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  1. Hace 3 días · Gilbert de Clare, earl of Hertford, is said to have given this church to the monks of Lewes, in Sussex; however that be, on his death without issue in 1151, his brother and heir Roger de Clare, earl of Hertford, resumed the property of it, giving the monks the church of Blechingley in exchange for it, and in the next reign of king ...

  2. Hace 4 días · Rainald was a Norman nobleman, and attended Duke William on his invasion; how long he possessed it does not appear; Walter Giffard Earl of Bucks, or his son, seems to have been the next lord, whose sister and coheir, Rohais, married Richard Fitz-Gilbert, alias de Clare, ancestor of the Earls of Hertford and Clare; whose descenants ...

  3. King Henry, his son and brother, were all captured. Using his position to enrich himself and his sons, Montfort, who was described by the mayor of London as a ‘quasi-King’, lost the support of one of his greatest supporters, the earl of Gloucester, Gilbert de Clare.

  4. Hace 3 días · The honour, including the overlordship of Great Missenden, descended with the Earldom of Gloucester, and passed upon the death of Gilbert de Clare in 1314 to his daughter Margaret, who married firstly Piers Gaveston, Earl of Cornwall, and secondly Hugh Audley, who became Earl of Gloucester.

  5. Hace 3 días · Again an accord was reached, with Cadwaladr retaining Aberffraw until a more serious breach occurred in 1153 when he was forced into exile in England, where his wife was the sister of Gilbert de Clare, 1st Earl of Hertford and the niece of Ranulf de Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester.

  6. Hace 2 días · The Welsh of Gwent, led by Iorwerth ab Owain (grandson of Caradog ap Gruffydd, Gwent's Welsh ruler displaced by the Norman invasions), ambushed and slew Richard de Clare, the grandson of the Norman lord Richard Fitz Gilbert.

  7. Hace 3 días · From 1162 to 1180 Princes Risborough is said to belong to the honour of Giffard, but on the death of the earl in 1164 it reverted to the Crown, and does not appear to have been included in the grant of his honour made by Richard I to William Marshal and Gilbert de Clare, the heirs of the Giffards.