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  1. Alice Perrers. Birth. 1340. Groby, Hinckley and Bosworth Borough, Leicestershire, England. Death. 1400 (aged 59–60) Wendover, Aylesbury Vale District, Buckinghamshire, England. Burial. St Laurence Churchyard.

  2. Alice von England (born Salisbury Perrers), 1348 - 1400. Alice von England (born Salisbury Perrers) was born in 1348, in birth place. Alice married Edward Edward III King of England of England (Plantagenet) in 1364, at age 16 in marriage place. Edward was born on month day 1312, in birth place.

  3. Alice (Concubine) of Perrers deWindsor was born in the year 1340 in Hertfordshire, England.. She was married in Not, Graz-Umgebung, Styria, Austria to Edward England She was married in the year 1364 to Edward England She was married in the year 1369 in Associated to Edward England, they had 8 children..

    • War
    • Plague
    • Rebellion
    • Religion and Reform
    • Conclusion

    Just as the language of Middle English was deeply infused with elements of French language and culture, England as a nation was, in many ways, shaped by its relationship to France. In 1066, Duke William of Normandy sailed across the channel to claim England, asserting that England’s King Edward the Confessor had promised him the throne. Since that ...

    In the late 1340s, approximately a decade into the Hundred Years’ War, England felt the downside of increased contact with the continent: plague. In 1348, two years after what became known as the Black Death swept through continental Europe, the plague reached England and decimated its population. The population of England, together with Wales, had...

    The 1388 Statute was, however, enacted within a somewhat different political and social environment than the first two labour laws. Edward III died in 1377, leaving his grandson Richard II as a child king responsible for maintaining the martial campaigns against France and keeping the commons under control. With significant increases in wartime tax...

    The increasing unrest and violence in England during the latter half of the fourteenth century was not limited to the social and political spheres; it extended to religion as well. In the 1360s and 1370s, a popular and respected theologian by the name of John Wyclif studied and taught at Oxford University, producing over the years a huge corpus of ...

    These fourteenth-century anxieties – about Lollardy, about England’s claim to France, about royal authority, and about labourers becoming wealthy beyond their correct social position – were, at their core, very similar. In all of these situations, power was disrupted, removed from its purportedly true place in order to be wielded by someone else – ...

  4. found: Wikipedia WWW site, 2 Sept. 2010(Alice Perrers, c. 1340-1400/01, lady in waiting to Queen Philippa, mistress of King Edward III; also successful landowner) found: ThePeerage.com WWW site, 2 Sept. 2010:Alice Perrers (b. ca. 1348, married William de Windsor; d. in 1400)

  5. John of Gaunt (1340-1399), Duke of Lancaster, Earl of Richmond, King of Castile and Leon [Sept. 1378], 4th son of William III by mistress, Alice Perrers; married to Blanche (d. 1369), Constantine of Castile (1378), and Kathryn Swynford (mistress c. 1376, married 1396); Regent during minority of Richard II; opposed by Black Prince until Edward's ...

  6. faculty.goucher.edu › eng240 › chaucers_careerChaucer's career

    John of Gaunt (1340-1399), Duke of Lancaster, Earl of Richmond, King of Castile and Leon [Sept. 1378], 4th son of William III by mistress, Alice Perrers; married to Blanche (d. 1369), Constantine of Castile (1378), and Kathryn Swynford (John's mistress since c. 1376, married 1396); Regent during minority of Richard II; opposed by Black Prince ...

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