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A brandling which snatched itself from the burning.
When he died in 1636, the estate passed to his son, Sir Francis Brandling.
Not all the land belonged to Brandling, and the Act gave him power to obtain wayleave.
Lady jersey married Charles Brandling on 12 September 1865.
Charles Brandling was their successor.
In 1605, Thomas' grandson, Robert Brandling, inherited the manor.
Charles John Brandling (1797-1856) suffered financial problems as a result of which he sold the estate in 1852 to Thomas Smith.
The house was built between 1755 and 1764 for Charles Brandling (1733-1802) to a design by architect James Paine.
Robert Brandling (c. 1575 - 1636) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1621 to 1622.
Sir Robert Brandling bef.
Collins went on a walking tour of Cornwall with artist Henry Brandling in July and August 1850.
He appears to have married fourthly by licence on 29 November 1671, Dorothy Brandling, widow of Carmarthen.
Another son, Henry Brandling (1515-1578), was Sheriff of Newcastle in 1566 and mayor of the city in 1568, 1575 1576.
In 1756 the Thompson heiress, Elizabeth, married Charles Brandling and they commissioned the building of a new mansion to replace the existing manor house.
Members of the family lived there until 1860 including R.H. Brandling who donated land on Town Street on which the church is built.
He came into possession of his mother's property at Halton, and also acquired the estates of Hadston from Robert Brandling.
Penelope Brandling: A Tale of the Welsh Coast in the Eighteenth Century (1903)
Thomas Brandling (1512-1590), founder of the Brandling land and coal owning dynasty.
He died in 1641 and was succeeded by Charles Brandling, a cavalry colonel who also resided at both Felling and Alnwick.
In the mid 16th century Hadston township was acquired by Robert Brandling of North Gosforth.
This type of mine was in operation when Anne Leigh married Ralph Brandling whose family owned collieries in Durham.
His son, Sir Robert Brandling (d. 1568), served as sheriff of Newcastle in 1524 and also as mayor in 1536, 1543, 1547 and 1564.
His brother Thomas Brandling (1512-1590) was educated at the newly-established Royal Grammar School and founded the land and coal owning dynasty.
R.H. Brandling of Middleton Lodge gave land on Town Street on which to build a church and parsonage in 1845.
Charles Brandling (1733-1802) was High Sheriff of Northumberland in 1781 and was Member of Parliament for Newcastle 1784-1798.
Their scientific name is Eisenia foetida.
The first species in the genus, V. eiseniae, was isolated from the earthworm Eisenia foetida, and its description published in 2008.
Brandling worms - also called tiger worm, or Eisenia foetida - will come naturally into your compost heap, but you can make your own wormery to process kitchen waste more quickly and efficiently.
Yan Shu Fang, et al. "Eisenia foetida fibrinolytic enzymes research VIII: determination of fibrinolytic enzymes active components.
The most common worms used in composting systems, redworms (Eisenia foetida, Eisenia andrei, and Lumbricus rubellus) feed most rapidly at temperatures of 15-25 C (59-77 F).
And so, early last month, I ordered a Worm-a-way bin made of recycled plastic and a pound of red worms - Eisenia foetida, a type of earthworm famed for its ability to eat garbage - from Flowerfield Enterprises in Kalamazoo, Mich.