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  1. Theme: de Lacy family history. Date: 1000’s 1100’s 1200’s. The de Lacy family developed a number of branches in Herefordshire and exerted substantial influence in the County and elsewhere in the centuries following the Norman Conquest. This paper deals only with the branch who became Lords of Ewyas [later Ewyas Lacy] in the period from ...

  2. Emerson Hugh De Lacy (May 9, 1910 – August 19, 1986) was an American politician and socialist. He served on the Seattle City Council from 1937 to 1940 and as a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1945 to 1947.

  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. 24 de sept. de 2018 · Hugh I de Lacy (d. 1186), like John de Courcy and others of the first generation, was given a human face by Gerald of Wales; he lingered in the imagination of colonial and native writers into the sixteenth century. Hugh II, earl of Ulster (d. 1242), by contrast, figured, if at all, as the unscrupulous agent of de Courcy’s fall.

  5. 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 ...

  6. When Hugh de Lacy Lord of Meath was born in 1125, in Herefordshire, England, United Kingdom, his father, Gilbert de Lacy, was 11122 and his mother, Agnes de Bulmer, was 21. He married Rohese of Monmouth FitzBaderon in 1155, in Herefordshire, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 6 sons and 7 daughters.

  7. 18 de jun. de 2017 · Hugh de Lacy succeeded in his mission in 1204, defeating John de Courcy and taking Carrickfergus Castle for himself. After around twenty-seven years of relative autonomy in Ulster, John de Courcy’s bold dream was crushed. Hugh de Lacy did not let his newly obtained castle go to waste. Instead, he improved and added to the walls and towers of ...