Robert Gibbes
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Robert_Gibbes an entity of type: Thing
Robert Gibbes (* 9. Januar 1644 wahrscheinlich in Sandwich, Kent, England; † 24. Juni 1715 in der Province of South Carolina) war ein englischer bzw. britischer Kolonialbeamter und kommissarischer Gouverneur der Province of South Carolina.
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Robert Gibbes (January 9, 1644 – June 24, 1715) was an English Landgrave, chairman and acting governor of the province of South Carolina between 1710-1712. Although he was elected acting governor by the Executive Council between the three proprietary deputies of former governor, Edward Tynte, after his death, received one vote more than his opponent Thomas Broughton, getting it through bribery. This sparked a conflict between both the oppositions and their supporters which finished with the Lords Proprietors declaring the election of Gibbes illegal (although they allowed them to rule for almost a year) and the appointment of Charles Craven as governor of South Carolina in 1711, who didn't arrive until 1712.
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Robert Gibbes
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Robert Gibbes
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Robert Gibbes
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Robert Gibbes
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1715-06-24
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1644-01-09
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46911392
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1097986278
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1644-01-09
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--06-24
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Landgrave, chairman and administrator
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20
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Jane Davis , Mary Davis and Elizabeth Rixam
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1712-03-19
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June 1710
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Robert Gibbes (* 9. Januar 1644 wahrscheinlich in Sandwich, Kent, England; † 24. Juni 1715 in der Province of South Carolina) war ein englischer bzw. britischer Kolonialbeamter und kommissarischer Gouverneur der Province of South Carolina.
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Robert Gibbes (January 9, 1644 – June 24, 1715) was an English Landgrave, chairman and acting governor of the province of South Carolina between 1710-1712. Although he was elected acting governor by the Executive Council between the three proprietary deputies of former governor, Edward Tynte, after his death, received one vote more than his opponent Thomas Broughton, getting it through bribery. This sparked a conflict between both the oppositions and their supporters which finished with the Lords Proprietors declaring the election of Gibbes illegal (although they allowed them to rule for almost a year) and the appointment of Charles Craven as governor of South Carolina in 1711, who didn't arrive until 1712.
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8775
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1712-03-19
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20th Proprietary PeriodGovernor of South Carolina