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  1. About Hugh Lacy, Lord of Midgley. Lord of Midgley in the early 1500's was this Hugh Lacy (of the Norman De Laci family) who was born about 1489 at Brearley Hall and his will was proved in 1570. He married Agnes Saville of the Savilles of Thornhill. "The Lacy's had strong local land and property ties and a close association with the Farrar ...

  2. 26 de may. de 2021 · Few aristocratic lives in medieval Britain and Ireland displayed greater degrees of success and reversal than that of Hugh II de Lacy. Ascending from modest beginnings as a younger son of a celebrated Anglo-Norman adventurer, Hugh was the recipient of the first earldom in Angevin Ireland when he was created earl of Ulster by King John on 29 May ...

  3. Hugh de Lacy, señor de Meath; Hugh de Lacy (antes de 1135-25 de julio de 1186, Durrow, Leinster), bisnieto del conquistador normando Walter de Lacy. Enrique II de Inglaterra concedió el Condado de Meath a Hugh de Lacy en 1172, convirtiéndose en el I Señor de Meath. Hugh de Lacy y su hijo Walter de Lacy (antes de 1170-1241) construyeron el ...

  4. A Compendium of Irish Biography. 1878. De Lacy, Hugh, one of the most distinguished of the Anglo-Norman invaders, came over in Henry II.'s retinue, landing at Waterford, 18th October 1171. The estates that fell to his lot were chiefly in Meath and Connaught. He was appointed Lord-Justice more than once, and vigorously maintained the English ...

  5. Hugh de Lacy, was the son of Gilbert de Lacy (-c.1163) of Ewyas Lacy, Weobley and Ludlow. Hugh de Lacy is said to have had a dispute with Joscelin de Dinan as to certain lands in Herefordshire in 1154. He was in possession of his father's lands before 1163, and in 1165–6 held fifty-eight and three-quarters knights' fees, and had nine tenants ...

  6. On its de Lacy origins pages and the book, 'de Lacy Chronicles', however, takes you back a further two hundred years and to the history of the Lassy Norseman. When the two brothers, Ilbert and Walter de Lacy, arrived in England, They were accompanied by family cousins who held estates under their father's gift from Lord Hugh de Lassi.

  7. Hugh de Lacy, Lord of Meath (died 25 July 1186, Durrow, Leinster) was an Anglo-Norman magnate granted the lands of the Kingdom of Meath by Henry II in 1172, during the Norman Invasion of Ireland. He was the first Norman Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.