Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Alice Perrers es conocida en la historia como la amante de Eduardo III en su vida posterior, acusada por el Parlamento de influencia indebida y extravagancia.

  2. Alice Perrers and Cecily Chaumpaigne (Champain, etc.). About 1930, forty-five years ago, I read a note of 1829 by the editor Thomas Amyot, who then reproduced an English translation of the contem-porary chronicle in London, British Library, Harley MS 6217. Amyot there stated that Alice Perrers's earlier surname was "Chawpeneys" (an Angliciza-

  3. 12 de abr. de 2008 · In addition to shedding new light on Alice's landed estate, the petition names John Salisbury as her brother. This, in conjunction with evidence proving that she had previously been married to Janyn Perrers, demonstrates that Alice cannot, as previously thought, be a descendant of the Hertfordshire gentry dynasty of Perrers.

    • W. Mark Ormrod
    • 2008
  4. 1 de abr. de 2024 · Alice Perrers was the mistress of King Edward III of England. She exercised great influence at the aging monarch’s court from about 1369 until 1376. She belonged probably to the Hertfordshire family of Perrers, although it is also stated that she was of more humble birth.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Great_HennyGreat Henny - Wikipedia

    (Main article: Alice Perrers) [better source needed] Alice Perrers, (circa 1348 –1400/1401) was an English royal mistress, lover of Edward III, King of England. Some sources attribute her as the daughter of a thatcher from Henny, while others place her from several alternative locations. As no birth record of Alice Perrers remains, many ...

    • 187
    • CO10
  6. Alicia Perrers fue amante del rey Eduardo III de Inglaterra. Lo conoció como dama de compañía de la esposa de Eduardo, la reina Felipa de Henao. Como resultado de su relación, adquirió numerosas propiedades.

  7. Alice Perrers, the mistress of Edward III, transcended her designated place early on in her career to become one of the wealthiest landowning women in later fourteenth-century England.