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  1. Anne Mortimer Minor. Birth. 2 Feb 1859. Leesburg, Loudoun County, Virginia, USA. Death. 15 Jun 1948 (aged 89) Richmond City, Virginia, USA. Burial.

  2. Mortimer killed Hugh Despencer and Simon de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham in August 1265. He died on 30 October 1282 and was buried at Wigmore Abbey, where his tombstone read:- Here lies buried, glittering with praise, Roger the pure, Roger Mortimer the second, called Lord of Wigmore by those who held him, dear.

  3. Death: Anne de Mortimer died around the age of 22 and was buried at All Saints' Church, Kings Langley, Hertfordshire. Children: Isabel, Henry, Richard. Marriages: Richard of Conisburgh. Parents: Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March and Alianore Holland

  4. Anne de Mortimer died soon after the birth of her son Richard on 22 September 1411. She was buried at Kings Langley, Hertfordshire, once the site of Kings Langley Palace, which housed the tombs of her husband's parents Edmund of Langley and Isabella of Castile.

  5. Anne de Mortimer. View Cenotaph here Originally interred in Kings Langley Priory in the Convent Chapel. After the Dissolution of the Monestaries, the chapel was in disrepair and her body and the bodies of her father and mother in law, Edmund of Langley and Isabel of Castile were all reburied at the Church of All Saints.Anne was of the...

  6. Dec 7, 2019 · Richard, Earl of Cambridge was the main conspirator. Its for this reason that the Southampton Plot is also known as the Cambridge Plot. He was married to Anne Mortimer (their son was Richard of York who managed to get himself killed at the Battle of Wakefield in 1460).

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  8. Joan was buried, following a request in her will, not by her royal husband at Canterbury but the Greyfriars at Stamford in Lincolnshire, beside her first husband, Thomas Holland. Early the following year Holland became reconciled with the Staffords, and had his property was restored to him.

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