Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 33.djvu/432

Rh daughter of the Rev. James Bulwer, rector of Hunworth-cum-Stody, Norfolk. He had no children. A bust of him, by Mr. Albert Bruce Joy, was placed in the library of Trinity College in 1892.

Besides several tracts, his published works comprise: 1. ‘A Treatise on Light and Vision,’ London, 1831. 2. ‘Two Introductory Lectures on Physical and Mechanical Science,’ London, 1834. 3. ‘Lectures on the Wave-theory of Light,’ two parts, Dublin, 1836 and 1841; republished, London, 1857, as ‘Elementary Treatise on the Wave-theory of Light.’ 4. ‘Account of the Magnetic Observatory at Dublin, and of the Instruments and Methods of Observation employed there,’ London, 1842. 5. ‘An Account of the Method of Determining the Total Intensity of the Earth's Magnetic Force in Absolute Measure,’ London, 1848. 6. ‘The Elements of Optics,’ Dublin, 1849. 7. ‘Address delivered at the opening meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, held at Dublin 26 Aug. 1857,’ Dublin, 1857. 8. ‘Is it a Sin? An Inquiry into the Lawfulness of Complying with the Rule of the National Board relative to Religious Instruction,’ published anonymously, Dublin, 1860. 9. ‘The Climate of Ireland and the Currents of the Atlantic,’ a lecture, Dublin, 1865. 10. ‘Observations made at the Magnetical and Meteorological Observatory at Trinity College, Dublin,’ Dublin, 1865. 11. ‘The University of Dublin in its Relations to the several Religious Communities,’ anonymous, Dublin, 1868. 12. ‘The Doctrine of Absolutism,’ Dublin, 1871. 13. ‘Treatise on Magnetism, General and Terrestrial,’ London, 1874. 14. ‘Miscellaneous Papers connected with Physical Science,’ London, 1877. 

LLOYD, JACOB YOUDE WILLIAM (1816–1887), genealogist, born in 1816, was eldest son of Jacob William Hinde, esq., of Ulverstone, Lancashire, afterwards of Langham Hall, Essex, by Harriet, younger daughter of the Rev. Thomas Youde of Clochfaen, Montgomeryshire, Plas Madog, Denbighshire, and Rowley's Mansion, Shrewsbury. He was educated at Wadham College, Oxford (B.A. 1839, M.A. 1874), and became curate of Banhaglog, Montgomeryshire. Afterwards he turned Roman catholic, and served in the pontifical Zouaves. Pius IX conferred upon him the knighthood of the order of St. Gregory. He was also a knight of the Saviour of Greece. On the death of his aunt in 1857 he succeeded to the estates at Clochfaen and Plas Madog, and subsequently he assumed the name of Lloyd in lieu of Hinde. The chevalier was a generous landlord, and although a Roman catholic he restored the parish church of Llangurig at a cost of 10,000l. He was a distinguished Welsh antiquary, and published several genealogical works, the chief of which is ‘The History of the Princes, the Lords Marcher, and the ancient Nobility of Powys Fadog, the ancient Lords of Arwystli, Cedewen, and Meirionydd, and many of the Descendants of the fifteen Noble Tribes of Gwynedd,’ 6 vols. London, 1881–7, 8vo. He died at Ventnor, Isle of Wight, on 14 Oct. 1887. 

LLOYD, FLOYD, or FLUD, JOHN (d. 1523), composer, appears to have been born either in the parish of St. Cadocks or in that of Christchurch, at Caerleon in Monmouthshire, near the end of the fifteenth century. Foxe, bishop of Winchester, writing to Cardinal Wolsey 20 July 1515, seems to refer to the composer when describing the unruly action of the canons of St. Augustine's, Bristol. He writes that ‘one Lloyd, of the king's chapel, is chief author of this mischief … a young fool.’ It may have been to atone for some youthful indiscretion hinted at here that Lloyd resolved, in January 1518, to make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Whether he was the John Fludde who graduated B.A. at Oxford in 1519 is doubtful. Hawkins describes him as bachelor of music; he certainly took a musical degree, as he is styled in Brit. Mus. Addit. MS. 31922 ‘in armonia graduat,’ and his early death makes it improbable that he obtained a doctor's degree. In 1520 Lloyd, along with the other gentlemen of Henry VIII's Chapel, attended the king at the Field of the Cloth of Gold, and in January in the following year he appears to have accompanied his royal master on a visit to the Duke of Buckingham at Thornbury Castle, Gloucestershire. At various times he received grants of corrodies in the monasteries of St. Augustine's at Bristol, Glastonbury, and Thetford. He died on 3 April 1523 ‘in the king's chapel,’ and was buried in the Savoy, being described on his tombstone there as ‘virtutis et religionis cultor.’ The only compositions of his extant are contained in Brit. Mus. Addit. MS. 31922, and consist of a round in three parts, ‘Deme