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  1. Edmond (III) Mortimer (1 r de Fevereiro de 1352, Llyswen, País de Gales - 27 de de Dezembro de 1381, Cork, Irlanda), 3 º Conde de março e Earl de Ulster de jure uxoris, foi um importante barão Inglês e um comandante militar durante a Guerra dos Cem Anos.

  2. Edmondo Mortimer ( c. 1351 - Cork, 27 de Dezembro de 1381) foi o quinto barão de Wigmore, desde 1360, 3.º Conde de Março de 1360 e Conde de Ulster, juntamente com a sua mulher, Filippa Plantageneta, desde 1368 até ao seu morte.

  3. 24 de ago. de 2016 · Edmund de Mortimer, 3d earl of March and 1st earl of Ulster (də môr´tĬmər), 1351–81, English nobleman. He succeeded (1360) his father, Roger, 2d earl of March, married (1368) Philippa, daughter of Edward III 's son Lionel, duke of Clarence, and on Lionel's death (1368) inherited his estates and the title of earl of Ulster.

  4. EDMUND DE MORTIMER, 3RD EARL OF MARCH, was son of Roger, 2nd Earl of March, by his wife Philippa, daughter of William Montacute, 1st Earl of Salisbury. Being an infant at the death of his father, Edmund, as a ward of the crown, was placed by Edward III under the care of William of Wykeham and Richard Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel.

    • He Was A Significant Claimant to The Throne from A Young Age
    • He Reported A Plot to Make Him King to Henry V
    • He remained Loyal Until His Death
    • The Mortimer Claim Continued to Arouse Suspicion
    • The Fate of The Princes in The Tower Was Likely Influenced by Mortimer’s Claim

    Edmund’s story is fascinating, particularly with reference to the Princes in the Tower later in the century. In 1399, when Richard II was deposed by Henry IV, many would not have considered Henry to be the childless Richard’s heir. Henry was the son of Edward III’s third son, John of Gaunt. Edmund was a great-great-grandson of Edward III via that k...

    In 1415, Edmund exposed another plot to make him king to Henry V. He told the king that Edmund’s brother-in-law Richard of Conisburgh, Earl of Cambridge, along with Henry Scrope, 3rd Baron Scrope of Masham, and Sir Thomas Grey of Castle Heaton were behind the plan. The indictment against the three asserted that they planned to murder Henry Vand his...

    Henry then embarked on what would go down in history as the Agincourtcampaign. If he had been assassinated, the course of the 15th century may well have been very different. The failure of the Southampton Plot had some far reaching consequences too. Edmund Mortimer lived until 1425, dying in Ireland while serving as Lord Lieutenant there. He had re...

    Richard of Conisburgh was not attainted, the process of conviction for treason by parliament that stripped a man and his descendants of lands and titles. Consiburgh’s only son was another Richard. Later in 1415, Conisburgh’s older brother Edward, Duke of York was killed at Agincourt, and his lands and titles passed to his nephew, who became Richard...

    A large part of the reason York would fall into opposition to Henry VI’s government was that he was viewed with huge suspicion by a Lancastrian government that never shook off the fear of the Mortimer claim. Two of York’s sons would sit on the throne in Edward IV and Richard III. The fate of the Mortimer boys in 1399 and afterwards may have played ...

  5. Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March A Royal Wedding with far-reaching Consequences In this series of articles we have already met several larger-than-life Mortimers.

  6. Sir Edmund Mortimer knt (1302–1331), casado com Isabel de Badlesmere; eles produziram Rogério Mortimer, 2º conde de March que foi restaurado ao título de seu avô. Margaret Mortimer (1304 - 5 de maio de 1337), casou-se com Thomas de Berkeley, Barão de Berkeley; Maud Mortimer (1307 - depois de 1345), casou-se com John de Charlton ...