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  1. Bogo [1] de Clare (21 July 1248 – October 1294) was a member of the Anglo-Norman de Clare family, as third son of Richard de Clare (1222–1262), 5th Earl of Hertford and 6th Earl of Gloucester. He was the brother of Gilbert and Thomas. By all accounts he was not a good man.

  2. This is a large collection of the private household accounts of three members of the Clare family, the earliest being Bogo de Clare, the second Gilbert de Clare, earl of Gloucester and...

    • Subseries within E 101
    • CLARE HOUSEHOLD.
  3. Magnates, Ritual and Commensality at Royal Assemblies: Bogo de Clare and Edward I’s Easter Parliament, 1285; By Lars Kjoer; Edited by Andy King, Andrew M. Spencer; Book: Edward I: New Interpretations; Online publication: 21 March 2020; Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781787446144.005

  4. page 16 note 1 Though Bogo de Clare was certainly in possession of the rectory of Melton Mowbray, it is possible he did not enjoy it for long. The early history of the church, Mr. Hamilton Thompson tells me, is very obscure, but in Hugh Welles's Matriculus for the archdeaconry of Leicester, compiled about 1227, it was in two medieties, the prior and convent of Lewes being patrons of both.

  5. The construction of a stone castle began in a new place, probably in the second half of the 13th century, on the initiative of Bogo de Clare, who received the local estate in the 1280s from his brother, Earl Gilbert II de Clare, or several years earlier on the initiative of the earl himself.

  6. Thomas de Oxford counted the wealthy Bogo de Clare, son of the Earl of Gloucester, among his customers, and was able to leave £100 to his children on his death.

  7. 26 de feb. de 2022 · Through a detailed study of the household rolls of Bogo de Clare, Kjær demonstrates that the extravagant ritual and ceremonial hospitality that Clare provided during the Easter parliament of 1285 reflected not only his family’s position as the Crown’s ‘most powerful and favoured subjects’ (p. 83), but explicitly celebrated ...