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・ Vivian Davis Figures
・ Vivian de Buffrénil
・ Vivian De Gurr St George
・ Vivian de Sola Pinto
・ Vivian Della Chiesa
・ Vivian Dering Majendie
・ Vivian Dsena
・ Vivian Dunn
・ Vivian Dykes
・ Vivian E. Browne
・ Vivian E. Cook
・ Vivian E. Watts
・ Vivian Edwards
・ Vivian El Jaber
・ Vivian Ellis
Vivian family (baronets and barons)
・ Vivian family (of Trewan Hall)
・ Vivian Fernández
・ Vivian Fine
・ Vivian Flowers
・ Vivian Fowler
・ Vivian Fowler Memorial College for Girls
・ Vivian Francis Bulkeley-Johnson
・ Vivian Frederick Maynard FitzSimons
・ Vivian French
・ Vivian Fuchs
・ Vivian Fung
・ Vivian G. Harsh
・ Vivian Gibbins
・ Vivian Gibson


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Vivian family (baronets and barons) : ウィキペディア英語版
Vivian family (baronets and barons)
Vivian is the name of a British noble family of Cornish extraction that rose to wealth in various regions of the British Isles. Over time, several members of the Vivian family were made knights, baronets and peers. Hereditary titles held by the family include the Vivian barony as well as the Swansea barony. Several other members of the family have also risen to prominence.
==History==
The Vivian baronets and barons are a junior branch of the Vivian family of Trewan Hall, St Columb Major, Cornwall, from whom they are descended through John Vivian (1583–1647) of Trenoweth and Trewan. Around 1800, one of his descendants, John Vivian (1750–1826) of Truro, became managing partner in the copper works at Penclawdd and Loughor owned by the Cheadle Brasswire Company of Staffordshire, and thus the first of the Vivian family to settle in Swansea. His son John Henry Vivian (1785–1855) continued and expanded the business, eventually owning copper mining, copper smelting and trading businesses in Swansea (Vivian & Sons), Liverpool, Birmingham and London. Between 1832 and 1855 he sat as Member of Parliament for Swansea District.〔Burke (1928)〕 His brother Hussey Vivian (1775–1842) meanwhile pursued a military career in the British cavalry and commanded the 6th Brigade of the Earl of Uxbridge's Cavalry Division in the Battle of Waterloo. General Hussey Vivian was created a Baronet of Truro in the County of Cornwall in 1827, and Baron Vivian, of Glynn and of Truro in the County of Cornwall, in 1841. After John Henry Vivian's death in 1855, his sons Henry, Arthur and Richard continued to run the family business and sit as Members of Parliament for Swansea. Through their enterprises in the area, the Vivian family did much to develop Swansea into a city, in much the same way as the Marquesses of Bute drove the development of Cardiff. Henry Vivian was created a Baronet of Singleton in the Parish of Swansea in the County of Glamorgan in 1882 and Baron Swansea, of Singleton in the County of Glamorgan, in 1893.

John Henry Vivian, Ferrara Square, Swansea, Wales.JPG|John Henry Vivian (1785–1855), statue in Ferrara Square, Swansea
Richard Hussey Vivian, 1st Baron Vivian by William Salter.jpg|Hussey Vivian, 1st Baron Vivian (1775–1842), portrait by William Salter
Henry Hussey Vivian.JPG|Henry Vivian, 1st Baron Swansea (1821–1894), statue in Swansea
Odo Richard Vivian grave.JPG|Grave of the 3rd Baron Swansea at St. David's Church, Maesmynis, Builth Wells


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