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  1. 10 de ene. de 2019 · If any man could be considered to have been “raised from the dust,” that man would be William le Marshal. Footnote 1 His loyalty to the royal line led to his being rewarded, in 1189, with a most prestigious marriagepartner, Isabellade Clare, daughter of Richard fitzGilbert de Clare, earl of Pembroke and lord of Striguil, and Eofe [Eva], daughter of Diarmid Mac Murchada, king of Leinster.

  2. Isabel de Clare, suo jure Countess of Pembroke and Striguil (1172 – 1220), was a Cambro-Norman-Irish noblewoman and one of the wealthiest heiresses in Wales and Ireland.[1] She was the wife of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke, who served four successive kings as Lord Marshal of England.

  3. 30 de abr. de 2024 · The real story of Isabel de Clare, William Marshal's wife, a powerful woman who was a key figure in the history of Ireland, England, Wales and Normandy. Isabel de Clare, the descendant of kings, dukes and freebooters, was one of the wealthiest heiresses in Henry II’s kingdom thanks to the ambitions of her father Richard, Strongbow, de Clare and his marriage to Aoife, daughter of the last ...

    • Julia A Hickey
  4. 14 de oct. de 2019 · William the Marshal married Isabel de Clare the Countess of Pembroke in August 1189. Despite the 26-year age gap their marriage was successful. Isabel brought her husband extensive properties in England and Ireland, and William trusted her judgement when the political situation took him away from their lands. At her birth on 9 October 1200 the ...

  5. When Isabel de Clare 4th Countess of Pembroke was born about 1172, in Pembroke Castle, Pembrokeshire, Wales, United Kingdom, her father, Richard II de Clare 2nd Earl of Pembroke, was 43 and her mother, Aoife of Leinster Princess of Leinster, was 28. She married Sir William Marshal on 8 August 1189, in London, England.

  6. 16 de dic. de 2015 · November 27, 2014. One of the most interesting heiresses of the period, not in the least because she was married to William Marshal, was Isabel de Clare. Isabel’s marriage to Marshal typified the incredibly important political role that the marriage of these heiresses played. These marriages were not only used as rewards, they were used to ...

  7. Clare, Isabel de (c. 1174–1220)Countess of Pembroke. Name variations: Isabel Marshall, countess Strigoil. Born around 1174; died in 1220; interred at Tintern Abbey; daughter of Richard de Clare (b. 1130), 2nd earl of Pembroke, and Aoife (Eva) MacMurrough , countess of Ireland; married William Marshall, 1st earl of Pembroke, in August 1189; children: William Marshall, 2nd earl of Pembroke ...