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  1. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › AbergavennyAbergavenny - Wikipedia

    Abergavenny (in gallese Y Fenni ), che significa foce del fiume Gavenny, è una città di mercato nella contea di Monmouthshire in Galles, Regno Unito . Si trova a 24 km ad ovest di Monmouth fra le strade A40 e A465, a 10 km dal confine fra Inghilterra e Galles. Situata alla confluenza fra i fiumi Gavennye e Usk, è quasi circondata da due ...

  2. In the late 13th century a larger town wall was built around Abergavenny in stone, forming an oval shape, approximately 350 m by 215 m across. The wall was paid for and maintained by murage, by which the king allowed a city to raise taxes on the imports of particular goods. By the 21st century, only occasional masonry remains of the medieval ...

  3. 9 de dic. de 2023 · Following countless deaths in the lower rankings, stakes shifted a gear when Henry FitzMiles, Baron of Abergavenny, was killed by Welsh forces led by Seisyll ap Dyfnwal in the 1160s. Despite Henry’s death working in his favour, William de Braose, the successor to the castle, sought to end, once and for all, the ceaseless conflict with his men ...

  4. Mother. Katharine Tatton. George Nevill, 1st Earl of Abergavenny (24 June 1727 – 9 September 1785), known as Lord Bergavenny from 1744 to 1784, was an English peer. He married into a branch of the Pelham family seated at Stanmer and briefly held office as Lord Lieutenant of Sussex. Created an earl in 1784, he died the following year.

  5. Henry John Montague Nevill, Earl of Lewes (1948–1965), educated at Eton, died without issue. [2] Lady Rose Nevill (b. 15 July 1950); a bridesmaid at the wedding of Princess Margaret and Antony Armstrong-Jones. Lady Rose married George Clowes and had issue. Lord Abergavenny was an Honorary Colonel of the Kent Yeomanry 1949–1961, and of the ...

  6. The Abergavenny Market Hall was a key venue and the festival worked with the town hall staff (many of whom are still involved today). Funding: £15,500 came from a variety of sources. A further £1,800 was raised from private sponsors and in addition the festival made £4,295 from the sale of tickets to events and stall holders etc.

  7. Earl of Abergavenny was an East Indiaman launched in 1796 that was wrecked in Weymouth Bay, England in 1805. She was one of the largest ever built. John Wordsworth was her captain during her last two successful voyages to China. He was also her captain on her fifth voyage and lost his life when she wrecked.