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  1. Richard fitz Gilbert de Clare (died 15 April 1136) 3rd feudal baron of Clare in Suffolk, was an Anglo-Norman nobleman. A marcher lord in Wales, he was also the founder of Tonbridge Priory in Kent. Life [ edit ]

  2. Gilbert was a younger son of Gilbert fitz Richard de Clare, earl of Tonbridge and Clare and lord of Ceredigion, the Marcher lordship of Cardigan. Strongbow's mother was Isabel (Elizabeth) de Beaumont, sister to Robert earl of Leicester and Waleran count of Meulan. Isabel had been the youngest mistress of King Henry I, and their liaison resulted ...

  3. 24 de ago. de 2021 · Biography. Her father held the chief canonry of the collegiate church of St. Mary of Bromfield, which he passed to his son-in-law. Richard Scrob (Scroop/Scrope) married (before 1052) the daughter of another French settler, Robert the Deacon (possibly to be identified with Robert fitz Wimarc); his (Richard's) sons Osbern and William were adults by 1066.

  4. No debe confundirse con Richard Fitz Gilbert de Clare, señor de la Marca de Gales. Richard FitzGilbert de Clare o simplemente Richard de Clare (1130-20 de abril de 1176), fue un noble cambro-normando y destacado líder de la invasión cambro-normanda de Irlanda. 1 Al igual que su padre, en la historia es conocido por el sobrenombre de ...

  5. Clare, Richard de (‘Richard fitz Gilbert’, ‘Strongbow’) (a. 1127–1176), earl of Pembroke and Strigoil and lord of Leinster, and one of the pivotal figures of Irish history, was eldest son of Gilbert de Clare, earl of Pembroke, and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, earl of Leicester.

  6. Marshal, William (I) ( c. 1146–1219), earl of Pembroke , regent of England and lord of Leinster, was the fourth son of John fitz Gilbert (John the Marshal), his second son by his second wife, Sibyl, daughter of Walter of Salisbury. At the age of six he was given as a hostage for his father's good behaviour to King Stephen; despite his father ...

  7. Whilst the ultimate origin of the family name would seem to be Flemish (de Ruddervoorde), Walter de Ridelesford was probably based in Wales immediately prior to Richard de Clare's (qv) ('Richard fitz Gilbert', 'Strongbow') expedition to Ireland in 1169.