Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Francis Hay, 9th Earl of Erroll (30 April 1564 – 16 July 1631) was a Scottish nobleman. A convert to Catholicism, he openly conspired with the king of Spain to try to unseat the Protestant Queen Elizabeth.

  2. 26 de abr. de 2022 · He succeeded to the title of 9th Earl of Erroll and to the title of 9th Lord Hay on 8 October 1585.[2] Francis was a member of the Catholic faction along with the Earls of Crawford, Huntly and Bothwell, which in 1589 corresponded with King Philip of Spain and the Duke of Parma and rebelled.[7]

    • Mary Murray
    • Scotland (United Kingdom)
    • 1557
    • 9th Earl of Erroll
  3. Francis Hay, 9th earl of Erroll (baptized April 30, 1564—died July 16, 1631, Slains, Aberdeen, Scotland) was a Scottish nobleman, a leader of the militant Roman Catholic party in Scotland. Erroll was converted to Roman Catholicism at an early age and succeeded to the earldom in 1585.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Francis Hay, 9th Earl of Erroll was the son of Andrew Hay, 8th Earl of Erroll and Lady Jean Hay. He was baptised 30 April 1564. He married by contract, firstly, Lady Margaret Stewart, daughter of James Stewart, 1st Earl of Moray and Lady Anne Keith, on 27 June 1584.

    • Male
    • July 16, 1631
    • Elizabeth (Douglas) Hay, Margaret Stuart
  5. When Sir Francis Hay 9th Earl of Erroll was born on 30 April 1564, in Errol, Perthshire, Scotland, United Kingdom, his father, Andrew Hay 8th Earl of Erroll, was 33 and his mother, Lady Jeanette Stewart 8th Countess of Erroll, was 24. He married Mary Stewart of Atholl in 1587.

  6. "Margaret, posthumous, married (contract 22 and 28 April and 27 June 1584), to Francis, ninth Earl of Erroll. She died s.p. before January 1586-87." from Scots Peerage (vol 6)

  7. 25 de feb. de 2023 · Francis Hay, 9th Earl of Erroll (1564-1631) was a Scottish nobleman who conspired with the Spanish king to overthrow Queen Elizabeth I. He was a Catholic convert, married thrice and succeeded to the earldom in 1585.