Google
×
John Johnstone (28 April 1734 – 10 December 1795) was a Scottish nabob, a corrupt official of the British East India Company who returned home with great ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
James Johnstone, the chief of the clan, was created Lord Johnstone of Lochwood by Charles I in 1633. Ten years later he was made Earl of Hartfell, which title ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
People also ask
Title: The Edinburgh tales. Author: Johnstone, C. I. (Christian Isobel), 1781-1857. Note: W. Tait; [etc., etc.], 1845. Link: page images at HathiTrust.
MP [S], Dumfriesshire 1700–7. Burgess, Edinburgh 1702.3. Biography. Johnstone had already established his military career when he succeeded his father as the ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
James Johnstone (1719 – c. 1791), also known as Chevalier de Johnstone or Johnstone de Moffatt, was the son of an Edinburgh merchant.
JOHNSTONE, JAMES, an eminent physician, fourth son of John Johnstone, Esq., of Galabank, was born at Annan in 1730. He studied medicine at Edinburgh, and ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
James Mace, Rector of Lisburn. John Johnstone purchased a large farm at Ballinderry, County Antrim, near Portmore, and settled there about 1670. He had five ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
John Johnstone of Johnstone had issue four sons and three daughters. 1. James Johnstone, who predeceased his father. Of him a brief notice follows. 2 ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor:
"That the second Son of James Earl of Annandale and Hartfell, John Johnstone, commonly called Lord John Johnstone, was married to Elizabeth Belcher or Belchair, ...
Painter and teacher, born in Falkirk, Stirlingshire. He studied at Edinburgh College of Art, 1956–60, then a travelling scholarship took him to the West Indies ...
Missing: inauthor: | Show results with:inauthor: