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  1. Walter de Gray (died 1 May 1255) was an English prelate and statesman who was Archbishop of York from 1215 to 1255 and Lord Chancellor from 1205 to 1214. His uncle was John de Gray, who was a bishop and royal servant to King John of England. After securing the office of chancellor, the younger Gray was a supporter of the king ...

  2. In 1239 Walter de Grey, Archbishop of York, brought Rotherfield from his Kinswoman, Eve de Grey, in order to give it to his brother Robert de Grey, ancestor of the Lords Grey of Rotherfield. This Robert’s Grandson, Sir Robert de Grey fought for Edward I in Wales in 1282/3.

  3. William Grey Walter fue un neurólogo norteamericano, experto en robótica y neurofísica. Nació en Kansas City, Missouri el 19 de febrero de 1910. Vivió en Inglaterra desde 1915 donde realizó su carrera de investigador. Estudió en Westminster School y luego en el King's College, de Cambridge, en 1931.

  4. 30 de abr. de 2024 · Walter de Gray (died May 1, 1255, Fulham, Middlesex [now part of London], Eng.) was an English churchman who rose to high ecclesiastical office through service to King John. He became chancellor of England in 1205 and, after John had made his peace with the church , was elected bishop of Worcester (1214).

  5. A Collection of Charters Relating to Anglo-Saxon History. Search within full text. Get access. Volume 1: AD 430–839. Edited by Walter de Gray Birch. Publisher: Cambridge University Press. Online publication date: May 2013.

  6. Medieval. The Medieval Minster. The Quire - looking West. 1220AD - 1472AD. From 1215 until 1255, Walter de Gray held the office of Archbishop of York. Walter de Gray persuaded the Dean and Chapter of York that the Minster should be rebuilt in the new Gothic style.

  7. GRAY (or GREY), Walter De (d. 1255), English prelate and statesman, was a nephew of John de Gray, bishop of Norwich, and was educated at Oxford. He owed his early and rapid preferment in church and state to the favour of King John, becoming the king's chancellor in 1205, and being chosen bishop of Lichfield in 1210.