Robert Melville (other)
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Robert Melville (other)
Robert Melville or Melvill may refer to: * Robert Melvill or Melville (1723–1809), Scottish general, botanist and inventor * Robert Melville, 1st Lord Melville (died 1621), Scottish lawyer and diplomat * Robert Melville, 2nd Lord Melville (died 1635) * Robert Melville (died 1693), burgh commissioner for Cupar (Parliament of Scotland constituency) * Robert Melville (art critic) (1905–1986), British art critic and journalist * Robert Melville (Australian politician) (1919–1982), Australian politician * Robert Melville (car designer), former chief designer at McLaren Automotive {{Hndis, Melville, Robert ...
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Robert Melvill
General Robert Melvill (or Melville) LLD (12 October 1723 – 29 August 1809) was a Scottish soldier, antiquary, botanist and inventor. Melvill invented (1759) the Carronade, a cast-iron cannon popular for 100 years, in co-operation with the Carron Iron Works (from which it takes its name). He founded the St. Vincent Botanic Garden in the West Indies. Life Melville was born in Monimail in Scotland, the son of Rev Andrew Melville, a clergyman, and Helen Whytt, sister of Dr. Robert Whytt. As a member of the noble Melville family, he was related to the Earls of Leven and Earls of Melville. He was educated at the grammar school in Leven, and attended Glasgow University (at the same time as Adam Smith) but left to study medicine at Edinburgh University. He left his studies a second time and joined the 25th Foot (originally raised by David Melville, 3rd Earl of Leven in 1689, and later known as the King's Own Scottish Borderers) as an Ensign in 1744 in Flanders, and fought ...
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Robert Melville, 1st Lord Melville
Robert Melville, 1st Lord Melville (c. 1527–1621) was a Scottish diplomat, administrator, jurist, and intriguer, and uncle of the poet Elizabeth Melville. Family Known as Sir Robert Melville of Murdocairnie or Murdochcairnie, Robert was the second son of Sir John Melville of Raith in Fife and Helen Napier of Merchiston. His younger brother Sir James Melville of Halhill wrote a famous political memoir. Another brother, Andrew Melville of Garvock, joined the household of Mary, Queen of Scots in Scotland. Robert married firstly; Katherine Adamson; secondly Mary Leslie, daughter of Andrew Leslie, Earl of Rothes; thirdly, Jean Stewart, daughter of Robert Stewart, Earl of Orkney. His heir was his son with Katherine Adamson, Robert Melville, 2nd Lord Melville. Career During the Scottish Reformation, Robert Melville sided with the Protestant Lords of the Congregation. He was sent to England as a diplomat by Mary, Queen of Scots. He opposed her marriage to Henry, Lord Darnley and jo ...
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Robert Melville, 2nd Lord Melville
Earl of Melville is a title in the Peerage of Scotland. It was created in 1690 for the Scottish soldier and statesman George Melville, 4th Lord Melville. He was made Lord Raith, Monymaill and Balwearie and Viscount of Kirkcaldy at the same time, also in the Peerage of Scotland. He married Catherine Leslie, daughter of Alexander Leslie, Lord Balgonie, and granddaughter of Alexander Leslie, 1st Earl of Leven. Lord Melville was succeeded upon his death in 1707 by his eldest surviving son, David, who already in 1681 had succeeded to the earldom of Leven through his mother. The two earldoms have since remained united. For further history of the titles, see Earl of Leven. The title Lord Melville, of Monymaill, was created in the Peerage of Scotland in 1616 for Robert Melville, an Extraordinary Lord of Session under the judicial title Lord Murdochairnie, with remainder to his elder brother, John Melville. He was succeeded by his son, Robert, the second Lord. He was a Lord of Session ...
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Robert Melville (died 1693)
Robert Melville or Melvill may refer to: * Robert Melvill or Melville (1723–1809), Scottish general, botanist and inventor * Robert Melville, 1st Lord Melville (died 1621), Scottish lawyer and diplomat * Robert Melville, 2nd Lord Melville (died 1635) * Robert Melville (died 1693), burgh commissioner for Cupar (Parliament of Scotland constituency) * Robert Melville (art critic) (1905–1986), British art critic and journalist * Robert Melville (Australian politician) (1919–1982), Australian politician * Robert Melville (car designer), chief designer at McLaren Automotive {{Hndis, Melville, Robert ...
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Cupar (Parliament Of Scotland Constituency)
Cupar in Fife was a royal burgh that returned one commissioner to the Parliament of Scotland and to the Convention of Estates. After the Acts of Union 1707, Cupar, Dundee, Forfar, Perth and St Andrews formed the Perth district of burghs, returning one member between them to the House of Commons of Great Britain. List of burgh commissioners * 1661: George Turnbull, bailie (died 1662) * 1662–63: Andrew Paterson * 1665 convention, 1667 convention: Andrew Paterson of Kilmeny * 1669–72: John Barclay, dean of guild * 1678 convention: George Manson, bailie * 1681–82: Patrick Mortimer, bailie * 1685–86: Andre Glasford, bailie * 1689 convention, 1689–90: Robert Melville of Carskeirdoe (died c. 1690) * 1693–1702: Sir Archibald Muir of Thorntown * 1702–07: Patrick Bruce of Banzion See also * List of constituencies in the Parliament of Scotland at the time of the Union A ''list'' is any set of items in a row. List or lists may also refer to: People * List (sur ...
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Robert Melville (art Critic)
Robert Melville (31 December 1905 - March 1986) was an English art critic and journalist. Along with the artists Conroy Maddox and John Melville (his brother), he was a key member of the Birmingham Surrealists in the 1930s and 1940s. An early biographer of Picasso, he later become the art correspondent of the '' New Statesman'' and the '' Architectural Review''. Early life Melville was born in Tottenham, London, in 1905, the second son of an asphalt contractor's foreman. His family moved to the Harborne area of Birmingham in 1913 and after his secondary schooling Melville spent most of the 1920s in clerical jobs with a variety of industrial companies. In 1928 he married and settled in Sparkhill.. Melville's brother John had shown early talent as a painter and from the late 1920s the Melvilles both developed an interest in the emerging modernist movements in continental Europe, becoming regular patrons of Zwemmer's art bookshop in London's Charing Cross Road. Meeting fell ...
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Robert Melville (Australian Politician)
Robert Gavin Melville (9 February 1919 – 18 May 1982) was an Australian politician. He was a Labor member of the New South Wales Legislative Council from 1973 to 1981. Born in Kempsey to Robert Leslie and Caroline Melville, he was a building contractor and banana grower before entering politics. He served in the 2/13th Battalion for six months, and became an alderman of Kempsey Shire Council in 1954. He was Mayor of Kempsey in 1959. Active in the Labor Party, he was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Council The New South Wales Legislative Council, often referred to as the upper house, is one of the two chambers of the parliament of the Australian state of New South Wales. The other is the Legislative Assembly. Both sit at Parliament House in th ... in 1973 and served until 1981. Melville died in Kempsey in 1982. As a testament to his commitment to the local community, the new high school in Kempsey was named in his honour, Melville High School Reference ...
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