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  1. Hace 4 días · The name of Hugh de Lacy, Alan's long-time enemy and later father-in-law, as it appears in British Library Cotton Faustina B IX: "Hugone de Laſci". In 1223 and 1224, Hugh de Lacy waged war to recover his former Irish lands, allied himself to Áed Méith, and soon overran most of Ulster.

  2. Hace 6 días · Under the Barons of Fingal (lordship of Meath Ireland): Hugh de Lacey was granted the lordship of Meath shortly after the invasion of Ireland. However there was an Irish king who claimed the land as his own. Hugh invited this king to parley but it went poorly and it ended in the Irish being slaughtered.

  3. 20 de abr. de 2024 · 1565 takes Anglo-Irish nobleman Hugh de Lacy as her lover. When the McMahon clan kills him, Grace visits terrible retribution on the McMahons. 1566 married Richard Burke for a year. She then broke off the relationship but kept his castle at Rockfleet. 1578 captured by the English and imprisoned in Dublin Castle.

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  4. 17 de abr. de 2024 · Among these beneficiaries was Hugh de Lacy, a Norman nobleman appointed as Lord of Meath, tasked with asserting English authority over the region. In 1172, de Lacy commenced the construction of Trim Castle on a strategic site overlooking the River Boyne.

  5. Hace 1 día · A gem in Herefordshire: The Kempley landmark that is St Mary’s ancient church, built around 1075 by Hugh de Lacy. English Heritage is trying to keep it that way, but it’s not a straightforward task.

  6. 7 de may. de 2024 · First, it appeared as de Courcy’s average-sized stronghold, with only a tiny bailey and an inner ward. Then, de Courcy was ousted by another Norman knight, Hugh de Lacy, who continued the construction of the Castle. De Lacy built the gatehouse, outerwear, and the drum tower.

  7. 17 de abr. de 2024 · Navan, urban district and county seat of County Meath, Ireland. It lies at the confluence of the Rivers Boyne and Blackwater. The Great Motte, an imposing earthwork 52 feet (16 metres) high, is on its western outskirts. The town was walled and fortified by Hugh de Lacy and later became an outpost.