Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Henry of Almain ( Anglo-Norman: Henri d'Almayne; 2 November 1235 – 13 March 1271), also called Henry of Cornwall, was the eldest son of Richard, Earl of Cornwall, afterwards King of the Romans, by his first wife Isabel Marshal. [2] [3] His surname is derived from a vowel shift in pronunciation of d'Allemagne ("of Germany"); he was so called ...

  2. The heart of Henry of Almayne (or Almain) (born 1235), son of Richard Earl of Cornwall and King of Germany and nephew of Henry III, was preserved in a golden heart shrine (cup or vase) within a cavity on the south step of the Shrine of St Edward the Confessor in Westminster Abbey. The Confessor's shrine from that period was later dismantled and ...

  3. Henry of Almain, also called Henry of Cornwall, was the eldest son of Richard, Earl of Cornwall, afterwards King of the Romans, by his first wife Isabel Marshal. His surname is derived from a vowel shift in pronunciation of d'Allemagne ; he was so called by the elites of England because of his father's status as the elected German King of Almayne.

  4. 2 November 1235 - 13 March 1271. The eldest son of Richard Earl of Cornwall and his first wife Isabel Marshal, daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke and Isabel de Clare, Henry of Almain was born on 2nd November 1235. Henry's father Richard, Earl of Cornwall was the second son of King John and Isabella of Angouleme and had married ...

  5. HENRY OF ALMAIN (1235-1271), so called from his father's German connexions, was the son of Richard, earl of Cornwall and king of the Romans. As a nephew of both Henry III. and Simon de Montfort he wavered between the two at the beginning of the Barons' War, but finally took the royalist side and was among the prisoners taken by Montfort at Lewes (1264).

  6. Henry of Almain (Anglo-Norman: Henri d'Almayne; 2 November 1235 – 13 March 1271), also called Henry of Cornwall, was the eldest son of Richard, Earl of Cornwall, afterwards King of the Romans, by his first wife Isabel Marshal.

  7. HENRY OF ALMAIN (1235-1271), so called from his father's German connexions, was the son of Richard, earl of Cornwall and king of the Romans. As a nephew of both Henry III. and Simon de Montfort he wavered between the two at the beginning of the Barons' War, but finally took the royalist side and was among the prisoners taken by Montfort at Lewes (1264).

  1. People also search for