Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Arms of Richard Talbot, 2nd Baron Talbot, together with those of other knights who fought in the Battle of Crecy and at the Siege of Calais (1347), Great East Window of Gloucester Cathedral Richard Talbot, 2nd Baron Talbot (c. 1306 – 23 October 1356) was an English nobleman and soldier.
Richard Talbot c. 1306 –1356 2nd Baron Talbot: Gilbert Talbot 1332–1387 3rd Baron Talbot: Richard Talbot c. 1361 –1396 4th Baron Talbot: Ankaret le Strange 1361–1413 7th Baroness Strange of Blackmere: Earl of Shrewsbury (2nd creation), 1442 Earl of Waterford, 1446: Gilbert Talbot c. 1383 –1419 8th Baron Strange of Blackmere, 5th Baron ...
Richard was the eldest son of Gilbert Talbot and Gwenthlian Mechyll. He served in Wales in 1282, Gascony in 1295. He was Governor of Cardiff Castle and Sheriff of Gloucestershire (1300-1301) and was a signatory of the Baron's Letter to Pope Boniface VIII in 1301. He died in 1306 and was succeeded by his eldest son Gilbert. [1]
Arms of Talbot: Gules, a lion rampant within a bordure engrailed or. [1] These were the paternal arms of Gwenllian, the daughter and heiress of Rhys Mechyll (d. 1244) (Prince of the Welsh House of Dinefwr, grandson of Rhys ap Gruffydd), and wife of Gilbert Talbot (d. 1274), grandfather of Gilbert Talbot, 1st Baron Talbot (d. 1345/6) [2] [unreliable source] assumed by Talbot as arms of alliance ...
The Talbot family are an English aristocratic family headed by the Earl of Shrewsbury. Subcategories This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.
Baron Talbot of Malahide (or de Malahide) is a title that has been created twice for members of the same family—in 1831 in the Peerage of Ireland as Baron Talbot of Malahide, and in 1856 in the Peerage of the United Kingdom as Baron Talbot de Malahide. While the barony of 1856 became extinct in 1973, the barony of 1831 is extant.
The first creation occurred in 1074 for Roger de Montgomerie, one of William the Conqueror's principal counsellors. He was one of the Marcher Lords, with the Earl of Hereford and the Earl of Chester, a bulwark against the Welsh; he was granted great powers, and his territory, which extended from Shropshire (of which Shrewsbury is the county town) into Mid-Wales (the county of Montgomeryshire ...
Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell (1630–1691), Irish royalist and Jacobite soldier; Richard Talbot (archbishop of Dublin) (c. 1390–1449), leading ecclesiastical and political figures in Ireland; Richard Talbot (bishop of London) (died 1262), Dean of St Paul's, London and bishop-elect of London; Richard Talbot (Irish judge) (c.1520-1577 ...