Henry de Lacy1

M, #15691, d. 1177

Father*Robert de Lacy1 b. c 1070, d. b 1129
Mother*Maud (?)1
Henry de Lacy|d. 1177|p524.htm#i15691|Robert de Lacy|b. c 1070\nd. b 1129|p205.htm#i6144|Maud (?)||p523.htm#i15690|Ilbert de Lacy|b. c 1040\nd. 1093|p284.htm#i8498|Hawise (?)||p211.htm#i6303|||||||

Death*1177 1 

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.

Gilbert de Lacy1

M, #15694, d. 1141

Father*Robert de Lacy1 b. c 1070, d. b 1129
Mother*Maud (?)1
Gilbert de Lacy|d. 1141|p524.htm#i15694|Robert de Lacy|b. c 1070\nd. b 1129|p205.htm#i6144|Maud (?)||p523.htm#i15690|Ilbert de Lacy|b. c 1040\nd. 1093|p284.htm#i8498|Hawise (?)||p211.htm#i6303|||||||

Marriage* 1st=Alice de Gant1 
Death*1141 1 
Name Variation Ilbert1 

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.

Robert de Lacy1

M, #15695, d. 22 August 1138

Father*Robert de Lacy1 b. c 1070, d. b 1129
Mother*Maud (?)1
Robert de Lacy|d. 22 Aug 1138|p524.htm#i15695|Robert de Lacy|b. c 1070\nd. b 1129|p205.htm#i6144|Maud (?)||p523.htm#i15690|Ilbert de Lacy|b. c 1040\nd. 1093|p284.htm#i8498|Hawise (?)||p211.htm#i6303|||||||

Death*22 August 1138 |He was the only English knight killed at the Battle of the Standard1 
(English) Battle-Standard22 August 1138 Northallerton, Yorkshire, England, Principal=David I of Scotland "the Saint", Principal=Stephen of Blois2,3,4 

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.
  2. [S342] Sir Bernard Burke, Extinct Peerages, p. 21.
  3. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 114.
  4. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 256.

Jordan de Lacy1

M, #15696

Father*Robert de Lacy1 b. c 1070, d. b 1129
Mother*Maud (?)1
Jordan de Lacy||p524.htm#i15696|Robert de Lacy|b. c 1070\nd. b 1129|p205.htm#i6144|Maud (?)||p523.htm#i15690|Ilbert de Lacy|b. c 1040\nd. 1093|p284.htm#i8498|Hawise (?)||p211.htm#i6303|||||||

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.

Roger de Lacy1

M, #15697

Father*Walter de Lacy1 b. c 1036, d. 27 Mar 1085
Mother*Emma (?)1 b. c 1046
Roger de Lacy||p524.htm#i15697|Walter de Lacy|b. c 1036\nd. 27 Mar 1085|p211.htm#i6306|Emma (?)|b. c 1046|p209.htm#i6256|Hugh de Lacey|b. s 1006|p211.htm#i6308|Emma de Bois L'Eveque||p211.htm#i6309|||||||

Title* 1st Lord of the Honour of Weobley1 
Event-Misc1096 He was banished to Normandy1 

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 117.

Hugh de Lacy1

M, #15698, d. before 1126

Father*Walter de Lacy1 b. c 1036, d. 27 Mar 1085
Mother*Emma (?)1 b. c 1046
Hugh de Lacy|d. b 1126|p524.htm#i15698|Walter de Lacy|b. c 1036\nd. 27 Mar 1085|p211.htm#i6306|Emma (?)|b. c 1046|p209.htm#i6256|Hugh de Lacey|b. s 1006|p211.htm#i6308|Emma de Bois L'Eveque||p211.htm#i6309|||||||

Death*before 1126 1 

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 117.

Agnes de Lacy1

F, #15700

Father*Walter de Lacy1 b. c 1036, d. 27 Mar 1085
Mother*Emma (?)1 b. c 1046
Agnes de Lacy||p524.htm#i15700|Walter de Lacy|b. c 1036\nd. 27 Mar 1085|p211.htm#i6306|Emma (?)|b. c 1046|p209.htm#i6256|Hugh de Lacey|b. s 1006|p211.htm#i6308|Emma de Bois L'Eveque||p211.htm#i6309|||||||

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 117.

Emelina de Lacy1

F, #15702

Father*Walter de Lacy1 b. c 1036, d. 27 Mar 1085
Mother*Ermeline (?)1 b. c 1046
Emelina de Lacy||p524.htm#i15702|Walter de Lacy|b. c 1036\nd. 27 Mar 1085|p211.htm#i6306|Ermeline (?)|b. c 1046|p211.htm#i6307|Hugh de Lacey|b. s 1006|p211.htm#i6308|Emma de Bois L'Eveque||p211.htm#i6309|||||||

Marriage Principal=Arnulf de Hesdine1 

Family

Arnulf de Hesdine
Children

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.
  2. [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.

Arnulf de Hesdine1

M, #15703

Marriage Principal=Emelina de Lacy1 
Of Picardy, France2 
Name Variation Ernulf de Hesding3 

Family

Emelina de Lacy
Children

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.
  2. [S218] Marlyn Lewis, Ancestry of Elizabeth of York.
  3. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 78.
  4. [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 108-26.

Robert de Lacy1

M, #15704

Father*Gilbert de Lacey1 b. c 1104, d. 1163
Mother*Agnes (?)1 b. c 1108
Robert de Lacy||p524.htm#i15704|Gilbert de Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|Hugh Talbot de Lacy|b. c 1078\nd. 1120|p211.htm#i6304|Emma d. Lacey|b. c 1082|p211.htm#i6305|||||||

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.

Alaric de Lacy1

M, #15706

Father*Gilbert de Lacey1 b. c 1104, d. 1163
Mother*Agnes (?)1 b. c 1108
Alaric de Lacy||p524.htm#i15706|Gilbert de Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|Hugh Talbot de Lacy|b. c 1078\nd. 1120|p211.htm#i6304|Emma d. Lacey|b. c 1082|p211.htm#i6305|||||||

Title* Lord of Cressage1 

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.

Robert de Lacy1

M, #15707

Father*Hugh de Lacey1 d. 25 Jul 1185
Mother*Rose of Monmouth1
Robert de Lacy||p524.htm#i15707|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300|Rose of Monmouth||p211.htm#i6301|Gilbert d. Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|Badeion of Monmouth||p273.htm#i8189|Rohesa d. Clare||p273.htm#i8190|

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.

Gilbert de Lacy1

M, #15708

Father*Hugh de Lacey1 d. 25 Jul 1185
Mother*Rose of Monmouth1
Gilbert de Lacy||p524.htm#i15708|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300|Rose of Monmouth||p211.htm#i6301|Gilbert d. Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|Badeion of Monmouth||p273.htm#i8189|Rohesa d. Clare||p273.htm#i8190|

Living*December 1222 1 

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.

Hugh de Lacy1

M, #15709, b. circa 1176, d. before 26 December 1242

Father*Hugh de Lacey1 d. 25 Jul 1185
Mother*Rose of Monmouth1
Hugh de Lacy|b. c 1176\nd. b 26 Dec 1242|p524.htm#i15709|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300|Rose of Monmouth||p211.htm#i6301|Gilbert d. Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|Badeion of Monmouth||p273.htm#i8189|Rohesa d. Clare||p273.htm#i8190|

Marriage* Principal=Lesceline de Verdun2 
Birth*circa 1176 1 
Marriage* 1st=Emmeline de Riddlesford3,4 
Death*before 26 December 1242 1 
(Witness) Biography Dugdale felt that this family was related to the Verdons. They had similar arms (fretty) and Henry had received an inheritance from Nicholas de Verdon. Henry was a favorite of Ranulph, Earl of Chester, one of the most powerful barons in England, and received from him Newhall in Cheshire, as well as manors in Staffordshire. From King John, in reward for his support in the baronial insurrections, he received royal grant of the lordship of Storton in Warwickshire. He executed the office of sheriff of Salop and Staffordshire for Ranulf of Chester and later was named to those offices in his own right in 10 Hen III. He also received grants in Ireland from Hugh de Lacy, Earl of Ulster.

When Richard Marshall rebelled and made an incursion into Wales, Henry III seized Henry de Audley along with other marcher barons.

Later, Henry was made governor of Shrewsbury, the castles of Chester and Beeston, and Newcastle-under-Lyme., Principal=Henry de Audley5 
DNB* Lacy, Hugh de, earl of Ulster (d. 1242), magnate and soldier, was the son of Hugh de Lacy (d. 1186) and his first wife, Rose of Monmouth, and younger brother of Walter de Lacy, lord of Meath (d. 1241). Hugh was a minor on his father's death, but had reached his majority by 1195 when he and John de Courcy led an army to Athlone and negotiated a treaty with Cathal Crobderg Ó Conchobair, king of Connacht. At about this time he was also the recipient of a speculative grant from William de Burgh of ten cantreds in Connacht, a grant confirmed by John, count of Mortain. From his brother Walter he received in Meath the barony of Ratoath and land in Morgallion, and by his marriage, some time between 1194 and 1199, to Lesceline de Verdon, daughter of Bertram de Verdon (d. 1192) and sister of Thomas and Nicholas de Verdon, he acquired the Cooley peninsula, Louth, and land north of Dundalk. In 1201 Lacy and Courcy supported an attempt by Cathal Crobderg to regain the kingship of Connacht from his great-nephew Cathal Carrach Ó Conchobair, but they were heavily defeated. Lacy then arrested Courcy and Cathal Crobderg but released them soon after. King John had grown suspicious of Courcy and used Lacy against him. In 1203 Lacy defeated Courcy at Down and in the following year captured and released him again. In November 1204 Hugh and Walter de Lacy were granted eight cantreds in Ulster and on 29 May 1205 Hugh was granted all Ulster as earl to hold as Courcy had held it on the day he was captured by Lacy.

In 1206 Lacy plundered Armagh, causing the archbishop of Armagh, Echdonn Mac Gilla Uidhir, to travel to England to complain to the king. In 1208 he attacked the Meath lands of the justiciar, Meiler fitz Henry, and captured his castle of Ardnurcher in Westmeath. This was done in support of William (I) Marshal whose position in Ireland was being undermined by King John. At the same time John had begun to persecute his former friend William (III) de Briouze who had quarrelled with the king over the murder of Arthur of Brittany. Briouze held land in Limerick and his daughter was married to Walter de Lacy. John hounded him for money owed to the crown and in 1209 he and his family fled to Ireland. Briouze returned to Wales the same year but his family were sheltered by Hugh de Lacy. In 1210 John arrived in Ireland to crush his opponents there. As Lacy moved north into Ulster he ravaged north Louth, thereby revenging himself on his brother-in-law, Nicholas de Verdon, who had objected to the marriage portion assigned to Lacy and attempted to claw some of it back. Lacy was chased from Ulster and fled to Scotland, where he spent a short time at St Andrews. Either before his expulsion or following his restoration in 1227 he granted the church of Carlingford in Louth to St Andrews. He and Walter de Lacy appear to have travelled to France and may have sheltered among the monks of St Taurin in Évreux. Hugh de Lacy later participated in the Albigensian crusade, being present at the siege of Toulouse in 1216 and the death of Simon de Montfort on 25 June 1218.

Negotiations for Lacy's restoration were already underway by the time of John's death. Soon after the coronation of Henry III in 1216 he was given safe conduct to meet the Marshal, and this was repeated in February 1217. Lacy, however, appears to have remained in France until 1219. The death of the Marshal in that year and the rise to power of Hubert de Burgh signalled a less sympathetic approach by the government. In 1220 Lacy responded by joining Llywelyn ab Iorwerth of Gwynedd in attacking the lands of William (II) Marshal in Wales. Attempts were again made to reach a compromise with a safe conduct being issued to Lacy to travel to England in 1221. He seems to have been confident of success at this point and in 1222 used the title earl of Ulster when witnessing a grant by Ranulf (III), earl of Chester, whose nephew and eventual successor, John the Scot, was married to Llywelyn's daughter Helen.

In December 1222 Lacy was offered his land in Meath and his wife's land in Louth, but he demanded the return of Ulster. The king offered to place it instead in the custody of the earls of Chester, Salisbury, and Gloucester and Walter de Lacy for five years, but in the summer of 1223 these lords refused to accept it. By this time Lacy was preparing to invade Ireland and the king sent letters from the pope to the archbishop of Dublin excommunicating anyone who aided him. Henry III's sister, Joan, the wife of Alexander II, king of Scotland, wrote to her brother to inform him that Alexander would not aid Lacy but that the king of Norway might do so. Lacy was involved in supporting one candidate for the kingship of Man and the Isles, Olaf, against the incumbent ruler, his brother Ragnvald. In 1224 the kingdom was divided between them with Ragnvald keeping Man and some of the isles and Olaf taking the rest. The latter subsequently supported Lacy's invasion of Ireland.

Lacy arrived in Ireland late in 1223 and went to Meath where he joined his half-brother, William Gorm de Lacy, in plundering his enemies. On 19 June 1224 the new justiciar, William (II) Marshal, arrived in Ireland and with the support of Walter de Lacy besieged Trim Castle which had been taken by adherents of Hugh. Marshal sent his cousin William le Gros with a force to relieve Carrickfergus Castle in Ulster which was being besieged by Hugh. Trim was taken and Hugh de Lacy abandoned the siege of Carrickfergus and joined his ally Aéd Méith Ó Néill, king of Tír Eoghain, in destroying the castle of Coleraine which had been built by Thomas of Galloway after Lacy's expulsion in 1210. He and Aéd then turned south and harried the Verdon lands around Dundalk. A large force under William Marshal met them at the Ulster passes in October and Lacy surrendered. His captivity, however, seems not to have been onerous. About May 1225 he was granted 200 marks by the king at the instance of Marshal and in May of the following year all his lands were placed in the custody of Walter de Lacy, with Marshal acting as guarantor. Finally in April 1227 Ulster was restored to Hugh as earl, with the proviso that it would return to the crown in the absence of a male heir.

The lands of the Galloway lords Alan and Thomas were also excluded from the grant to Hugh de Lacy, but he continued to undermine their position. In 1228 he rebuilt Coleraine Castle for himself. In 1229 his daughter married Alan of Galloway but the Scottish lord did not recover his interests in Ulster. When Alan died in 1234 he left three daughters and an illegitimate son, Thomas. Alexander II was determined that Galloway would be divided between the daughters, but in 1236 an unsuccessful invasion was launched from Ulster by Thomas, with Lacy's support. As part of his attempts to neutralize Galloway involvement in Ulster, Lacy also introduced into the earldom the family of Bisset of Moray, some of whose members murdered Patrick the son of Thomas, earl of Atholl, Alan of Galloway's brother, in 1242.

In 1230 Lacy's ally and client Aéd Méith Ó Néill died and in the ensuing succession contest Lacy supported not Aéd's son Domnall but his rival Domnall Mac Lochlainn. In 1234–5 Mac Lochlainn killed Ó Néill but soon turned against the earl. In 1238 the Irish of Ulaid (Antrim and Down) revolted against Lacy and appealed to Mac Lochlainn for help. Lacy was expelled but returned the following autumn with the justiciar Maurice Fitzgerald (d. 1257). Domnall was banished to Connacht and Brian Ó Néill, a nephew of Aéd Méith, was set up in his place. Mac Lochlainn regained power in 1239 but in 1241 he and his family were finally destroyed by Ó Néill.

In 1228 Hugh de Lacy was summoned by the king to fight in France and in 1234 he demonstrated his loyalty to Henry III by participating in the murder of Richard Marshal on the Curragh. Considering the favour shown to Lacy by both Richard's older brother and father this was a particularly unpleasant incident in the earl's career. In the following year he was involved in the conquest of Connacht by Richard de Burgh. His reward was the revival of the grant made to him almost forty years earlier by Richard's father William. He was granted five cantreds in Sligo for the service of ten knights. Apart from founding the manor of Meelick, Lacy did not involve himself personally in Connacht and granted most of his lands there to others such as Maurice Fitzgerald, Jordan of Exeter, Gerald de Prendergast, Peter of Birmingham, and Miles de Nangle. In 1235 he also reached agreement with Roesia de Verdon, daughter of Nicholas de Verdon and niece of his wife, Lesceline, about the half of the Verdon lands he had acquired by his marriage. For a payment of £200 these were returned to Roesia on condition that the men enfeoffed there by Lacy remained undisturbed. In 1237 Lacy opposed the piratical attacks of the Mariscos in the Irish Sea and arrested Scottish merchants then in Ulster. His rehabilitation into royal favour was shown by two summonses he received to give counsel to the king in 1234 and 1237.

Hugh de Lacy died shortly before 26 December 1242 in Ulster. It is possible but not certain that he was buried at the Franciscan house in Carrickfergus, which he may have founded. He certainly founded the Franciscan house at Down in 1240. He had no surviving sons and his lands reverted to the crown. He married twice. With his first wife, Lesceline de Verdon, he had at least two sons and at least three daughters. His sons Walter and Roger were alive in 1226, but both predeceased him. One of them, or possibly another son, was killed fighting Mac Lochlainn in 1238. Of the daughters of Lacy and Lesceline one, Matilda, married David, baron of Naas, and brought as her marriage portion Lesceline's lands around Carlingford as well as Lacy's lands in Meath and Limerick. She died at a great age in 1281. Another daughter married Miles de Nangle and on her death in 1253 was buried at Boyle Abbey. A third daughter, Rose, married Alan of Galloway and was still alive in 1237. Lacy's second wife was Emeline, daughter of Walter of Ridelisford, with whom he had no children. Shortly after Lacy's death she married Stephen Longespée, a kinsman of Henry III, bringing with her as dower Lacy's Connacht manor of Meelick.

B. Smith
Sources

G. H. Orpen, Ireland under the Normans, 4 vols. (1911–20) · A. J. Otway-Ruthven, A history of medieval Ireland (1968) · T. W. Moody and others, eds., A new history of Ireland, 2: Medieval Ireland, 1169–1534 (1987); repr. with corrections (1993) · H. S. Sweetman and G. F. Handcock, eds., Calendar of documents relating to Ireland, 5 vols., PRO (1875–86), vol. 1 · K. Simms, ‘The O Hanlons, the O Neills and the Anglo-Normans in thirteenth-century Armagh’, Seanchas Ardmhacha, 9 (1978–9), 70–94 · K. J. Stringer, ‘Periphery and core in thirteenth-century Scotland: Alan, son of Roland, lord of Galloway and constable of Scotland’, Medieval Scotland: crown, lordship and community: essays presented to G. W. S. Barrow, ed. A. Grant and K. J. Stringer (1993), 82–113 · Paris, Chron., 4.232
© Oxford University Press 2004–5
All rights reserved: see legal notice      Oxford University Press


B. Smith, ‘Lacy, Hugh de, earl of Ulster (d. 1242)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15853, accessed 24 Sept 2005]

Hugh de Lacy (d. 1242): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/158536 
Title Earl of Ulster7 
(Witness) Event-Misc1235 Maurice FitzGerald was given extensive holdings in Connaught by Hugh de Lacy and Richard de Burgh, Principal=Sir Maurice FitzGerald "the Friar"8 

Family

Lesceline de Verdun
Child

Last Edited24 Sep 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 118.
  2. [S168] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 38-26.
  3. [S233] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 144-2.
  4. [S284] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Zouche 4.
  5. [S342] Sir Bernard Burke, Extinct Peerages, p. 15.
  6. [S376] Unknown editor, unknown short title.
  7. [S338] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots, 8th ed., 33A-27.
  8. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 90.
  9. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 120.

Elayne de Lacy1

F, #15710

Father*Hugh de Lacey1 d. 25 Jul 1185
Mother*Rose of Monmouth1
Elayne de Lacy||p524.htm#i15710|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300|Rose of Monmouth||p211.htm#i6301|Gilbert d. Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|Badeion of Monmouth||p273.htm#i8189|Rohesa d. Clare||p273.htm#i8190|

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 119.

Alice de Lacy1

F, #15712

Father*Hugh de Lacey1 d. 25 Jul 1185
Mother*Rose of Monmouth1
Alice de Lacy||p524.htm#i15712|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300|Rose of Monmouth||p211.htm#i6301|Gilbert d. Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|Badeion of Monmouth||p273.htm#i8189|Rohesa d. Clare||p273.htm#i8190|

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 119.

William de Lacy1

M, #15715

Father*Hugh de Lacey1 d. 25 Jul 1185
William de Lacy||p524.htm#i15715|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300||||Gilbert d. Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|||||||

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 119.

Thomas de Lacy1

M, #15716

Father*Hugh de Lacey1 d. 25 Jul 1185
Thomas de Lacy||p524.htm#i15716|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300||||Gilbert d. Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|||||||

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 119.

Henry de Lacy1

M, #15717

Father*Hugh de Lacey1 d. 25 Jul 1185
Henry de Lacy||p524.htm#i15717|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300||||Gilbert d. Lacey|b. c 1104\nd. 1163|p211.htm#i6302|Agnes (?)|b. c 1108|p352.htm#i10558|||||||

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 119.

Katherine de Lacy1

F, #15718

Father*Walter de Lacy1 b. c 1172, d. Feb 1241
Mother*Margaret de Braiose1 b. c 1177, d. 19 Nov 1200
Katherine de Lacy||p524.htm#i15718|Walter de Lacy|b. c 1172\nd. Feb 1241|p89.htm#i2667|Margaret de Braiose|b. c 1177\nd. 19 Nov 1200|p89.htm#i2668|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300|Rose of Monmouth||p211.htm#i6301|William de Braiose|b. c 1144\nd. 9 Aug 1211|p89.htm#i2669|Maud St. Valery "Lady of La Haie"|b. c 1148\nd. 1210|p89.htm#i2670|

Occupation*1262 Prioress of Aconbury1 
Living*1267 1 

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 119.

Thomas de Lacy1

M, #15719

Father*Walter de Lacy1 b. c 1172, d. Feb 1241
Mother*Margaret de Braiose1 b. c 1177, d. 19 Nov 1200
Thomas de Lacy||p524.htm#i15719|Walter de Lacy|b. c 1172\nd. Feb 1241|p89.htm#i2667|Margaret de Braiose|b. c 1177\nd. 19 Nov 1200|p89.htm#i2668|Hugh de Lacey|d. 25 Jul 1185|p210.htm#i6300|Rose of Monmouth||p211.htm#i6301|William de Braiose|b. c 1144\nd. 9 Aug 1211|p89.htm#i2669|Maud St. Valery "Lady of La Haie"|b. c 1148\nd. 1210|p89.htm#i2670|

Last Edited5 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S347] Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans, p. 119.
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