne (builder of Chenies Manor) in Chenies, Buckinghamshire c.1460 * Sir John Cheyne (died 1468), c.1390–1468), MP for Buckinghamshire, 1421 to 1445 * John Cheyne (died 1585), Member of Parliament for Chipping Wycombe * John Cheyne (by 1510–67), Member of Parliament for Dover, Winchelsea and Berkshire * John Cheyne, Baron Cheyne (c.1442–1499), Master of the Horse to Edward IV of England * John Cheyne (physician) (1777–1836), British physician, surgeon and author * Sir John Cheyne (advocate) of Tangwick QC KC LLD (1841–1907), Scottish advocate See also * John Cheney (other) *John Chaney (other) John Chaney may refer to: Government * John Chaney (judge) (born 1953), Judge in the Supreme Court of Western Australia * John Chaney (congressma ...
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Chenies
Chenies is a village and civil parish in south-east Buckinghamshire, England. It is on the border with Hertfordshire, east of Amersham and north of Chorleywood. History Until the 13th century, the village name was Isenhampstead. There were two villages here, called Isenhampstead Chenies and Isenhampstead Latimers, distinguished by the lords of the manors of those two places. In the 19th century the prefix was dropped and the two villages became known as Chenies and Latimer. Near this village there was once a royal hunting-box, where both King Edward I and King Edward II were known to have resided. It was the owner of this lodge, Edward III's shield bearer, Thomas Cheyne, who first gave his name to the village and his descendant, Sir John Cheyne, who built Chenies Manor House in around 1460 on the site. Several paper mills were once established in Chenies, operated by the River Chess, which flowed here from further west in Buckinghamshire. St Michael's Church The parish ...
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John Cheyne (died 1468)
John Cheyne may refer to: * Sir John Cheyne (speaker) (died 1414), Speaker of the House of Commons * John Cheyne (MP for Buckinghamshire) (died c.1447), MP for Buckinghamshire, 1413, 1415, 1425 and 1427 * Sir John Cheyne (builder of Chenies Manor) in Chenies, Buckinghamshire c.1460 * Sir John Cheyne (died 1468), c.1390–1468), MP for Buckinghamshire, 1421 to 1445 * John Cheyne (died 1585), Member of Parliament for Chipping Wycombe * John Cheyne (by 1510–67), Member of Parliament for Dover, Winchelsea and Berkshire * John Cheyne, Baron Cheyne (c.1442–1499), Master of the Horse to Edward IV of England * John Cheyne (physician) (1777–1836), British physician, surgeon and author * Sir John Cheyne (advocate) of Tangwick QC KC LLD (1841–1907), Scottish advocate See also * John Cheney (other) *John Chaney (other) John Chaney may refer to: Government * John Chaney (judge) (born 1953), Judge in the Supreme Court of Western Australia * John Chaney (congressman) ...
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John Cheyne (died 1585)
John Cheyne may refer to: * Sir John Cheyne (speaker) (died 1414), Speaker of the House of Commons * John Cheyne (MP for Buckinghamshire) (died c.1447), MP for Buckinghamshire, 1413, 1415, 1425 and 1427 * Sir John Cheyne (builder of Chenies Manor) in Chenies, Buckinghamshire c.1460 * Sir John Cheyne (died 1468), c.1390–1468), MP for Buckinghamshire, 1421 to 1445 * John Cheyne (died 1585), Member of Parliament for Chipping Wycombe * John Cheyne (by 1510–67), Member of Parliament for Dover, Winchelsea and Berkshire * John Cheyne, Baron Cheyne (c.1442–1499), Master of the Horse to Edward IV of England * John Cheyne (physician) (1777–1836), British physician, surgeon and author * Sir John Cheyne (advocate) of Tangwick QC KC LLD (1841–1907), Scottish advocate See also * John Cheney (other) *John Chaney (other) John Chaney may refer to: Government * John Chaney (judge) (born 1953), Judge in the Supreme Court of Western Australia * John Chaney (congressman) ...
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Chipping Wycombe (UK Parliament Constituency)
Wycombe () is a constituency in Buckinghamshire represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2010 by Steve Baker, a Conservative. Constituency profile The constituency shares similar borders with Wycombe local government district, although it covers a slightly smaller area. The main town within the constituency, High Wycombe contains many working/middle class voters and a sizeable ethnic minority population that totals around one quarter of the town's population, with some census output areas of town home to over 50% ethnic minorities, and a number of wards harbouring a considerable Labour vote. The surrounding villages, which account for just under half of the electorate, are some of the most wealthy areas in the country, with extremely low unemployment, high incomes and favour the Conservatives. Workless claimants totalled 3.0% of the population in November 2012, lower than the national average of 3.8%. The seat bucked the trend in 2019 with a swing of 2 ...
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John Cheyne (by 1510–67)
John Cheney (died 19 March 1567) was an English soldier and politician during the Tudor period. John Cheney was the son of John Cheney Senior of West Woodhay House in Berkshire, by his wife, Jane, the daughter, by his third wife, of Sir William Norreys of Ockwells and Yattendon. His father was a nephew of King Henry VII's friend and cousin, Baron Cheney. John was a gentleman at arms in the Royal household. He was also elected Member of Parliament for Dover (November 1554) and for Winchelsea (1558) through the influence of his father's cousin, Thomas Cheney, the Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports, and then for Berkshire from 1563 to 1567. With a group of others, he attacked and murdered a man named Robert Paris in a sword fight at Newbury, Berkshire in 1550 but was pardoned for it in 1552. References Members of the Parliament of England for Berkshire 1567 deaths English murderers People from West Berkshire District 16th-century English soldiers 16th-century English cri ...
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John Cheyne, Baron Cheyne
Sir John Cheyne, Baron Cheyne, ( – 30 May 1499) was Master of the Horse to King Edward IV of England and personal bodyguard to King Henry VII of England. Biography John was the third but second surviving son of John Cheyne (or Cheney) of Shurland Hall in Kent, by his wife, Eleanor, daughter and sole heiress of Sir Robert Shottesbrooke of Faringdon in Berkshire (now Oxfordshire). He was the uncle of Thomas Cheyne, Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and grand-uncle of Tudor soldier and MP John Cheyne. In the 1460s he was appointed Esquire of the body to Elizabeth Woodville, Queen of Edward IV. He was MP for Wiltshire in 1478, and in 1479 was appointed Master of the Horse. In the same year he married Margaret Chideock, eldest daughter of Sir John Chideock, and widow of William Stourton, 2nd Baron Stourton; some sources say that they had a son who predeceased his father. He was present when the Treaty of Picquigny was signed in 1475, and remained behind as a hostage of Ki ...
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John Cheyne (physician)
John Cheyne FRSE FKQCPI (3 February 1777 – 31 January 1836) was a British physician, surgeon, Professor of Medicine in the Royal College of Surgery in Ireland (RCSI) and author of monographs on a number of medical topics. He was one of the people to identify Cheyne–Stokes respiration. Life He was born in Leith, the son of Dr John Cheyne, a surgeon. The family lived at New Key (Quay) in the middle of the Shore. He was educated at Leith Grammar School and then the High School in Edinburgh. Having grown up around medical practice, he was able to enter Edinburgh University at the age of 15, graduating as a doctor at 18 years of age. He joined the army, worked as a surgeon with an artillery corps, and was present at the Battle of Vinegar Hill. Cheyne rejoined his father's practice four years later in 1799. Ten years later, Cheyne moved to Dublin and in 1811 began working at the Meath Hospital. He was appointed Professor of Medicine in the Royal College of Surgery in Ireland (R ...
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John Cheyne (advocate)
Sir John Cheyne of Tangwick KC LLD (1841–1907) was a 19th/20th century Scottish judge. Life He was born on 15 February 1841 at 5 Walker Street in Edinburgh's West End the son of Henry Walker WS. He was christened at Northmavine parish church in Shetland near his father's home estate of Tangwick Haa which was built by his family around 1690. By 1851 the family was living at 6 Royal Terrace on Calton Hill. He was sent to Trinity College, Oxford to study Law, graduating MA. He passed the Scottish bar as an Advocate in May 1865. He mainly practiced in Dundee. In the 1880s he was living at 7 Airlie Place in Dundee. Airlie Place is a handsome mid-19th century townhouse forming part of a terrace stepping down towards the River Tay. He was at this stage also Sheriff Substitute for Forfarshire. From 1891 he was also Procurator to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and Vice Dean of the Faculty of Advocates. He became Sheriff of Ross, Cromarty and Sutherland in 1886 ...
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