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A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… occupied, in the twelfth century, by Cadwallon, and Mortimer, during the arduous conflicts which took place …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… under the command of the Earl of Gloucester and Sir Edward Mortimer, who, near Llandilo-Vawr, encountered and totally …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… arrival of an English army under the command of Sir Edmund Mortimer and John Giffard, who had obtained intelligence of …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… it passed by exchange to the Mortimers, of whom Llewelyn Mortimer, the first of that name who owned the estate, … of Cardigan. Rowland, the sixth in descent from Llewelyn Mortimer, assigned it to his brother-in-law, Sir John Lewis, … wardship of his two sons to John, Earl Warren, and Roger Mortimer, who, causing them to be murdered, received from the …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… vestiges of Colwyn Castle, erected here in 1242, by Ralph Mortimer, on the site of an encampment supposed to have been …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… known; but in the 28th of Edward I. it belonged to Roger Mortimer, who was in that year summoned to parliament by the title of Baron Mortimer of Pencelly Castle. It is also noticed by Leland, …
Survey of London
… age of 39 as a novice with All Saints Sisters of the Poor, Mortimer Street, in the West End. In 1866 she inaugurated her … part to receive the overflowings' from the zealous Thomas Mortimer's early congregation at St Mark's, and its first …
A History of the County of Middlesex
… and built a library in Harrow Road designed by Karslake & Mortimer, 1890, which passed controversially to Paddington at …
An Essay towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk
… Earl of Warwick, by Catherine his wife, daughter of Roger Mortimer Earl of March, sister to Agne mother of John Earl of …
Displaying 2001 - 2010 of 2804