Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Denomination. Catholic. Nicholas Longespee was a medieval Bishop of Salisbury . Longespee was the son of Ela, 3rd Countess of Salisbury, and William Longespee. [1] He was a canon of Salisbury Cathedral before 1272 and held the office of treasurer of the diocese of Salisbury before 1275.

    • Biography
    • Research Notes
    • Sources

    Birth and Parentage

    Nicholas Longespée was the son of William de Longespée and Ela, Countess of Salisbury. His birth date is uncertain, but he was still a ward of his mother in 1236, so it must have been after 1215.

    Ecclesiastical Career

    Although he did not have a university degree, he had a successful ecclesiastical career. In 1236 he was presented to the church of Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire with the agreement of his brother Stephen, who was patron of the living.(Note that this does not necessarily mean he was of age then: it was not unknown for men under 21 to be presented to church livings.) By September 1248 he was rector of Iwerne Minster, Dorset. He acquired other parish livings. He was rector of South Tawton, Devon...

    Children

    Nicholas had at least two children, probably by a mistress: 1. Nicholas 2. Alice, who married Geoffrey de Japrpenville in 1260/1261. After his death she probably married Willia de Barneville of Harrow, Middlesex.

    Nicholas may have had another son, William, who called himself son of Nicholas Longespé in charters and who held an interest in the church of Brocklesby, Lincolnshire.

    Douglas Richardson. Plantagenet Ancestry, 2nd edition 2011, Vol. II, pp. 427-428, LONGESPÉE 3.iv
    Oxford Dictionary of National Biography - entry for 'Longespée, Nicholas', online 2009, revised 2010, available online via some libraries
    William Lisle Bowles and John Gough Nichols. Annals and Antiquities of Lacock Abbey, pub. John Bowyer Nichols and Son, London, 1835, pp. 157-160, Internet Archive
    'Treasurers', in Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066-1300, Vol. 4, Salisbury, ed. Diana E Greenway (London, 1991), pp. 20-23. British History Online, accessed 6 July 2019
    • Male
  2. Ela Longespée, Countess of Warwick (died 9 February 1298) was an English noblewoman. She was the daughter of Ela of Salisbury, 3rd Countess of Salisbury and William Longespée, and sister to, among others, Nicholas Longespee, Bishop of Salisbury.

  3. St Nicholas was a 4th-century bishop of Myra in Lycia, about whom virtually nothing factual is known, although a vast body of legend grew up around him, and he became the patron saint of Greece and of Russia, as well as of children, sailors, merchants, and pawnbrokers.

  4. 27 de mar. de 2021 · Already in his sixties, Nicholas died on 18 May 1297. In 1216, the oldest son, William II Longespée, fourth Earl of Salisbury, was granted marriage by King John to Idonea, granddaughter and sole heiress of the formidable Nicholaa de la Haye.

  5. William Longespée, 3rd Earl of Salisbury (In or before 1167 – 7 March 1226) ("Long Sword", Latinised to de Longa Spatha) was an Anglo-Norman nobleman, primarily remembered for his command of the English forces at the Battle of Damme and for remaining loyal to his half-brother, King John.

  6. Tags Administration and Government in the Middle Ages • James Turner • Medieval England • Medieval Politics. Born sometime around the mid 1170s, William Longespée was the son of King Henry II and the most aristocratic and well connected of his known mistresses, Ida de Tosny.