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  1. Hamelin de Warenne, conde de Surrey (c. 1130 - 7 de mayo de 1202) ( alias Hamelin de Anjou y (anacrónicamente [a] ) Hamelin Plantagenet), era un noble anglo- angevino , medio hermano del rey Enrique II de Inglaterra, y fue prominente en las cortes de los reyes Plantagenet de Inglaterra , Enrique II y sus hijos Ricardo I y Juan .

  2. William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey (born 1160s–1170s, died 27 May 1240) was the son of Hamelin de Warenne and Isabel, daughter of William de Warenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey. His father Hamelin granted him the manor of Appleby, North Lincolnshire .

  3. Hamelin de Warenne, Earl of Surrey (sometimes Hamelin of Anjou and, anachronistically, Hamelin Plantagenet [a] (c.11291202) was an English nobleman who was prominent at the courts of the Angevin kings of England, Henry II, Richard I, and John. He was an illegitimate son of Geoffrey of Anjou, and thus a half-brother of King Henry II, [1] and an ...

  4. 10 de abr. de 2024 · Battle of Stirling Bridge. John de Warenne, 6th earl of Surrey (born c. 1231—died September 27, 1304, Kennington, Surrey, England) was an eminent English lord during the reigns of Henry III and Edward I of England. John de Warenne was son and heir of the 5th earl, William de Warenne, and succeeded upon his father’s death in 1240.

  5. In 1164 Henry II’s half-brother Hamelin married the Angevin Empire’s most desirable and highly sought-after heiress, Countess Isabel of Surrey, simultaneously gaining a wife, an earldom and a fortune. The marriage was, of course, instigated at the behest of Henry II and like the marriages of all royal family members at this time ...

  6. Hamelin de Warenne, conde de Surrey (c. 1130 - 7 de mayo de 1202) ( alias Hamelin de Anjou y (anacrónicamente [a] ) Hamelin Plantagenet), era un noble anglo- angevino , medio hermano del rey Enrique II de Inglaterra, y fue prominente en las cortes de los reyes Plantagenet de Inglaterra , Enrique II y sus hijos Ricardo I y Juan .

  7. 30 de ene. de 2015 · They were, in fact, both, the 4th Earl of Surrey. Hamelin supported his brother the king in the contest of wills that Henry was engaged in with his archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket. When Henry called for the archbishop to appear at a great council at Northampton Castle on 12 October 1164, to answer to the charges laid against him ...