Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Sir Thomas Neville (c. 1429 – 1460) was the second son of Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, a major nobleman and magnate in the north of England during the fifteenth-century Wars of the Roses. Sir Thomas was a younger brother to the more famous Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, the 'Kingmaker'.

  2. Neville is a kind, ubiquitous square-shaped tender engine, who has a bridge named after his brutal accident. When Neville first arrived on Sodor, Thomas saw him with 'Arry and Bert - who were actually teasing him - which caused a rumour regarding him being friends with the diesels and horrid to...

  3. Thomas Fauconberg o Thomas Neville, a veces llamado Thomas el Bastardo, o el Bastardo de Fauconberg (1429 – 22 de septiembre de 1471), era hijo natural de William Neville, Lord Fauconberg, quien fue un destacado comandante en la Guerra de los Cien Años.

  4. 1429. Died. 22 September 1471 (aged 42) Middleham Castle, Yorkshire. Noble family. Neville. Father. William Neville, 1st Earl of Kent. Thomas Fauconberg or Thomas Neville, sometimes called Thomas the Bastard, or the Bastard of Fauconberg (1429 – 22 September 1471), was the natural son of William Neville, Lord Fauconberg, who was a ...

    • 1429
    • Neville
  5. Sir Thomas Neville or Nevill (in or before 1484 – 29 May 1542) was a younger son of George Neville, 4th Baron Bergavenny. He was a prominent lawyer and a trusted councillor of King Henry VIII, and was elected Speaker of the House of Commons in 1515.

    • in or before 1484
    • Margaret Fenn
  6. 21 de oct. de 2017 · Joan Beaufort’s descendants – Eleanor Neville Countess of Northumberland. Posted on April 3, 2018. 6. Eleanor was born in about 1397 to Joan Beaufort and Ralph Neville, 1st earl of Westmorland. Eleanor, like the rest of her sisters, was married off to another cousin – Richard le Despenser- who if you want to be exact was her second cousin.

  7. It was Thomas’s marriage to Maud Stanhope the niece and co-heiress of Lord Cromwell which resulted in the escalation of the Neville Percy feud in 1453 and which probably moved Salisbury from a neutral position to an alliance with York. salisbury received little help from either the queen or Somerset agains the Percy family – Somerset was friendly to Northumberland.