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  1. Richard Óg de Burgh, II conde del Ulster y III barón de Connacht (1259-29 de julio de 1326), conocido como "The Red Earl" (El Conde Rojo), [1] fue un noble y militar angloirlandés que vivió entre los siglos XIII y XIV.

    • Richard de Burgh
  2. Richard Óg de Burgh, II conde del Ulster y III barón de Connacht (1259-29 de julio de 1326), conocido como "The Red Earl" ( El Conde Rojo ), fue un noble y militar angloirlandés que vivió entre los siglos XIII y XIV.

  3. 12 de abr. de 2024 · Richard de Burgh, 2nd earl of Ulster was one of the most powerful Irish nobles of the late 13th and early 14th centuries. He was a member of a historic Anglo-Irish family, the Burghs, and son of Walter de Burgh (c. 1230–71), the 1st earl of Ulster (of the second creation).

  4. Beresford, David. Burgh, Richard Óg de (d. 1387), 2nd lord of Clanricard , was eldest surviving son of William de Burgh, 1st lord of Clanricard. He inherited his father's position in 1343 and over the course of his career succeeded in asserting the independence of the Clanricard de Burghs from the overlordship of the MacWilliam de Burghs of Mayo.

  5. Richard Mór de Burgh, 1st Lord of Connacht (died 1243) is considered the ancestor of the Burke family of Clanricarde in south Connacht (now County Galway, which became an extremely powerful family in their own right following the Burke Civil War of the 1330s. According to volume nine of A New History of Ireland, "The origins of the Clanricard ...

  6. Richard Óg de Burgh (1259 – 29 de julio de 1326), conocido como "The Red Earl" (el Conde Rojo), II conde del Ulster y Señor de Connacht, fue un noble y militar angloirlandés que vivió entre los siglos XIII y XIV. (es) dbo:wikiPageID: 2825193 (xsd:integer) dbo:wikiPageLength: 7825 (xsd:integer) dbo:wikiPageRevisionID: 130005419 (xsd ...

  7. Alfred Webb. A Compendium of Irish Biography. 1878. De Burgh, Richard, 2nd Earl of Ulster, son of preceding, commonly known as the "Red Earl," was educated at the court of Henry III. For his successes against the Scots he was made general over the Irish forces in Ireland, Great Britain, and France.