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  1. Hace 4 días · Count of Kent: Joan Countess of Kent 1328–1385: Thomas Holland c. 1314 –1360 1st Earl of Kent & 2nd Baron Holand, and jure uxoris: Blanche of Lancaster 1342–1368: John of Gaunt 1340–1399 1st Duke of Lancaster: Constance of Castile 1354–1394 Duchess of Lancaster: Katherine Swynford Duchess of Lancaster 1350–1403: Edward 1373–1415 ...

  2. Hace 4 días · After this Edmund Earl of Kent had a grant of it from King Edward III and his son, John Earl of Kent, died possessed of it in the 26th of Edward III. when it came in right of the Lady Joane his wife, to Thomas Holland Earl of Kent: and on the death of the said Lady Joan, princess of Wales, and mother of King Richard II. it came to ...

  3. Hace 5 días · He was succeeded in 1370 by his eldest surviving son Thomas, who as one of the Lords Appellant was deprived of his possessions by the king in 1397, when Sutton Coldfield was among his lands given to Thomas Holland, Earl of Kent.

  4. Hace 4 días · THOMAS HOLAND, eldest son of the last mentioned earl, by Alice his wife, succeeded him as Earl of Kent and lord Wake of Lydel, shortly after which, doing his homage, he had possession granted of his lands; and upon the attainder of Thomas de Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, had a grant of much of his lands, and the same year he had the title of Duke ...

  5. Hace 1 día · William Ufford, 2nd Earl of Suffolk: d. 1382 1375–1376 57 Hugh Stafford, 2nd Earl of Stafford: c. 1342–1386 1375–1376 58 Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent: 1350–1397 1375–1376 59 Thomas Percy: 1343–1403 1375–1376 Later Earl of Worcester 60 William Beauchamp: d. 1411 1376 Later Baron Bergavenny F2 Isabella, Countess of Bedford: d ...

  6. Hace 5 días · Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster – Lord High Steward (1322) – executed at Pontefract Castle by Edward II of England Edmund FitzAlan, 9th Earl of Arundel (1326) – executed at Hereford by Queen Isabella , Regent for Edward III

  7. Hace 5 días · Hackenden Banks. In the eastern part of St. Peter's Parish, near the cliffs, about midway between the North Foreland Lighthouse and Kingsgate, are two large barrows or tumuli, called Hackenden Banks, which tradition says, mark the graves of the English and Danes who were slain in battle here: probably, as Lewis conjectures, in that battle, fought A.D. 853, between the Danes, who had invaded ...