Cecil Calvert (Baltimore) b. 8 sierpień 1605 d. 30 listopad 1675
From Rodovid PL
| Ród | Calvert |
| Płeć | Mężczyzna |
| Imię i nazwisko (po urodzeniu) | Cecil Calvert |
| Inne nazwiska | Baltimore |
| Inne imiona | 2nd Lord // |
| Rodzice
♂ George Calvert (Baltimore) [Calvert] b. 1580 d. 12 kwiecień 1632 ♀ Anne Mynne [Mynne] b. 20 listopad 1579 d. 8 sierpień 1622 | |
| Reference numbers | GEDCOM::3258799.ged::INDI @I52580@::Hailey C. Shannon |
Lista wydarzeń
8 sierpień 1605 urodzenie: Bexley, Kent, England
ślub: ♀ Anne Arundell [Arundell] b. 1615 d. 23 lipiec 1649
27 sierpień 1637 narodziny dziecka: ♂ Charles Calvert (Maryland) [Calvert] b. 27 sierpień 1637 d. 21 luty 1713
30 listopad 1675 śmierć:
Notatki
Cecil or Cecilius Calvert, succeeded to the title of second Lord Baltimore upon his father, George's death. Cecil Calvert married the Catholic Anne Arundell, the daughter of Thomas Arundell in 1629. Anne Arundel County, Maryland is so named after Lady Anne Arundell. Cecil and Anne had two children, one son, and one daughter.
Cecil Calvert was raised a Catholic and attended Trinity College, Oxford, England. Upon his father's death, Cecil inherited the title, the Irish estates, and about twelve million acres of land, in what would become Maryland. He served as the first designer and Lord Proprietor of the Maryland colony from 1632 to 1675.
Although he never visited America, he proficiently preserved his charter rights from adversaries over the course of several decades. He established Maryland on a sturdy and wealthy footing, to the depletion of his personal fortune. Additionally, he consistently promoted religious toleration for all Christians living in his colony.
Cecil Calvert died on November 30, 1675. His only son, Charles, served as governor of Maryland from 1661 to 1676, and the third Lord Baltimore from 1675 to 1715.
Od dziadków do wnuków
śmierć: 1672, Haverhill, Massachusetts
nadanie tytułu: Lady
ślub: ♂ Benedict Leonard Calvert (4th Baron Baltimore) , /99
ślub: ♂ Christopher Crowe , /19
śmierć: 22 styczeń 1720, England, Woodford, Essex, England/21


