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  1. 10 de may. de 2024 · The name of Hugh de Lacy, Alan's long-time enemy and later father-in-law, as it appears in British Library Cotton Faustina B IX: "Hugone de Laſci". In 1223 and 1224, Hugh de Lacy waged war to recover his former Irish lands, allied himself to Áed Méith, and soon overran most of Ulster.

  2. Hace 2 días · Hugh de Lacey was granted the lordship of Meath shortly after the invasion of Ireland. However there was an Irish king who claimed the land as his own. Hugh invited this king to parley but it went poorly and it ended in the Irish being slaughtered.

  3. Hace 2 días · THE ABBEY OF SELBY. The abbey of St. Mary and St. German of Selby claimed the Conqueror for its founder, but its origin was due to Benedict, a monk at Auxerre. The legend (fn. 1) is that Benedict, when a monk at Auxerre, was warned in a dream by St. German to go to England, whither he came, bringing with him as a relic a finger of the saint.

  4. Hace 5 días · Architectural evidence shows that there was a church at Winstone by the mid 11th century, and in 1101 or 1102 Henry I confirmed an earlier grant by Hugh de Lacy of the demesne tithes of Winstone to Gloucester Abbey.

  5. Hace 6 días · In the following year Hugh de Lacy gave the collegiate church of St. Peter at Hereford. The church of St. Martin in the Vintry, London, was the gift of Ralph Peverel. The number of monks increased rapidly, and in 1104 was said to have reached 100.

  6. 13 de may. de 2024 · Hugh Bigod ( c. 1182 – 18 February 1225) was a member of the powerful early Norman Bigod family and was for a short time the 3rd Earl of Norfolk . Origins. Arms used by Hugh Bigod, as heir to the earldoms of Norfolk and Suffolk, and as recorded during the signing of Magna Charta.

  7. Hace 5 días · Civil disobedience: the citizens and archbishop of Dublin during Hugh de Lacy’s Irish rebellion, 1223-4 by Daniel Brown. Read this essay [PDF]. The winner of the Fine of the Month Competition for 2012 is Christopher Tilley for his article 'The Chenduits in the Fine Rolls - A Gentry Family in the Reign of Henry III.'