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  1. 11th March 1485 - John of Gloucester appointed Constable of Calais. John of Gloucester was the illegitimate son of King Richard III. Although the identity of his mother is unknown, it is thought...

  2. 11 de mar. de 2021 · John Gloucester aka of Pontefract, Captain of Calais. Born about 1470 [location unknown] Ancestors. Son of Richard (York) of England KG and [mother unknown] Brother of Katherine (Plantagenet) Herbert and Edward (York) Plantagenet [half] [spouse (s) unknown] Died about 1499 at about age 29 [location unknown] Problems/Questions.

  3. 27 de mar. de 2014 · By 1807, John Gloucester was street preaching in Philadelphia on Sundays at Seventh and Shippen Streets, but without a license to do so. In 1810, Gloucester returned to Tennessee and obtained his license to preach and was ordained as a minister. He was ordered to return “as soon as possible to repair to the city of Philadelphia.”

  4. 16 de may. de 2024 · John Joseph Masiz Obituary. It is with great sadness that we announce the death of John Joseph Masiz of Gloucester, Massachusetts, born in Danvers, Massachusetts, who passed away on May 11, 2024, at the age of 65, leaving to mourn family and friends. Family and friends are welcome to leave their condolences on this memorial page and share them ...

  5. 5 de mar. de 2015 · John Gloucester, founder of the first African American Presbyterian Church in the United States, was born enslaved in Blount County, Tennessee, in 1776. Before gaining his freedom, his name was Jack, and as a believer he began converting slaves to Christianity at an early age. … Read MoreJohn Gloucester (1776- 1822)

  6. John, however, kept her lands, and Isabella did not contest the annulment. Earldom of Gloucester. After the annulment, John granted the title of Earl of Gloucester to Isabella's nephew Amaury, count of Évreux. This compensated Amaury for the loss of his French title, which was surrendered in the Treaty of Le Goulet.

  7. Katherine, the only daughter, albeit illegitimate, of Richard III, first comes to notice in 1484, when William Herbert, Earl of Huntingdon (formerly Earl of Pembroke) covenanted ‘to take to wife Dame Katherine Plantagenet, daughter to the King, before Michaelmas of that year’. Nothing is known of Dame Katherine before this, no mention is ...