Bazsites.com Clavering
Directory Topics
On the Web
- St. Peter Claver, Confessor - From the book "A Saint A Day" by Berchmans Bittle.
- De Clavers - Groepspraktijk voor fysiotherapie, acupunctuur, kinderfysiotherapie, manuele therapie en diverse andere disciplines met diverse praktijkadressen.
- Claver - Administració de Loteria Nº2 Claver, venda de decims per internet.
- Catholic Online: St. Peter Claver - Biography by Terry Matz.
- Peter Claver, Saint - Brief entry in the Columbia Encyclopedia.
- Peter Claver - Profile of the "Slave of the Blacks." Illustrated, with links, and a reading from one of the saint's letters.
- A Saint in the Slave Trade - Biography of St. Peter Claver, by Arnold Lunn.
- Catholic Encyclopedia: St. Peter Claver - Biography of the Spanish Jesuit priest who for 33 years ministered to African slaves in the New World, and tried to stop the slave trade. Died in 1654.
- Vietnamese Eucharistic Youth Society: St. Peter Claver - A short life of this saint, suitable for children.
- Clavering Village - A community web site for the village and surrounding area. The village, business, the council, and general information.
Wikipedia Articles
- Clavering Baronets - The Baronetcy of Clavering of Axwell was created in the Baronetage of England on 5 June 1661 for James Clavering, the grandson of James Clavering (1565-1630), a mechant adventurer of Newcastle upon Tyne, who was Mayor of that city and who bought the estate of Axwell Park, near Blaydon, Northumberland in 1629.
- Clavering Castle - Clavering Castle was in the village of Clavering in Essex on the bank of the River Stort, some 10 Km south-west of Bishop's Stortford ().
- John Clavering - John Clavering (19 July 1698 – 23 May 1762) of Chopwell Hall, Chopwell, formerly County Durham, now Tyne and Wear, was a member of a junior branch of the Clavering family.
- Sir James Clavering, 1st Baronet - Sir James Clavering, 1st Baronet (3 February 1620 – 24 March 1702) was an English landowner.
- Sir Thomas Clavering, 7th Baronet - Sir Thomas Clavering, 7th Baronet (19 June 1719 – 14 October 1794) succeeded to the Baronetcy of Axwell and to the family estates on the death of his father in 1748.