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  1. Artist New Zealand NMG Gallery Bartley and Company Art Foenanda Gallery Wallace Art Awards ISCP NYC Apocrypha;The Map Paintings of Roger Mortimer New Zealand Herald Hewitson Radio NZ sunday Roger Mortimer The Grey Place Art Associates Ocula Magazine University of Auckland Art Net.com Mutual Art.com Milford Galleries

  2. Roger Mortimer (25 de abril de 1287, Londres -29 de noviembre de 1330, Tyburn) fue barón de Wigmore y conde de March hasta la supresión de sus títulos por el Parlamento de Inglaterra. Fue amante de Isabel de Francia, Reina y regente de Inglaterra durante tres años. Fue condenado por usurpación del trono y colgado en Tyburn.

  3. 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. Escaping in 1324 he fled to France.

  4. 25 de fev. de 2015 · Remember Roger Mortimer. By Alice Munro. February 25, 2015. The seizure of Roger Mortimer (1287-1330) at Nottingham Castle, October 19, 1330. The Print Collector via Getty. _This essay originally ...

  5. Roger Mortimer (1287 – 1330. november 29.), March 1. grófja, Írország helytartója. Élete A Mortimer család címere. Edmund Mortimernek, Wigmore bárójának és Marguerite de Fiennes-nek legidősebb fia, a nyolcadik Wigmore báró.

  6. Roger Mortimer graduated from the Elam School of Fine Arts in 1999. In 2014 he was the Paramount Award Winner in the Wallace Art awards - one of New Zealand’s top two art awards. In 2017, a survey exhibition of his work, 'Dilemma Hill’, was shown in public galleries in Wellington and Auckland. His paintings feature in a range of public and ...

  7. Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March (1287–1330), English nobleman. Roger Mortimer, 2nd Earl of March (1328–1360), military commander during the Hundred Years' War. Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March (1374–1398), heir presumptive to Richard II of England from 1385. Roger Mortimer (racing) (1909–1991), English horse-racing correspondent.