Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Sir Roland de Velville (1471/74 – 25 June 1535) was a Breton-born English soldier and government official who is theorised as the illegitimate son of King Henry VII of England by "a Breton lady whose name is not known", or as a favoured member of the court of Henry VII and later recipient of beneficences, brought home to England ...

  2. Discover life events, stories and photos about Sir Roland de Velville (1474–1535) of Angers, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire, France.

    • Male
    • Agnes Griffith
  3. Sir Roland de Velville ( 1474 – 25. června 1535) byl zřejmě nemanželský syn anglického krále Jindřicha VII. aBretaňské paní“. V roce 1509 byl jmenován konstáblem z hradu Beaumaris ve Walesu, funkci zastával až do své smrti. Po bitvě u Blackheathu v roce 1497 byl pasován na rytíře.

  4. The person you're referring to is Roland de Veleville. I've come across some books (often royal genealogies) that either list him as a possible royal bastard or just flat-out state that he was a son of Henry VII.

  5. 10 de abr. de 2023 · Sir Roland de Velville (also spelt Vielleville, Veleville or, probably more correctly, Vieilleville), Constable of Beaumaris Castle from 1509 to 1535 is reputed to have been a natural son of Henry VII, born to a Breton lady while Henry was in exile in Brittany between 1471 and 1485.

    • 1474
    • June 25, 1535 (60-61)England (United Kingdom)
    • England (United Kingdom)
    • Constable Of Beaumaris Castle
  6. 30 de abr. de 2023 · ROLAND VELEVILLE (or VIELLEVILLE) alias BRITTANY, Knt., of Westminster, Middlesex and Beaumaris, Anglesey, Wales, king’s servant, Constable of Beaumaris Castle. He served in Sir John Cheyne’s retinue in the expedition to Brittany in 1489.

  7. Sir Roland de Velville (1471/4 - 25 June 1535, also Vielleville, Veleville, or Vieilleville) is alternatively presented as the clear "illegitimate issue" (son) of King Henry VII of England by "a Breton lady whose name is not known", or as a favored member of the court of Henry VII and later recipient of beneficences, brought home to England ...