Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Maud, Countess of Huntingdon (c. 1074 – 1130), or Matilda, was Queen of Scotland as the wife of King David I. She was the great-niece of William the Conqueror and the granddaughter of Earl Siward .

  2. Family. Marriage and issue. References. Matilda of Chester, Countess of Huntingdon. Matilda of Chester, [1] Countess of Huntingdon (1171 – 6 January 1233) [2] was an Anglo-Norman noblewoman, sometimes known as Maud and sometimes known with the surname de Kevelioc.

  3. 23 de abr. de 2023 · Maud of Northumbria (1074-1130), countess for the Honour of Huntingdon, was the daughter of Waltheof II, Earl of Northumbria and Judith of Lens, the last of the major Anglo-Saxon earls to remain powerful after the Norman conquest of England in 1066. She inherited her father's earldom of Huntingdon and married twice.

    • Maud, Countess of Huntingdon
    • Death and Burial of Queen Maud of Scotland
    • Sources

    Maud was the daughter of Waltheof, earl of Northumbria, and Judith, a niece of William the Conqueror. Maud's first husband was Simon de Senlis (or St. Liz), a knight who had served the Conqueror. Maud and Simon had two sons. She was nearly 40 years old when she married David of Scotland, who was ten years her junior. Her mother, Judith, refused to ...

    (Royal Ancestry) His wife, Queen Maud, died 1130 or 1131, and was buried at Scone. Note. Scone Abbey (or Scone Priory) was a house of Augustinian canons based at Scone, Perthshire (Gowie), Scotland. It was founded between 1114 and 1122. In 1163 or 1164 King Malcolm IV increased Scone's status to that of abbey from priory and in his words was, "in t...

    Royal Ancestry 2013 Vol. I p. 278-280
    Royal Ancestry 2013 Vol. III p. 299
    • Female
  4. Dictionary of National Biography. The Scots Peerage: founded on Wood's edition of Sir Robert Douglas's The Peerage of Scotland. View All. Spouse and Children. Simon de Senlis I Earl of Huntingdon-Northampton. Maud of Huntingdon.

  5. 29 de mai. de 2024 · Maud of Huntingdon, Queen of Scotland. After the death of Simon I of St. Liz, King Henry I arranged for her to marry his brother-in-law, David of Scotland in 1113, the youngest son of Malcolm Canmore and St. Margaret.

  6. Countess of Huntingdon . Name variations: Maud de Kevilioc or de Keveliock; Maud Dunkeld; Matilda of Chester.