Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Roger was steward and receiver of Cantref Selyf, Alexanderston, and Pencell. In 1465, had a role in suppressing an upring in Carmarthenshire. On 16 February 1470 he was appointed constable of Cardigan Castle. Roger is thought to have received the fortified manor, Tretower Court, as a gift from his half-brother William Herbert, 1st ...

  2. 13 de oct. de 2023 · Birthplace: Tretower, Breconshire, Wales (United Kingdom) Death: 1471 (56-65) Chepstow, Gwent, Wales (Beheaded by Jasper Tudor) Place of Burial: Staffordshire, England, United Kingdom. Immediate Family: Son of Sir Roger Vaughan of Bredwardine, Kt. and Gwladus verch Dafydd Gam.

    • Tretower
  3. Sir ROGER VAUGHAN, third son of ROGER VAUGHAN of Bredwardine - see Vaughan family of Bredwardine - by Gwladys, daughter of Dafydd Gam, was the first of the Vaughans to reside at Tretower. It is said that the residence was a gift to him from his half-brother William Herbert, earl of Pembroke, to whom the castle and manor of Tretower had ...

  4. Brief Life History of Roger. When Sir Roger Vaughan of Tretower was born in 1410, in Tretower, Breconshire, Wales, United Kingdom, his father, Sir Roger Vaughan, was 33 and his mother, Gwladys verch Dafydd Gam, was 26. He married Denise-Cicely verch Thomas in 1431, in Cwm-du, Breconshire, Wales, United Kingdom.

    • Male
    • Denise-Cicely Verch Thomas
  5. 17 de jun. de 2023 · Biography. Sir Roger Vaughan of Tretower, married Denys, daughter of Thomas ap Philip Vychan Vaughan, 2ndly Margaret daughter of lord Audley and widow to lord Powys. [1]

    • Male
  6. 12 de ago. de 2022 · He died on 6 January 1504. Sir Roger Vaughan (d. 1471), the third son of Roger Fychan of Bredwardine, was the most prominent of all. He was the first Vaughan to reside at Tretower, which appears to have been a gift from William Herbert, and which he turned into an imposing fortified manor house.

  7. 15 de jun. de 2016 · Just across the castle green lies an entire medieval court that became a byword for magnificence. It was the creation of Sir Roger Vaughan and his descendants. During the Wars of the Roses Sir Roger became one of the most powerful men in Wales – and Tretower reflected his fame.