Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. William de Briouse, son of Philippe, born before 5 January 1096, died after 1175, married Bertha, daughter of Miles of Gloucester. William de Briouse, son of William, died in Corbeil 9 August 1211, buried in Paris, Saint-Victor) married Mathilde de Saint Valery, daughter of Bernard. They had a daughter Maud de Braose who married Gruffydd ap Rhys.

  2. 2 de may. de 2019 · The Welsh king Llywelyn the Great had William de Braose hanged on this date in 1230 near Bala for — well, the aforesaid. The lords of his Norman house patrolled the Welsh marches, and our man — Gwilym Ddu (“Black William”) to the Welsh — was Llywelyn’s prisoner from 1228 via capture in some skirmish. All in a day’s work for the ...

  3. 20 de nov. de 2021 · William de Braose was a wealthy Norman baron with estates along the Welsh Marches, he was the grandson of Maud de Braose, who starved to death in King John’s dungeons. Hated by the Welsh, who had given him the nickname Gwilym Ddu, or Black William, he had been taken prisoner by Llywelyn in 1228, near Montgomery.

  4. William de Braose, 3rd Lord of Bramber (fl. 1135–1179) was a 12th-century Marcher lord who secured a foundation for the dominant position later held by the Braose family in the Welsh Marches. In addition to the family's English holdings in Sussex and Devon , William had inherited Radnor and Builth , in Wales, from his father Philip.

  5. William de Braose (c. 1260 –1326) was the second Baron Braose, as well as Lord of Gower and Lord of Bramber. He was held as a hostage after being captured in 1264 during the Second Barons' War and records of some of his childhood expenses survive from his time as a hostage.

  6. When William de Braose was born about 1175, in Bramber, Sussex, England, his father, William de Braose 4th Lord of Bramber, was 23 and his mother, Mathilde de Saint-Valery, was 27. He married Matilda de Clare in 1197, in Heydon, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 3 daughters.

  7. William de Braose did however reputedly hunt down and kill Seisyll ap Dyfnwal's surviving son, Cadwaladr, a boy of seven. In 1192 William de Braose was made sheriff of Herefordshire, a post he held until 1199. In 1196 he was made Justice Itinerant for Staffordshire.