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  1. William Bateman was the son of Jonathan and Ann Bateman who in 1800 entered in partnership with his uncle Peter and his mother Ann. In 1805, after the retirement of Ann, was registered the new mark of PETER BATEMAN and WILLIAM (I) BATEMAN.

  2. William Bateman. Born in 1774 and last in the line of the Bateman dynasty of silversmiths. Second son of Jonathan and Ann Bateman, and grandson of Hester. Apprenticed in 1789 and free on the 6 February 1799. First mark entered in 1799 in partnership with Peter and Ann, January 1800. Address: Bunhill Row. Second mark with Peter in 1805.

  3. Mar 20, 2013 · William's occupation as a Freestone Quarry Labourer suggests digging, blasting and moving stone, just the job for helping build a railway line. William Bateman married Ann Hutchinson in Heighington in 1827. Her father was Henry Hutchinson, a Grocer, a Baker or a Weaver depending on which census return you read.

  4. William or Bill Bateman may refer to: William Bateman (bishop) (c. 1298–1355), medieval bishop of Norwich. William Bateman, 1st Viscount Bateman (1695–1744), British politician. William H. Bateman, 19th-century Sandy Hook pilot boat. Bill Bateman (cricketer) (1866–1935), Australian cricketer and businessman.

    • Foundation.
    • Endowments and Advowsons.
    • Site and Buildings.
    • Historical Sketch.
    • Pictures.
    • Plate.
    • Seals.
    • Masters of Gonville Hall
    • Masters of Gonville and Caius College

    The third founder and sixteenthMaster of the College, John Caius (Keys or Kees),was a native of Norwich. Born in 1510, he enteredGonville Hall in 1529 as a scholar, and was elected toa fellowship in 1533, retaining it until 1545. From1539 to 1544 or 1545 he studied in Italy, chiefly atPadua, where he took his medical degree and lectured on the logi...

    So faras his more material benefactions are concerned,Dr. Caius practically doubled the endowments ofthe College. By a deed dated 1 March 1558 he conveyed to the Master and Fellows the manors ofCroxley and Snellshall in Rickmansworth (Herts.),and Runcton Holme and Burnham Wyndham(Norf.); they were old monastic property which hehad purchased from th...

    Since Gonville Hall hadbeen moved from Free School Lane to Trinity Lane,only one addition had been made to its site; in 1498a garden on part of the ground which is now CaiusCourt was purchased from Anglesey Priory. It wasdue to Dr. Caius that the area of the College wasincreased to almost its present dimensions. In 1563he purchased from Trinity the...

    The fortunes of theCollege during the last four centuries have followedfairly closely those of the University. In the earlypart of the 16th century Gonville Hall was one of thepoorest foundations in Cambridge. The Dissolutionof the monasteries, and the consequent removal ofthe monastic element amongst its students, broughtabout a serious decline in...

    The College possesses paintings of allthe Masters since the time of Dr. Caius, with thepossible exception of William Dell, 1649–60. Twoof the portraits of Dr. Caius, one of them a remarkably fine work of art, are contemporary, and theportrait of John Smith, 1764–95, is by Sir JoshuaReynolds. Other notable portraits are those of Mrs.Frankland, a ben...

    Comparatively little of the early platewhich was once possessed by the College has survived. It escaped being melted down at the time ofthe Civil War, but a large part of it was stolen in twosuccessive robberies in 1800, and still more was disposed of at different times and replaced as it becameold and worn. The most remarkable pieces are twococonu...

    Old Seal, granted by Gonville or Bateman. The Annunciation. In base a bishop with mitreand pastoral staff, kneeling, between six other kneeling personages: s' coe' aule ān[n]unciacōis' b[eat]ē'marie cantebri. New Seal, granted by Caius. TheAnnunciation, different design. In base an ovalshield with carved work, between the letter b on theleft and a ...

    John Colton, of Terrington: (fn. 28)4 June 1349. William Rougham: c. 1360. Richard Pulham: 1393. William Somersham: 1412. John Rickinghale: 1416. Thomas Attwood: 1426. Thomas Boleyn: 1454. Edmund Sheriffe: 1472. Henry Costessey: 1475. John Barly: 1483. Edmund Stubb: 1504. William Buckenham: 1513. John Skipp: 1536. John Styrmin: 1540. Thomas Bacon: ...

    John Caius: 24 Jan. 1559. Thomas Legge: (fn. 30)27 June 1573. William Branthwaite: 14 Dec. 1607. (fn. 31) John Gostlin: 16 Feb. 1619. Thomas Batchcroft: 22 Oct. 1626, expelled15 Apr. 1649, returned 1660, resigned 1 Dec.1660. William Dell: 4 May 1649, resigned 11 May 1660. Robert Brady: 1 Dec. 1660. James Halman: 24 Aug. 1700. John Ellys: 1 Jan. 170...

  5. Life. Bateman was the son of William Bateman, a Norwich citizen and bailiff who was an M.P. He was born about 1298. He had two elder brothers, both of whom attained eminence. The firstborn, Sir Bartholomew Bateman, of Flixton, Suffolk, was knighted by Edward III for his martial prowess in the French wars. The second John, became a priest after ...

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  7. William Bateman, Bishop of Norwich. by John Faber Sr mezzotint, early 18th century 10 3/8 in. x 7 7/8 in. (262 mm x 200 mm) paper size Given by the daughter of compiler William Fleming MD, Mary Elizabeth Stopford (née Fleming), 1931

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