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  1. Earl of March is a title that has been created several times, respectively, in the Peerage of Scotland and the Peerage of England. The title derives from the " marches " or borderlands between England and either Wales ( Welsh Marches ) or Scotland ( Scottish Marches ), and it was held by several great feudal families which owned ...

  2. Roger Mortimer (25 de abril de 1287, Londres-29 de noviembre de 1330, Tyburn) fue barón de Wigmore y conde de March hasta la supresión de sus títulos por el Parlamento de Inglaterra. Fue amante de Isabel de Francia, Reina y regente de Inglaterra durante tres años. Fue condenado por usurpación del trono y colgado en Tyburn.

    • Roger Mortimer
    • 25 de abril de 1287jul., Wigmore Castle (Reino Unido)
  3. 25 de mar. de 2024 · Roger Mortimer, 1st earl of March (born 1287?—died Nov. 29, 1330, Tyburn, near London, Eng.) was the lover of the English king Edward II’s queen, Isabella of France, with whom he contrived Edward’s deposition and murder (1327).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 23 de may. de 2018 · Mortimer, Edmund, 5th earl of March and Ulster (1391–1425). Mortimer was the king's ward after the death of his father Earl Roger in 1398; he was kept in Henry IV's family circle. Potentially a valuable pawn because of his royal blood, he was apparently too amiable and unambitious to worry the Lancastrian establishment.

  5. The Earls of March When Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March was executed in 1330, most of his lands and titles were forfeited. His eldest son, Edmund, survived his father for only a year. Although never given the title Earl of March he was called to.