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Edmund and Crouchback
* 1296 – Edmund Crouchback, English son of Henry III of England ( b. 1245 )
* 1245 – Edmund Crouchback, son of Henry III of England ( d. 1296 )
Henry granted Kenilworth to his son, Edmund Crouchback, in 1267.
* June 5 – Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster, son of Henry III of England ( born 1245 )
* January 16 – Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster, son of Henry III of England ( d. 1296 )
Later, the castle was extended by Henry's son Edmund Crouchback, after he became Earl of Lancaster in 1267.
# Edmund Crouchback ( 16 January 1245 – d. 5 June 1296 )
Attempting to use their family connections to achieve what open politics hadn't, Edward sent his brother Edmund Crouchback ( who was both Philip's cousin and step-father-in-law ) to come to an agreement with the French Royal family that would avert war.
After the rebellion of one of the Lord High Stewards, the position was forfeited and re-granted to Edmund Crouchback, but it later merged in the Crown.
The large estates which were taken from Robert in 1266 were given by Henry III to his son, Edmund Crouchback ; and his son, Thomas, Earl of Lancaster also called himself Earl Ferrers.
Conrad was however not able to subdue the pope's supporters, and the pope in turn offered Sicily to Edmund Crouchback, son of Henry III of England ( 1253 ).
In 1265 Newcastle was granted by the Crown to Simon de Montfort, and subsequently to Edmund Crouchback, through whom it passed to Henry IV.
# Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster ( 1245 – 1296 ), married Aveline de Forz in 1269, who died four years later without issue ; married Blanche of Artois in 1276, by whom he had issue.
Thomas was the eldest son of Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster and Blanche of Artois, Queen Dowager of Navarre.
Coats of Arms of Edmund Crouchback, Earl of Lancaster, and his successors.
This would have been the property of Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster who died in 1296, the record of his estate mentioning " a capital mansion ".
His lands and titles were forfeited, and were soon re-granted to the king's youngest son Edmund Crouchback.
He was the younger son of Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster, Earl of Leicester, who was a son of Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence.
Image: Edmund Crouchback Arms. svg | Shield as Earl of Lancaster and Leicester
Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Leicester and Lancaster ( 16 January 1245 – 5 June 1296 ), was the second surviving son of King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence.
< div style =" background: # ccddcc ; text-align: center ; border: 1px solid # 667766 " class =" NavHead "> Ancestors of Edmund Crouchback
Lancaster, Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of
Lancaster, Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of
Edmund Crouchback

Edmund and passed
Morris, having passed his finals in the previous term, was entered as a pupil at the office of George Edmund Street, one of the leading English Gothic revival architects who had his headquarters in Oxford as architect to the diocese ; and on New Year's Day the first issue of the Oxford and Cambridge Magazine appeared.
In 944, however, Northumbria passed into West-Saxon hands again as Edmund drove out both Viking rulers.
After the manor came into the possession of Edward III he passed it to his son Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York, founder of the Yorkist line.
In spite of the objections of Hudson, for the Midland, and others, the new " London and York Railway ", ( later the Great Northern Railway ) led by Edmund Denison persisted, and the bill passed through Parliament in 1846.
He was married twice, and succeeded as Earl of Cork by his son Hamilton, who died in 1764 and passed the earldom to John's next son, Edmund.
To reinforce the line and deny access to the major east-west routes that passed through the line, in 1941 12 " Defensive Islands " were added to the line under a plan devised by General Brooke, who succeeded General Sir Edmund Ironside.
In 1321, it was again revived for Edmund of Woodstock, and through the marriage of Joan Plantagenet to Thomas Holland, the title passed to the Holland family, which held the title until 1408.
The Earldom of Somerset passed to his brother Edmund Beaufort, Count of Mortain ( c. 1406 – 1455 ).
The Judiciary Act 1903 was finally passed on 25 August 1903, and the first three justices, Chief Justice Sir Samuel Griffith and Justices Sir Edmund Barton and Richard O ' Connor were appointed on 5 October of that year.
The lands were then held by Edmund and passed onto his successor Thomas.
All early Everest expeditions — including the one led by John Hunt that put Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary on the summit — passed through Jiri.
By 1379 the manor had passed to Edward or Edmund Cook who gave it up to pay off debts.
His titles and the designation of heir presumptive passed to his young son, Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March.
Edmund Burke was the leading proponent of the scheme for a " national building ", and in 1775 Parliament passed an Act for the purpose of, inter alia, " erecting and establishing Publick Offices in Somerset House, and for embanking Parts of the River Thames lying within the bounds of the Manor of Savoy ".
Anglo-Saxon attempts to restore native rule in the person of Edgar the Ætheling, a grandson of Edmund Ironside who had originally been passed over in favour of Harold, were unsuccessful and William's descendants secured their rule.
Nevertheless, when the theatre passed to George Bolwell Davidge in 1824 he succeeded in bringing legendary actor Edmund Kean south of the river to play six Shakespeare plays in six nights.
The majority of boys then study at Edmund Rice College ( Hightown ) or St. Patrick's College ( Bearnageeha or " Barney ") or girls at Little Flower or Our Lady of Mercy with those who have passed the selection test going to the closer grammar school St Malachy's College ( boys ) or to Dominican College ( girls ).
On his death, the title passed to his grandson, Edmund, the fourth Baronet.
When he died, the title passed to his son, Edmund, the sixth Baronet.
Edmund was one of the judges who passed judgement on Harclay, who was hanged, drawn and quartered for treason.
Buttevant also has many literary associations: Edmund Spencer, from his manor at Kilcolman, referred to it and the gentle Mullagh ( the Awbeg River ) in The Faerie Queen ; Anthony Trollope passed through in his novel Castle Richmond ; James Joyce played a game of hurling there in his Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man ; the revered Canon Sheehan of Doneraile mentions Buttevant in several of his novels, not least in Glenanaar in the setting of the fatal events of the Fair of Rathclare ; and Elizabeth Bowen mentions it in her elegiacal family history Bowen's Court.
Following the ruling, however, the books passed to Edmund Freke, the new Bishop of Norwich, who kept them for himself at his residence.
Richard, Duke of York, used the castle next, before it passed to Edmund Tudor in the middle of the century.

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