Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Follow @DrJohnRickard. Tweet. Edmund Beaufort, second duke of Somerset (c.1406-1455) was a major supporter of Henry VI in the period before the outbreak of the Wars of the Roses, but he was killed at St. Albans in the first battle of the wars. Like so many of the major players in the Wars of the Roses Somerset was a descendent of Edward III.

  2. Duke of Somerset. John Beaufort, 1. Duke of Somerset KG (* 1404; † 27. Mai 1444) war ein englischer Adliger aus dem Haus Beaufort . Er war der zweite Sohn von John Beaufort, 1. Earl of Somerset und Margaret Holland. Er folgte 1418 seinem älteren Bruder Henry als 3. Earl of Somerset nach. Sein Großvater war John of Gaunt, der ein Sohn König ...

  3. 22 de ago. de 2017 · David Somerset was the former chairman of the Marlborough Gallery, who later became the 11th Duke of Beaufort, inheriting the title and 52,000-acre Badminton Estate from his cousin Henry in 1984.

  4. 26 de dez. de 2023 · Henry Beaumont, 3rd Duke of Somerset, was beheaded by the Yorkists at Hexham the same day as his capture. His mistress Joan Hill, was granted an annuity of 10 marks by King Henry VII in 1493. (Royal Tombs of Medieval England) henry Beaufort's eldest son, Henry, fought with the victorious Lancastrian army at Wakefield in 1460, and the defeated ...

  5. HENRY SOMERSET 3rd marquess of Worcester and 1st duke of Beaufort (1629 - 1700) The eldest son of the 2nd marquess, and as lord Herbert was believed to have attended his father in the operations round Gloucester in 1643; but the charge of delinquency, made in December 1650, was withdrawn the following June, probably because he had by this time turned Protestant and accepted the new order.

  6. Henry Beaufort, meanwhile, had been executed in May 1464 following his defeat at Hexham. Edmund Beaufort thus became known as the Duke of Somerset, though he technically had no right to the title, as Henry had been attainted. Somerset, as we shall call him now, did not linger long at the impoverished court of Koeur.

  7. The 5th Duke, Henry Somerset (1744-1803) extended his lands in Monmouthshire by buying the old Pembroke lordships of Usk and Trelech. According to the 1873 return of owners of land the Duke of Beaufort owned an estimated 32,533 acres in Wales (in Monmouthshire, Breconshire and Glamorgan) with an estimated rental of £32,564.