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  1. Mortimer, Roger. Mortimer, Roger (1374–98), 4th earl of March and 7th earl of Ulster , was eldest son of Edmund (qv), 3rd earl of March, and his wife Philippa, daughter of Lionel (qv), duke of Clarence, and became the foremost magnate in Ireland on the death of his father (December 1381). At the age of 7, he was appointed lieutenant of ...

  2. 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 ...

  3. Roger Mortimer ist bei Mittelalter Experten und/oder interessierten Laien eine eher umstrittene Gestalt de englischen Mittelalters. Ian Mortimer schafft es in seinem Buch neue Fakten zu präsentieren, das Ganze noch mit einem winzigen Augenzwinkern geschrieben. Im Gegensatz zu manchen seiner Kollegen sind alle Fakten sehr präzise recherchiert.

    • Taschenbuch
  4. 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.

  5. Roger Mortimer, I barón Mortimer (1231-30 de octubre de 1282), fue un famoso caballero procedente del castillo de Wigmore, Herefordshire. Fue un leal aliado del rey Enrique III y mantuvo una relación de amistad y de enfrentamiento con el príncipe galés Llywelyn ap Gruffydd .

  6. 29 de mar. de 2023 · Queen Isabella and Roger Mortimer. When we talk about Roger Mortimer, we cannot ignore Queen Isabella. Isabella was a daughter of the French king, Philip IV, and she married Edward II in 1308, when she was twelve years old. There had been ‘three in the marriage’ from the beginning – first Piers Gaveston and then Hugh Despencer.

  7. Invasion of England (1326) The invasion of England in 1326 by the country's queen, Isabella of France, and her lover, Roger Mortimer, led to the capture and executions of Hugh Despenser the Younger and Hugh Despenser the Elder and the abdication of Isabella's husband, King Edward II. It brought an end to the insurrection and civil war.