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  1. Noble, Staller, Constable, Thane, Royal Officer, Earl. Ralph the Staller or Ralf the Englishman (died 1069/70) was a noble and landowner in both Anglo-Saxon and post- Conquest England. He first appears in charters from Brittany, where he was described as Ralph / Ralf the Englishman, and it was in Brittany that his son Ralph de Gaël ...

    • Staller (title)

      Ralph the Staller and Ansgar the Staller are listed as royal...

  2. Ralph de Gaël was born as a noble before 1042, most probably about 1040. He was the high-born son of an Earl Ralph who was English, or born in England, and lived at the time of the Confessor. Some sources believe this to be Ralph the Staller , while others argue that he was the son of Earl Ralph Mantes of Hereford , and who briefly ...

  3. Following the Norman Conquest of England, William the Conqueror appointed Ralph the Staller, an aristocrat of Breton ancestry born in Norfolk, to the earldom. On his death he was replaced by his son Ralph Guader, who was one of the leaders of a rebellion against William, known as the Revolt of the Earls, in 1075.

  4. Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Suffolk. Earl of Suffolk is a title which has been created four times in the Peerage of England. The first creation, in tandem with the creation of the title of Earl of Norfolk, came before 1069 in favour of Ralph the Staller; but the title was forfeited by his heir, Ralph de Guader, in 1074.

  5. Ralph the Staller (1011-1068) was Earl of Norfolk under Kings Edward the Confessor and William the Conqueror. Ralf de Gael was born in Norfolk, England of Breton parentage, and he became a staller (constable) and the Earl of Norfolk under King Edward the Confessor. He survived the Norman...

  6. 28 de abr. de 2022 · Ralph was an influential figure as the steward of King Edward the Confessor, acting as Staller, or constable, between 1043 and 1066. Ralph held land in eastern England, in the counties of Essex, Suffolk, and Norfolk, as well as Lincolnshire. Ralph supported William of Normandy in his conquest of England in October 1066.