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  1. Mar 31, 2023 · Nicholas Litlyngton was the Abbot of Westminster from 1362 until he died in 1386. There is no evidence that Nicholas was the bastard son of Edward III, and he never claimed such a connection in his lifetime.

    • Male
  2. Apr 16, 2024 · According to several historians, Nicholas de Litlyngton, the preeminent Abbot of Westminster Abbey from 1362 - 1386, was an illegitimate offspring of either Hugh Despenser the younger or Hugh Despenser the elder.

  3. Apr 26, 2022 · Death: 1386. Immediate Family: Son of Edward III, king of England and Alice Perrers, Royal Mistress. Brother of John de Southeray. Half brother of John Baldac; Isabella Plantagenet; Edward, the Black Prince; Isabella, Countess of Bedford; Joan of England and 10 others.

    • estimated between 1353 and 1385
    • April 26, 2022
    • 1386
    • Ann Margrethe Nilsen
  4. Nov 26, 2016 · Edward III also had a number of known illegitimate children. Alison Weir lists them as John Surrey, Joan, Jane and possibly Nicholas Lytlington who became the Abbot of Westminster but there is uncertainty as to his paternity. He could also have been a Dispenser.

  5. Nicholas Lytlington was born on month day 1366, in birth place, to Edward III Plantagenet and Alice Plantagenet (born De Ferrers). Nicholas had 21 siblings: Lionel Plantagenet, Edmund "Of Langley" Plantagenet and 19 other siblings. Nicholas passed away on month day 1386, at age 20.

  6. The manuscript edited in these volumes is a fine and elaborate missal of Westminster Abbey, given by Nicholas Lytlington (abbot 1362-1386) and often referred to by his name. As well as its importance as a particularly full missaltext from a royal abbey (it includes an extensive coronation ritual), it is also the only monastic representative of ...

  7. Nicholas Litlyngton, Abbot of Westminster, was buried in St Blaise’s chapel (part of what is now Poets' Corner). The Missal he gave to the Abbey can be seen in the new Galleries display.

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