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  1. 1 de mai. de 2022 · John is so called because his father was Duke of Gloucester at the time of his birth. His father appointed him Captain of Calais, a position he lost after his father's death. He seems to have been held in custody at some point during the reign of Henry VII and may have been executed around 1499.

  2. John of Pontefract, the illegitimate son of Richard III was appointed as Captain of Calais on 11th March 1485. Richard III had two illegitimate children, both born before he married Anne Neville. Little is known about the mother of John, other than him being referred to as “John le Pountfreit Bastard” on documents relating to.

  3. John of Gloucester was an illegitimate son of Richard III of England. John is so called because his father was Duke of Gloucester at the time of his birth. He was also known as John of Pontefract The identity of his mother is not known. Katherine Haute, a woman mentioned in household records of the Richard, Duke of...

  4. John Gloucester (1776 – 1822) was the first African American to become an ordained Presbyterian minister in the United States, and the founder of The First African Presbyterian Church at Girard Avenue and 42nd Street in Philadelphia, which had 123 members by 1811.

  5. Katherine, the only daughter, albeit illegitimate, of Richard III, first comes to notice in 1484, when William Herbert, Earl of Huntingdon (formerly Earl of Pembroke) covenanted ‘to take to wife Dame Katherine Plantagenet, daughter to the King, before Michaelmas of that year’. Nothing is known of Dame Katherine before this, no mention is ...

  6. Há 6 dias · John of Gloucester, otherwise known as John of Pontefract was the natural son of Richard III and was probably born at Pontefract. The identity of John's mother remains unknown but it has been suggested that she may have Alice Burgh, who was granted an annuity of 20 pounds when Richard, Duke of Gloucester was at Pontefract on 1 March 1474, the ...

  7. By 1807, John Gloucester was street preaching in Philadelphia on Sundays at Seventh and Shippen Streets, but without a license to do so. In 1810, Gloucester returned to Tennessee and obtained his license to preach and was ordained as a minister. He was ordered to return “as soon as possible to repair to the city of Philadelphia.”