Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Sir Robert Knolles or Knollys (c. 1325 – 15 August 1407; aged 81–82) was an important English knight of the Hundred Years' War, who, operating with the tacit support of the crown, succeeded in taking the only two major French cities, other than Calais and Poitiers, to fall to Edward III.

  2. Sir Robert Knollys (or Knolles) (died 1521) was an English courtier in the service and favour of Henry VII and Henry VIII.

  3. Sir Robert Knollys was born in 1481, in North Mymms, Hertfordshire, England as the son of Robert Knollys and Elizabeth Troutbeck. He married Lady Lettice Peniston about 1514. They were the parents of at least 1 son.

    • Male
    • Lady Lettice Peniston
  4. When Sir Robert Knollys was born in 1547, in Rotherfield Greys, Oxfordshire, England, his father, Sir Francis Knollys I, was 33 and his mother, Lady Catherine Carey, was 23. He married Lady Catherine Vaughan in 1572, in Talgarth, Breconshire, Wales.

    • Male
    • Lady Catherine Vaughan
  5. Robert Knollys may refer to: Robert Knolles (c. 1320–1407), also known as Knollys, English soldier of the Hundred Years' War. Robert Knollys (courtier) (died 1521), also known as Knolles, English courtier in the service of Henry VII and Henry VIII of England.

  6. About Sir Robert Knollys. During the Hundred Years War between England and France, he was judged « ...the most able and skillful man-at-arms in all the companies » He had risen from the ranks in the breton wars and fought with the Thirty, gaining knighthood along the way.

  7. Sir Robert Knollys (d.1619) Born: circa 1547 probably at Rotherfield Greys, Oxfordshire. Usher of the Tower Mint. Died: January 1619 at Caversham, Oxfordshire.