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  1. Hace 3 días · FRAMPTON ON SEVERN lies 9 miles south-west of Gloucester, on a bend in the River Severn. It is widely known for its spacious village green, called Rosamund's Green after Henry II's mistress, Rosamund Clifford, a member of the family closely associated with Frampton from the 11th century to the 20th.

  2. Hace 2 días · Henry had eight legitimate children by Eleanor: five sons, William, the Young Henry, Richard, Geoffrey and John; and three daughters, Matilda, Eleanor and Joan. [nb 22] He had several long-term mistresses, including Annabel de Balliol and Rosamund Clifford, [209] [nb 23] and also several illegitimate children.

  3. Hace 2 días · In 1279 local jurors asserted that New Woodstock was founded by Henry II to provide lodgings for his retinue when he was at Woodstock Park, which he visited regularly for love of Rosamund Clifford; he therefore provided land outside the park so that men might build hospitia, and he granted a market to the new residents. (fn. 5) The ...

  4. Hace 2 días · These long periods of separation would give rise to speculation and then rumours of Henry's infidelities, and a resultant rift between him and Eleanor. The most notorious of these stories was that of an alleged affair, starting some time in 1165, with Rosamund Clifford.

  5. Hace 2 días · Henry II and Rosamund Clifford: This medieval royal romance was marked by passion and tragedy. Henry II, King of England, fell deeply in love with Rosamund Clifford, a beautiful and charming lady-in-waiting. Their love was forbidden, and Henry's wife, Eleanor of Aquitaine, eventually had Rosamund murdered.

  6. Hace 3 días · Un esempio è il caso di Enrico II d’Inghilterra e Rosamund Clifford. Enrico II ebbe una relazione extraconiugale con Rosamund Clifford, conosciuta come “Fair Rosamund”. La loro storia d’amore iniziò probabilmente negli anni ’60 del XII secolo e divenne una leggenda di passione e tradimento.

  7. Hace 4 días · The spring and pond preserved as Fair Rosamund's well, west of the site of the king's houses, was the focus of a separate group of 12th-century buildings, called in the 13th century Everswell, but persistently associated with Henry II's mistress and later known as Rosamund's well or bower.