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  1. www.monasticwales.org › person › 76People: Walter de Lacy

    Walter de Lacy , magnate. Died: 1241. Walter succeeded to his father, Hugh de Lacy's, estates in England, Wales, and Normandy late in 1188/9, when he was still a minor. During the civil war of John's reign he was instrumental in ensuring the loyalty of the Welsh marches. Walter's fines to the king, his castle building in Mide and on the Welsh ...

  2. When Walter De Lacy was born in 1038, in Lassy, Calvados, Lower Normandy, France, his father, Hugh de Lacy Lord of Lassy, was 18 and his mother, Emma Marshal, was 16. He registered for military service in 1075. He died on 27 March 1085, in Hereford, Herefordshire, England, at the age of 47, and was buried in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England ...

  3. During his absence in 1215, Walter de Lacy installed his younger half-brother William Gorm as custodian of Trim Castle and the de Lacy Irish estates. By 1216, Ireland was in turbulence. William Gorm de Lacy built a formidable army of Meath Knights, feared all over Southern Ireland; they were involved in fighting a succession of small Irish wars.

  4. The PEDIGREE of. Walter de LACY (LACI) Lord of MEATH & Ludlow; Sheriff of Herefordshire. Born: Hereford abt. 1165 Died: 1241 Eire. HM George I's 13-Great Grandfather. HRE Charles VI's 15-Great Grandfather. U.S. President [B, HARRISON] 's 16-Great Grandfather. PM Churchill's 19-Great Grandfather. Lady Diana's 21-Great Grandfather.

  5. When Walter de Lacy was born about 1229, in Wales, United Kingdom, his father, Gilbert de Lacy, was 24 and his mother, Isabel Bigod, was 20. He married Rohese de Botelier about 1237, in Staffordshire, England, United Kingdom. He died from 22 May 1238 to 1241, and was buried in Herefordshire, England.

  6. Walter had made John his enemy. In 1203, John granted custody of the city of Limerick to de Lacy's father-in-law, William de Braose, 4th Lord of Bramber. As de Braose was an absentee, de Lacy served as de Braose's deputy in Limerick. In 1206–07, de Lacy became involved in a conflict with Meiler Fitzhenry, Justiciar of Ireland, and de Lacy's ...

  7. A hitherto unpublished text of a negotiated settlement between Walter de Lacy, lord of Meath (d. 1241), and the canons of St Thomas's Abbey, Dublin, relating to the church of Ardmulchan in County Meath sheds new light both on the career of Theobald Walter I (d. 1205), ancestor of the Butler earls of Ormond, and on the dealings of John, son of King Henry II of England, with his Irish lordship ...