Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Sir Thomas de Brus (c. 1284, Carrick, Ayrshire – 17 February 1307) was a son of Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale and Margaret, Countess Of Carrick and thus a younger brother of King Robert I of Scotland.

  2. 2 de jun. de 2024 · Sir Thomas de Brus (c. 1284 – 9 February 1307) was a younger brother of King Robert I of Scotland, who supported his brother in the struggle for the crown of Scotland. He was captured by forces at Loch Ryan, Galloway, Scotland and later executed as a traitor.

  3. 12 de sept. de 2012 · Summary. By the end of the thirteenth century, when the Yorkshire Bruses had passed into oblivion, the Scottish Bruses were ascending towards their historic climax, beginning with the Great Cause in 1292 when Robert de Brus V, ‘the Competitor’, narrowly lost the kingship of the Scots to John de Balliol, his cousin's son, and coming to ...

  4. Robert I de Brus, 1st Lord of Annandale (c. 1078 –1141) was an early-12th-century Anglo-Norman lord and the first of the Bruce dynasty to hold lands in Scotland. A monastic patron, he is remembered as the founder of Gisborough Priory in Yorkshire, England, in present-day Redcar and Cleveland, in 1119.

  5. Robert de Brus (July 1243 – before April 1304), 6th Lord of Annandale, jure uxoris Earl of Carrick (1252–1292), Lord of Hartness, Writtle and Hatfield Broad Oak, was a cross-border lord, and participant of the Second Barons' War, Ninth Crusade, Welsh Wars, and First War of Scottish Independence, as well as father to the future king of ...

  6. 3 de jul. de 2023 · Thomas de Brus formerly Brus aka Bruce, Brewes. Born 1284 in Carrick, Scotland. Ancestors. Son of Robert (Bruce) Lord of Annandale and Earl of Carrick jure uxoris and Marjorie (Carrick) Countess of Carrick.

  7. Until then Robert de Brus had been able to pay fealty to the king of Scots for Annandale without compromising his position as a major tenant-in-chief of the English king in Cleveland and Hartnes. The accession of Stephen de Blois was to place that dual allegiance under severe strain.