Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Earl of Rutland


Related Topics

  
  Roger MANNERS (5° E. Rutland)
Born 6 Oct 1576, was son of John, fourth Earl of Rutland, and nephew of Edward, third Earl.
In the Tower, Rutland soon came to his senses, wrote very penitently, was examined and rated by the council, and was fined 30.000£.
On 9 Jun 1603 Rutland received the keepership of Birkwood Park, Yorkshire, and Clipstone Castle, Northamptonshire, and from Jun to Aug 1603 was engaged on a mission to Christian IV, King of Denmark, to present him with the order of the Garter, and to represent James at the christening of his son.
www.tudorplace.com.ar /Bios/RogerManners(5ERutland).htm   (673 words)

  
  Earls and dukes of Rutland - LoveToKnow 1911
Earls and dukes of Rutland - LoveToKnow 1911
RUTLAND The 1st earl of Rutland was Edward Plantagenet (1, 373-1415), son of Edmund, duke of York, and grandson of King Edward III.
In 1390 he was created earl of Rutland, but was to hold the title only during the lifetime of his father, on whose death in 1402 the earldom accordingly became extinct, the earl then becoming duke of York.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Earls_and_dukes_of_Rutland   (719 words)

  
 Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland - Education - Information - Educational Resources - Encyclopedia - Music
Earl Thomas was the son of Sir George Manners, 12th Baron de Ros, and was created the first Earl of Rutland on June 28, 1526.
In commemorating the 1st Earl of Rutland and his wife this tomb also marks the first of the actual burials in the church of the eight earls and four dukes over a period of almost 250 years.
The Earl's effigy is in mail and full plate armour with a loose military tabard over which he wears the mantle of the Order of the Garter while on his left leg is the Garter itself.
www.music.us /education/T/Thomas-Manners,-1st-Earl-of-Rutland.htm   (644 words)

  
 Hundred Years' War: Edward, Duke of York (c.1373-1415) [Edward Plantagenet, Edward of Norwich, Earl of Rutland]
EDWARD, DUKE OF YORK, elder son of Edmund of Langley, Duke of York, was created Earl of Rutland in 1390.
He accompanied the king to Ireland in 1394 and was made Earl of Cork; arranged Richard's marriage with Isabella, daughter of Charles VI of France; and was one of the king's most active helpers in the proceedings against the "lords appellant" in 1397.
It is uncertain what share Rutland had in the conspiracy against Henry IV in January 1400, but his complete acquittal by parliament in 1401, and the confidence subsequently reposed in him by the king, point to the conclusion that he was not seriously involved.
www.luminarium.org /encyclopedia/edwardyork.htm   (535 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Henry Manners, 2nd Earl of Rutland
Henry Manners, 2nd Earl of Rutland (23 September, 1526 - September 17, 1563) was the son of Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland.
Under Elizabeth I he served successfully and she made him Lord Lieutenant of Nottinghamshire and Rutland, Knight of the Garter and President of the North.
Earl Henry is depicted in armour of conventional pattern except that the breast plate is made up of laminated plates.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Henry_Manners%2C_2nd_Earl_of_Rutland   (376 words)

  
 NationMaster - Encyclopedia: George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham   (Site not responding. Last check: )
He married the daughter of the 6th Earl of Rutland, Lady Katherine Manners, later suo jure Baroness de Ros, on 16 May 1620 despite the objections of her father.
Richard Weston, 1st Earl of Portland, was born in 1577, at Roxwell in Essex, England, eldest son and heir of Sir Hierome Weston, High Sheriff of Essex, and Mary Cave.
Buckingham married Lady Katherine Manners, daughter of Francis, 6th earl of Rutland, by whom he left three sons and one daughter, of whom George, the second son (1628-1687), succeeded to the dukedom.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/George-Villiers,-1st-Duke-of-Buckingham   (3372 words)

  
 Francis Manners, 6th Earl of Rutland - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Francis Manners Rutland, 6th Earl of Rutland (1578-1632), was an English nobleman.
She married the Earl in 1608 and had two sons, Henry and Francis.
In 1618, three women who worked at his castle were executed for witchcraft, having supposedly caused the premature deaths of his sons.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Francis_Manners%2C_6th_Earl_of_Rutland   (137 words)

  
 Highbeam Encyclopedia - Search Results for Rutland
Rutland, Vt. He was one of the pioneers of the steel plow industry.
Son of a London clothmaker, he was enabled to travel in Europe before 1603 to study paintings, perhaps at the expense of the earl of Rutland.
Rutland is ready to lead Bulldogs: Croom may tinker with MSU offense.
www.encyclopedia.com /SearchResults.aspx?Q=Rutland&StartAt=1   (864 words)

  
 Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland and 15th Baron de Ros (1548 - April 14, 1587) was the son of Henry Manners, 2nd Earl of Rutland, whose titles he inherited in 1563.
The Earldom of Rutland and Barony of Manners went to his brother John Manners, but the Barony of de Ros went to his daughter.
At Bottesford Church in Leicestershire is the tomb commemorating the third Earl and his wife.
www.tocatch.info /en/Edward_Manners%2C_3rd_Earl_of_Rutland.htm   (229 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Duke of Rutland Article   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The subsidiary titles of the Duke are: Marquess of Granby, Earl of Rutland, Baron Manners, of Haddon in the County of Derby, and Baron Roos of...
The subsidiary titles of the Duke are: Marquess of Granby (created 1703), Earl of Rutland (1525), Baron Manners, of Haddon in the County of Derby (1679), and Baron Roos of Belvoir, of Belvoir in the County of Leicester (1896).
The 9th earl John Manners, (1638-1711), was created Duke of Rutland and Marquess of Granby in 1703 by Queen Anne.The eldest son of the duke may use Marquess of Granby as a courtesy title.
www.ipedia.com /duke_of_rutland.html   (621 words)

  
 Belvoir Castle   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Earl of Rutland supported the Parliamentarians, and the royalist army came from nearby Grantham, and attacked the castle.
In 1799 the fifth Duke of Rutland and his wife Elizabeth Howard (of Castle Howard, Yorkshire) redesigned the castle and spent 30 years rebuilding the castle in the Gothic style, producing the building which stands today.
Duke of Rutland, who is a direct descendent of Robert de Todeni, and therefore the castle has been home to the same family for nearly 1000 years.
semper.freelinuxhost.com /Articles/28.htm   (449 words)

  
 Touring Southwest Lincolnshire Country Houses on Britannia: Belvoir Castle
The Ros family were the owners at the time, then through marriage it passed to Sir Thomas Manners, the 1st Earl of Rutland, who started to rebuild the castle around 1523 although it was not completed until 1555.
On the Earl's death in 1543 Belvoir was inherited by Henry his eldest son while his younger son Sir John Manners acquired Haddon Hall in Derbyshire in 1567 through his marriage to Dorothy Vernon.
John, 9th Earl of Rutland was created Marquis of Granby and Duke of Rutland in 1703.
www.britannia.com /tours/lincs/swlinc15.html   (512 words)

  
 bowieNet.discourse.blogs
The Earl of Rutland, Christopher Marlowe (another writer from beyond the grave) and the Earl of Derby have similarly absurd defenders but you've seen enough to get the idea.
Francis Bacon, the 'philosopher king' as his followers would have it, a man heavily involved in affairs of state and always at the centre of court intrigues, died from a cold he caught whilst stuffing a dead chicken with snow in a failed experiment to preserve meat.
The Earl of Rutland received a mysterious stipend from Queen Elizabeth - which gives rise to predictable speculations - and later became the ambassador to Denmark, receiving King Christian IV in London.
www.davidbowie.com /blog/index.php?user=Southpaw&itemID=5382   (544 words)

  
 TimeRef - History Timelines - George (Duke of Clarence)
The eldest sons of the York family, Edward, Earl of March and Edmund, Earl of Rutland, had grown up and been taught all the arts and skills of being knights and belted earls at Ludlow.
Edmund, Earl of Rutland, aged 17, was killed on the battlefield in cold blood.
Earl Rivers was proposed as a candidate for marriage with Mary in Burgundy.
www.btinternet.com /~timeref/hpr1425.htm   (2597 words)

  
 Definition of Henry VI, part 3
The play begins with the Earl of Warwick (Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick) presiding over a dispute between Richard, Duke of York and the reigning King Henry, in the course of which Henry agrees to make York his heir.
King Henry VI has been restored to the throne, and the young Earl of Richmond (the future King Henry VII of England) is given a prominent part in the action, as he is shown going into exile in France to escape the Yorkists.
Edmund, Earl of Rutland, son to the Duke of York (Edmund, Earl of Rutland)
www.wordiq.com /definition/Henry_VI%2C_part_3   (865 words)

  
 The House of York
Richard’s first wife, Anne Mortimer, was sister and afterwards heiress to the Earl of March and to the claims of her great-grandfather, Lionel, Duke of Clarence, second son of Edward I, thus giving her Yorkist successors a superior claim to the throne over the House of Lancaster.
In 1484, Katherine was married to William Herbert, Earl of Huntingdon.
On 28 March 1465, Hastings was deputed with Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, to treat with representatives of Charles the Bold for an alliance.
www.richard111.com /house_of_york.htm   (14089 words)

  
 Edmund, Earl of Rutland Information
Edmund, Earl of Rutland (May 17, 1443 – December 31, 1460) was the fifth child and second surviving son of Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York and Cecily Neville.
He died at the age of seventeen after the Battle of Wakefield (December 30, 1460) during the Wars of the Roses, executed on the orders of the Lancastrian Lord Clifford, or by some accounts, by Lord Clifford himself.
His head was displayed on the gates of York, England, along with those of his father and of his uncle, Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury.
www.bookrags.com /Edmund%2C_Earl_of_Rutland   (157 words)

  
 Richard III Society -- Nobility - more charts
The question, in general, was-"If there was a 1st Earl of Rutland during the Tudor period, how could Richard's brother Edmund have been Earl of Rutland?" There was one answer to this question given by a member that I felt very comfortable with, being that, I believed it to have come from a reliable source.
The rest of the Earls of Derby to present have been either father to son or grandfather to grandson, with one exception of a brother to brother with Edward Henry Stanley 15th Earl and Fredrick Arthur Stanley 16th Earl.
With petition from the Earls of Suffolk and Berkshire, Viscount Stafford, the Barons Howard of Charlton, and Howard of Escrick, the title previously under attainder in 1572, was restored to Thomas.
www.r3.org /life/medmisc/nobnew.html   (2635 words)

  
 Hundred Years War Timeline 1391 - 1400
The Earls of Arundel and Warwick, and the Duke of Glouchester are accused of treason.
The Earl of March, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and heir presumptive to the throne of England is ambushed and killed near Kells by an army of O'Tooles and O'Brians.
Richard II of England surrenders to the Earl of Northumberland at Conway Castle.
www.maisonstclaire.org /timeline/1391.html   (811 words)

  
 Shakespeare Question
Also claims that the Earl of Southhampton was the son of Oxford and Elizabeth I. ---Sobran, Joseph.
Claims Bacon was the son of the Earl of Leicester and Elizabeth I. Apparently neither the Oxfordians nor the Baconians put much stock in the "Virgin Queen" story.
During this period, Rutland was an English ambassador to Denmark, and when he had studied at Padua University in 1596, two of his fellow students were named Rosencrantz and Guildenstern.
www.princeton.edu /~rbivens/shakespeare   (2142 words)

  
 Welcome to Rutland, North Dakota!
The people of Rutland are very friendly and I will definetly return again very soon.
Although the website is very very good, it seems that the other websites like Forman, for example, are full of color and modern, where the Rutland is in fl and white and very "old" looking.
Rutland has a lot of small town charm to show off.
www.rutlandnd.com /guestbook.asp   (220 words)

  
 thePeerage.com - Katherine Manners and others
She was the daughter of Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland and Eleanor Paston.
     Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland was the son of Henry Manners, 2nd Earl of Rutland and Lady Margaret Neville.
She married Edward Manners, 3rd Earl of Rutland, son of Henry Manners, 2nd Earl of Rutland and Lady Margaret Neville, circa 6 June 1573.
www.thepeerage.com /p1589.htm   (1220 words)

  
 Contenders: The URL of Derby
Rutland is well thought of in certain circles as the author of the work of Shake-speare, but any remote evidence seems poor.
The result of this, for Rutlanders, unfortunate fact, is that some sort of group theory is required (see Group Theories).
Yet I believe that William Shakspur, the earl of Oxford, Sir Francis Bacon, Christopher Marlowe, the earl of Rutland, and every other proposed author I am familiar with is disqualified for good reason, and that the earl of Derby has not been disqualified.
www.rahul.net /raithel/Derby/contenders.html   (1823 words)

  
 Edward de Vere
An Earl of Oxford was a favorite of Richard II (and therefore is excised from that history play), another was given a command at the battle of Agincourt, and Earls of Oxford supported the House of Lancaster in the Wars of the Roses in the 1400s.
The 16th Earl was a patron of a polemical dramatist and of a company of actors known as Oxford's Men who would travel the country in summer and reside at Castle Hedingham in winter.
Both the 16th Earl and the Countess of Oxford had court connections, John accompanying Princess Elizabeth from her prison to the throne and Margery being appointed a Maid of Honor.
www.wsu.edu /~delahoyd/shakespeare/vere.html   (2826 words)

  
 thePeerage.com - Sir Henry Killigrew and others
She married Sir William Courtenay, 3rd Earl of Devon, son of Sir William Courtenay, 2nd Earl of Devon and Elizabeth Paulett, between 18 January 1572 and 1573.
     Henry Manners, 2nd Earl of Rutland was the son of Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland and Eleanor Paston.
She married Henry Manners, 2nd Earl of Rutland, son of Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland and Eleanor Paston, on 3 July 1536.
www.thepeerage.com /p919.htm   (1289 words)

  
 1460
June - The Earl of Warwick and Edward, Earl of March, eldest son of the Duke of York, land in England with an army and seize London.
December 30 - Battle of Wakefield - A Lancastrian army under Henry Beaufort, Duke of Somerset[?] and Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland[?] defeats a Yorkist army under the Duke of York and his son, Edmund, Earl of Rutland[?].
Both York and Rutland are killed, the latter murdered after the battle.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/14/1460.html   (188 words)

  
 Candidates for Shakespeare Roger Manners   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland (1576 1612, aged 36) was “too young and unproven” to be Shakespeare, is the widely-held belief.
Again, to be taken seriously, he would have had to be a literary genius in 1593 at the age of 16 (when Venus and Adonis was first published).
Rutland at 20 was at Padua University, in Italy, at the same time as students by name Rosencrantz and Guylderstern – who in turn were at the royal christening in 1603 (and were in Shakespeare’s Hamlet)
www.shakespeare-authorship.org.uk /roger-manners.htm   (523 words)

  
 Langar Hall
The Earl of Chester died, poisoned, it was rumoured, by William, before he took possession of the Honour of Peverel, but the Azure 3 garbs Or (a garb is a wheatsheaf) of St Pol became the device of subsequent Earls of Chester.
His heir was his daughter Margaret, who married Robert de Ferrieres, 2nd Earl of Derby, but Henry seized the Honour of Peverel and it remained in the possession of the Crown for nearly half a century, despite the Earl of Derby's lawful right to it.
But the last Lord Scrope, Emanuel (created Earl of Sunderland), who died in 1630 and is buried, as are his parents, in the church ("the cathedral of the Vale" next to the house), had no children by his wife Elizabeth, the daughter of John Manners, 4th Earl of Rutland.
www.baronage.co.uk /langar/langar-1.html   (1348 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.