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  1. James Maitland Balfour (5 January 1820 – 23 February 1856) was a Scottish land-owner and businessman. He made a fortune in the 19th-century railway boom, and inherited a significant portion of his father's great wealth.

  2. Francis Maitland Balfour, known as F. M. Balfour, FRS (10 November 1851 – 19 July 1882) was a British biologist. [1] He lost his life while attempting the ascent of Mont Blanc. He was regarded by his colleagues as one of the greatest biologists of his day and Charles Darwin 's successor.

  3. James Maitland Balfour was born on 5 January 1820 to James Balfour and Lady Eleanor Maitland. Balfour senior made his fortune when he left for India as a young man, working as a contractor...

  4. James Maitland, 8th Earl of Lauderdale, KT, PC (26 January 1759 – 10 September 1839) was Keeper of the Great Seal of Scotland and a Scottish representative peer in the House of Lords. [1] Early years.

  5. Jun 29, 2010 · Only a decade after Balfour’s program of research began, an alpine climbing accident robbed Britain of its most promising embryologist. The fifth of eight children, Balfour was born to Lady Blanche Gascoyne-Cecil and James Maitland Balfour on 10 November 1851 in Edinburgh, Scotland.

  6. Francis Maitland Balfour (known as ‘Frank’ to his familiars) was born into an upper class Edinburgh family in November 1851. The picture of him that is overwhelmingly used in biographical accounts, taken from an oil painting by John Collier, shows him looking slightly ethereal, with a moustache of a type fashionable at the time.

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  8. Francis Maitland Balfour, British zoologist, younger brother of the statesman Arthur James Balfour, and a founder of modern embryology. He made many original observations about the embryonic development of vertebrate urogenital organs (e.g., kidneys, sex organs) and the origin of spinal nerves.