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  1. House of Neville. House of Tudor. Jasper Tudor. House of Tudor. Merged with the Crown in 1495.

  2. www.visitdenbigh.co.uk › about-denbigh › historyHistory | About Denbigh

    During Tudor and Stuart times, Denbigh prospered as a market town and business centre. Elizabeth I’s favourite Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester was granted the castle and Lordship of Denbigh, becoming virtually the Governor General of North Wales. He commissioned the Shire Hall, which now houses the Town Library.

  3. The lordship then went into decline, brought on by its invasion by Scotland in 1315–18, the Great Famine of 1315–17, and the Black Death of the 1340s. The fluid political situation and Norman feudal [3] system allowed a great deal of autonomy for the Anglo-Norman lords in Ireland, who carved out earldoms for themselves and had almost as much authority as some of the native Gaelic kings.

  4. 20 de out. de 2009 · Denbigh Castle. By Fiona Gale. Edward I created the Lordship of Denbigh in 1282 after capturing the town from Welsh noble Dafydd ap Gruffydd, with the lordship granted to Henry de Lacy, the Earl of Lincoln. He had led some of Edward's troops into Wales along the Dee Valley in 1277 in the early stages of Edward's final campaign to take over Wales.

  5. Denbigh Castle and town walls ( / ˈdɛnbi / DEN-bee; Welsh: Castell Dinbych a waliau tref [ˌkastɛɬ ˈdɪnbɨχ]) were built to control the lordship of Denbigh after the Conquest of Wales by Edward I of England in 1282.

  6. The Lordship of Bromfield and Yale was formed in 1282 [1] by the merger of the medieval commotes of Marford, Wrexham and Yale. It was part of the Welsh Marches and was within the cantref of Maelor in the former Kingdom of Powys . The marcher lordship was originally bestowed to the Earls of Surrey of the Warenne family, being seized from the ...