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  1. Hace 4 días · In the reign of Edward the Confessor it had been held by Asgar the Staller, and after the Conquest it was acquired by Geoffrey de Mandeville, who held in 1086. William de Mandeville, son and successor of Geoffrey, mortgaged the manor to the Crown, and it was granted by Henry I to Eudo Dapifer.

    • Geoffrey de Mandeville1
    • Geoffrey de Mandeville2
    • Geoffrey de Mandeville3
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    • Geoffrey de Mandeville5
  2. Hace 3 días · Two years later Stephen, having again the ascendancy, and suspecting the powerful Geoffrey de Mandeville, earl of Essex and sheriff of Hertfordshire, of negotiating with the Empress, sent to arrest him at St. Albans.

  3. Hace 1 día · geoffrey de mandeville, earl of essex and gloucester, and his countess, isabel— 1214 — 1217. Geoffrey died childless before June 1216, and the Countess before October 1217. Isabel seems to have acted as Lady of Glamorgan.

  4. Hace 5 días · The brothers' estates almost certainly formed part of the 10-hide manor of CHIPPENHAM held by Geoffrey de Mandeville in 1086 in demesne. It may have passed to his son William de Mandeville (d. c. 1116), but by 1130 had reverted to the Crown.

  5. 14 de may. de 2024 · Geoffrey de Mandeville's rebellion against Stephen in the east ended with his death in September 1144 during an attack on Burwell Castle in Cambridgeshire. As a result, Stephen made progress against Matilda's forces in the west in 1145, recapturing Faringdon Castle in Oxfordshire.

  6. Hace 2 días · One such rebel baron who felt particularly aggrieved by a marriage-related fine was Geoffrey de Mandeville, whose opposition to the king in 1215 was directly related to, if not caused by, the extortionate fine of 20,000 marks foisted upon him, in order that he might have as his wife Isabella, countess of Gloucester – John’s own ...

  7. 10 de may. de 2024 · William Stukeley, Secretary of the Society of Antiquaries, conjectured that the cave was the oratory of the 'Lady Rose,' wife of Geoffrey de Mandeville. (fn. 20) His romance was rudely destroyed by the Rev. Charles Parkin, who maintained that the excavation was of Saxon origin. (fn. 21) A heated argument followed, (fn. 22) but the origin and use...