Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Fergus of Galloway (died 12 May 1161) was a twelfth-century Lord of Galloway. Although his familial origins are unknown, it is possible that he was of Norse-Gaelic ancestry. Fergus first appears on record in 1136, when he witnessed a charter of David I, King of Scotland.

    • 12 May 1161
  2. Fergus de Galloway (m. 12 mayo 1161) fue Lord de Galloway en el siglo XII. A pesar de que sus orígenes familiares son desconocidos, es posible que sea de ascendencia hiberno-nórdica. Aparece por vez primera de manera oficial en 1136, cuando atestigua una carta de David I, Rey de Escocia.

    • Joan (?), Elizabeth (?) (desde 1124)
    • Catolicismo
    • 1161
  3. Fergus of Galloway was the ruler of the Kingdom of Galloway. Galloway is located in the southwest of Scotland. Galloway was a combination of Irish, Scottish, Scandinavian and English. Fergus was called variously: King of Galloway, Lord of Galloway, Prince of Galloway, and Princeps of Galloway.

    • Male
    • Elizabeth Fitzroy
  4. 15 de ene. de 2024 · Fergus of Galloway was King, or Lord, of Galloway from an unknown date (probably in the 1110s), until his death in 1161. He was the founder of Galloway, probably in the space left when the Norwegian King Magnus III Berrføtt ("Barelegs") led a campaign of subjugation in the Irish Sea world.[1]

    • "Fergus de Galweia", "13146"
    • Isle of Man
    • 1090
  5. Fergus. king of Galloway. Learn about this topic in these articles: role in Wigtownshire. In Wigtownshire. In the 1120s Fergus, the ruler of Galloway, reconstituted the area’s Anglian bishopric, which was first established in the 8th century, and he built a priory at Whithorn as the bishopric’s cathedral.

  6. Fergus de Galloway (m. 12 mayo 1161) fue Lord de Galloway en el siglo XII. A pesar de que sus orígenes familiares son desconocidos, es posible que sea de ascendencia hiberno-nórdica. Aparece por vez primera de manera oficial en 1136, cuando atestigua una carta de David I, Rey de Escocia.

  7. Fergus of Galloway took the throne of Galloway some time between 1110 and 1120. When he died in 1161 the year after taking canonical habit in Holyrood, according to the Chronicle of Holyrood, and resigning Galloway to Scotland’s King Mael Coluim IV, Galloway was left to his two sons, Uchtred and Gille Brigte (Gilbert).