Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. HistoryThe De Clares. The de Clares. 1217 – 1314 AD. The first Gilbert de Clare is principally remembered as one of the barons of the Magna Carta; he died in 1230, leaving his son, Richard, as his heir. Richard, who was only 8 years old at the death of his father. On coming of age in 1243, he tightened his father’s hold on the Welsh lords ...

  2. 27 de abr. de 2022 · Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford (1180 – October 25, 1230) was the son of Richard de Clare, 4th Earl of Hertford, from whom he inherited the Clare estates, from his mother, Amice Fitz Robert, the estates of Gloucester and the honour of St. Hilary, and from Rohese, an ancestor, the moiety of the Giffard estates.

  3. Earl of Hertford. Gilbert de Clare, 6. Earl of Gloucester und 6. Earl of Hertford (nach anderer Zählung auch 7. Earl of Gloucester ), genannt Gilbert der Rote ( Gilbert the Red) (* 2. September 1243 in Christchurch; † 7. Dezember 1295 in Monmouth Castle) war ein englischer Magnat. Er gehörte zu den mächtigsten und reichsten englischen ...

  4. William De Clare 1228-ca 1258; Gilbert De Clare 1229- Fratrie. Richard De Clare †1228; William Fitzrichard 1089-1130 Marié avecDenise De Mortaigne ca 1086-Joan De Clare; Aveline De Clare 1172-1225 Mariée avecWilliam De Munchesney 1158-1204 Aveline De Clare 1172-1225 Mariée vers 1205, Hereford, Herefordshire, England, avecGeoffrey De ...

  5. Gilbert de Clare is the grandson of Magna Carta surety barons John de Lacy and Gilbert de Clare, the great-grandson of Richard de Clare, and the great-great-grandson of Saher de Quincy and appears in project-approved/badged trails to the following Gateway Ancestor(s): Charles Barnes: trail to the Clares badged July 2022. See the trail HERE.

  6. Gilbert de Clare was the son of Gilbert de Clare, 7th Earl of Gloucester – known as Gilbert 'the Red' – who in 1290 married Joan of Acre, daughter of Edward I. As a condition for the marriage, the earl had to surrender all his lands to the king, only to have them returned jointly to himself and his wife for the lifetime of either.