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  1. homepages.rpi.edu › ~holmes › HobbiesRalph de Mortimer

    4 de sept. de 2012 · Name Ralph de Mortimer. Birth abt 1190, Wigmore, Hereford, England. ... Father Roger de Mortimer Lord of Wigmore (1158-1214) Mother Isabel de Ferriers ...

  2. When Ralph Knight was born in 1350, in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England, United Kingdom, his father, Sir William Alfred de Mortimer, was 31 and his mother, Ethel May Dyer, was 34. He married Lady Faith Dickinson in 1379. They were the parents of at least 1 son. He died on 30 April 1431, in Effingham, Surrey, England, at the age of 81.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Gwladus_DduGwladus Ddu - Wikipedia

    She married firstly, Reginald de Braose, Lord of Brecon and Abergavenny in about 1215. After Reginald's death in 1228 she was probably the sister recorded as accompanying Dafydd ap Llywelyn to London in 1229. She married secondly, Ralph de Mortimer of Wigmore about 1230. Ralph died in 1246, and their son, Roger de Mortimer, inherited the lordship.

  4. Ralph Mortimer conspired to assist his son in law in his quest for the throne, but William Rufus again defeated the rebellion through a combination of military action and diplomacy. In 1096, Robert Curthose joined the First Crusade for Jerusalem, departing Normandy for the Holy Land with Stephen of Aumale and many other knights.

  5. When Lord Ranulph de Mortimer was born about 1050, in Wigmore, Herefordshire, England, his father, Lord Roger de Mortimer, was 16 and his mother, Hawise de Vexin, was 16. He married Melisende about 1077. They were the parents of at least 1 daughter. He died in 1104, at the age of 55. Photos and Memories (9) +4. View All.

  6. RALPH [I] de Mortemer [Mortimer], son of ROGER [I] de Mortemer & his wife Hawise --- (-5 Aug after [1115/18]). " Hadvise et Radulfi filii eius " donated land " in episcopatu Ambianensium apud Mers " to Saint-Victor-en-Caux by undated charter (a copy of which is attached to a late-12th century transcription of a charter under which Hugh de Mortimer confirmed donations to the monastery).

  7. 28 de dic. de 2020 · This Roger seems to have been the first to assume the name of Mortimer, which was taken from the village and castle of Mortemer-en-Brai (mortuum mare), in the Pays de Caux, situated at the source of the little river Eaulne. In 1054 he won the victory of Mortemer, fought under the walls of his castle, against the troops of Henry I, king of the ...