Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hace 4 días · Date: Attestation of Warin Fitz Gerold as chamberlain. He was succeeded by his brother Henry before the king left England 14 Aug. 1158 (Eyton, Itinerary, 39–40). The witnesses all attest charters issued by Henry at Dover, 2 × 10 Jan. 1156 (ibid., 15–16).

  2. Hace 2 días · Henry accordingly became the first Angevin king of England and the first monarch of the Plantagenet dynasty as Henry II in 1154. The reigns of most of the Angevin monarchs were marred by civil strife and conflicts between the monarch and the nobility.

  3. Hace 2 días · King Henry II 1133–1189 r. 1154–1189 King of England: Geoffrey VI 1134–1158 Count of Nantes: William FitzEmpress Viscount of Dieppe 1136–1163/1164: William IX 1153–1156 Count of Poitiers: Margaret of France 1157–1197 Queen of England and Hungary: Henry the Young King 1155–1183 Duke of Normandy, Count of Anjou and Maine: Matilda of ...

  4. Hace 4 días · The first chapter sets out Coss' argument that the gentry emerged around 1300. The second chapter, 'The Roots of the Gentry', discredits alternative hypotheses that the gentry originated earlier, before the Norman Conquest or alongside the legal reforms of Henry II.

  5. Hace 3 días · Date accessed: 13 May, 2024. In March 1279 King Edward I commissioned a great inquiry into landholding in England. The surviving returns were arranged by hundred, hence their name ‘the Hundred Rolls’, and give a picture of rural society which, in its level of detail, goes far beyond that found in Domesday Book.

  6. After Richard was murdered, her family refused the offer for her to marry Henry of Monmouth (the future Henry V), who was the son and heir of her first husband's murderer. She returned to France at the age of 12 and never saw England again. She later married Charles, Duke of Orleans, but ultimately was to die in childbirth at the age of 19.

  7. Hace 5 días · ORIGINAL WRITS (fn. 1) It was mentioned above (fn. 2) that the first step in the levying of a final concord was for the demandant to obtain a writ from the chancery; for by an ordinance, probably of the time of Henry II, none could bring an action in the king's courts of common law without the king's writ.