Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. The king took an important step in 1385, when he acknowledged Roger de Mortimer as his heir, knighting him in 1390, and appointing him in 1397 deputy ruler of all Ireland. Probably this was the occasion which moved Iolo Goch , a man of Denbighland and therefore a tenant of Roger's, to compose a cywydd to him.

  2. Indeed, in a newly discovered contemporary account, it was Roger himself who struck Montfort the fatal blow. Certainly, after the great earl's body had been mutilated, his head began a horrible journey to Wigmore where it was presented ‘To Dame Maud de Mortimer [Roger's wife] who foully abused it’.

  3. 23 de mai. de 2018 · Mortimer, Roger, 1st earl of March (c.1287–1330). A lord of the Welsh march, with major interests in Ireland , Roger Mortimer was one of the rebels who surrendered to Edward II in 1321. He made a dramatic escape from the Tower of London in 1324, and went into exile in Paris ; it is probably there that he became Queen Isabella's lover.

  4. Roger (IV) († 1326), 1 er baron Mortimer de Chirk, est le troisième fils de Roger III. À la mort de son père, il est impliqué dans les affaires ...

  5. Roger Mortimer innehade enorma landområden i Wales, och ärvde titlarna och godsen som sjuåring. Den betydelse som han hade genom sina egendomar och sitt arv, särskilt släktskapet med Edvard III, ökade oerhört då Rikard II officiellt utropade honom som sin tronföljare 1385 .

  6. Roger Mortimer (Wigmore, 25 april 1287 - Tyburn, 29 november 1330) was van 1304 tot aan zijn dood baron Mortimer en van 1328 tot aan zijn dood graaf van March. Van 1326 tot 1330 was hij de facto ook regent van Engeland .

  7. ROGER MORTIMER, EARL OF MARCH, was a ward of Piers Gaveston, and held many important offices in the reign of Edward II, being appointed Lieutenant of Ireland in 1317. He sided with Lancaster in his opposition to the king, was taken prisoner in 1322, and condemned to perpetual captivity.