Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Brief Life History of Roger. When Sir Roger de Mortimer II, First Baron of Wigmore was born about 1231, in Radnorshire, Wales, his father, Ralph de Mortimer, was 42 and his mother, Gwladys ferch Llywelyn, was 27. He married Maud de Braose in 1247, in King's Stanley, Gloucestershire, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 5 ...

  2. ROGER DE MORTIMER, 4TH EARL OF OF MARCH AND ULSTER (1374-1398), son of Edmund Mortimer, the 3rd Earl, succeeded to the titles and estates of his family when a child of seven, and a month afterwards he was appointed lord-lieutenant of Ireland, his uncle Sir Thomas Mortimer acting as his deputy. Being a ward of the Crown, his guardian was the ...

  3. Joan Mortimer (d. 1225) – married May 1212 to Walter II de Beauchamp (1192–1236) [2] Roger is often wrongly stated to have been the father of Robert Mortimer of Richards Castle (died 1219), who married Margary de Say, daughter of Hugh de Say. But this Robert was born before 1155 and therefore could not have been a son of Roger.

  4. Roger of Mortemer. Roger I of Mortemer (Roger de Mortemer, Roger de Mortimer, Roger Mortimer) ( fl. 1054 [1] - aft. 1078), founded the abbey of St. Victor en Caux [2] in the Pays de Caux of Upper Normandy as early as 1074 CE. [3] Roger claimed the castle of Wigmore, Herefordshire that was built by William FitzOsbern, 1st Earl of Hereford.

  5. Roger de Mortimer, 4th Earl of March, 6th Earl of Ulster (11 April 1374 – 20 July 1398) was an English nobleman. He was considered the heir presumptive to King Richard II, his mother's first cousin. Roger Mortimer's father, the 3rd Earl of March, died in 1381, leaving the six-year-old Roger to succeed to his father's title. Roger was placed under the wardship of Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of ...

  6. Roger de Mortimer, d. before 19 Aug 1214, Lord Mortimer of Wigmore, co. Hereford; m. Isabel, d. before 29 Apr 1252, granted a life interest in Lechlade, co. Gloucester & Oakham, co. Rutland which her brother Henry lost at time of conquest of Normandy, daughter of Walkelin de Ferrieres, seigneur of Ferriers-Saint-Hilaire, and lord of Oakham ...

  7. 21 de feb. de 2020 · Roger is deemed by some to be the son of William de Warenne, and by others the son of Walter de St. Martin, brother of William. He was related by blood to William the Conqueror, his mother being the niece of Gunnora, wife of Richard sans Peur, Duke of Normandy. Roger de Mortemer was a Norman from Mortemer, canton Neufchatel-en-Bray, Seine ...