The Davies Family


King Of England Edward Plantagenet I [Parents] [scrapbook] "Longshanks" was born 17 Jun 1239 in Westminister, England. He died 7 Jul 1307 in Burgh-On-The-San, Cumberland, England and was buried 28 Oct 1307 in Westminster Abbey, London, England. Longshanks married Princess Eleanor Of Castile on Oct 1254 in Las Huelgas, Castile.

Other marriages:
Of France, Margaret

Edward I, called Longshanks (1239-1307), king of England (1272-1307), of the house of Plantagenet. He was born in Westminster on June 17, 1239, the eldest son of King Henry III, and at 15 married Eleanor of Castile. In the struggles of the barons against the crown for constitutional and ecclesiastical reforms, Edward took a vacillating course. When warfare broke out between the crown and the nobility, Edward fought on the side of the king, winning the decisive battle of Evesham in 1265. Five years later he left England to join the Seventh Crusade. Following his father's death in 1272, and while he was still abroad, Edward was recognized as king by the English barons; in 1273, on his return to England, he was crowned.

The first years of Edward's reign were a period of the consolidation of his power. He suppressed corruption in the administration of justice and passed legislation allowing feudal barons and the crown to collect revenues from properties willed to the church.

On the refusal of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, ruler of Wales, to submit to the English crown, Edward began the military conflict that resulted, in 1284, in the annexation of Llewelyn's principality to the English crown. In 1290 Edward expelled all Jews from England. War between England and France broke out in 1293 as a result of the efforts of France to curb Edward's power in Gascony. Edward lost Gascony in 1293 and did not again come into possession of the duchy until 1303. About the same year in which he lost Gascony, the Welsh rose in rebellion.

Greater than either of these problems was the disaffection of the people of Scotland. In agreeing to arbitrate among the claimants to the Scottish throne, Edward, in 1291, had exacted as a prior condition the recognition by all concerned of his overlordship of Scotland. The Scots later repudiated him and made an alliance with France against England. To meet the critical situations in Wales and Scotland, Edward summoned a parliament, called the Model Parliament by historians because it was a representative body and in that respect was the forerunner of all future parliaments. Assured by Parliament of support at home, Edward took the field and suppressed the Welsh insurrection. In 1296, after invading and conquering Scotland, he declared himself king of that realm. In 1298 he again invaded Scotland to suppress the revolt led by Sir William Wallace. In winning the Battle of Falkirk in 1298, Edward achieved the greatest military triumph of his career, but he failed to crush Scottish opposition.

The conquest of Scotland became the ruling passion of his life. He was, however, compelled by the nobles, clergy, and commons to desist in his attempts to raise by arbitrary taxes the funds he needed for campaigns. In 1299 Edward made peace with France and married Margaret, sister of King Philip III of France. Thus freed of war, he again undertook the conquest of Scotland in 1303. Wallace was captured and executed in 1305. No sooner had Edward established his government in Scotland, however, than a new revolt broke out and culminated in the coronation of Robert Bruce as king of Scotland. In 1307 Edward set out for the third time to subdue the Scots, but he died en route near Carlisle on July 7, 1307.

© 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

Princess Eleanor Of Castile [Parents] was born 1244. She died 29 Nov 1290. Eleanor married King Of England Edward Plantagenet I on Oct 1254 in Las Huelgas, Castile.

They had the following children:

  F i Princess Joan of Acre Plantagenet was born 1272 and died 23 Apr 1307.
  F ii
Princess Elizabeth Plantagenet was born Aug 1282 in Rhuddlan Castle, Flint, Wales. She died 5 May 1316 in Walden Abbey, Hertfordshire, England.
  M iii
King EDWARD II @ Plantagenet Of England was born 25 Apr 1284 in Carnavon Castle, Carnavon, Caernarvonshire, Wales. He died 21 Sep 1327 in Berkeley Castle, Gloucestershire, England.

Edward II (1284-1327), Plantagenet king of England (1307-1327), whose incompetence and distaste for government finally led to his deposition and murder.

Edward was born on April 25, 1284, at Caernarfon (Caernarvon), Wales, the fourth son of King Edward I and his first wife, Eleanor of Castile. The deaths of his older brothers made the infant prince heir to the throne; in 1301 he was proclaimed Prince of Wales, the first heir apparent in English history to bear that title. The prince was idle and frivolous, with no liking for military campaigning or affairs of state. Believing that the prince's close friend Piers Gaveston, a Gascon knight, was a bad influence on the prince, Edward I banished Gaveston. On his father's death, however, Edward II recalled his favorite. Gaveston incurred the opposition of the powerful English barony. The nobles were particularly angered in 1308, when Edward made Gaveston regent for the period of the king's absence in France, where he went to marry Isabella, daughter of King Philip IV. In 1311 the barons, led by Thomas, earl of Lancaster, forced the king to appoint from among them a committee of 21 nobles and prelates, called the lords ordainers. They proclaimed a series of ordinances that transferred the ruling power to themselves and excluded the commons and lower clergy from Parliament. After they had twice forced the king to banish Gaveston, and the king had each time recalled him, the barons finally had the king's favorite kidnapped and executed.

In the meantime, Robert Bruce had almost completed his reconquest of Scotland, which he had begun shortly after 1305. In 1314 Edward II and his barons raised an army of some 100,000 men with which to crush Bruce, but in the attempt to lift the siege of Stirling they were decisively defeated (see Bannockburn, Battle of). For the following eight years the earl of Lancaster virtually ruled the kingdom. In 1322, however, with the advice and help of two new royal favorites, the baron Hugh le Despenser, and his son, also Hugh le Despenser, Edward defeated Lancaster in battle and had him executed. The le Despensers thereupon became de facto rulers of England. They summoned a Parliament in which the commons were included and which repealed the ordinances of 1311 on the ground that they had been passed by the barons only. The repeal was a great step forward in English constitutional development, for it meant that thenceforth no law passed by Parliament was valid unless the House of Commons approved it.

Edward again futilely invaded Scotland in 1322, and in 1323 signed a 13-year truce with Bruce. In 1325 Queen Isabella accompanied the Prince of Wales to France, where, in accordance with feudal custom, he did homage to king Charles IV for the fief of Aquitaine. Isabella, who desired to depose the le Despensers, allied herself with some barons who had been exiled by Edward. In 1326, with their leader, Roger de Mortimer, Isabella raised an army and invaded England. Edward and his favorites fled, but his wife's army pursued and executed the le Despensers and imprisoned Edward. In January 1327, Parliament forced Edward to resign and proclaimed the Prince of Wales king as Edward III. On September 21 of that year Edward II was murdered by his captors at Berkeley Castle, Gloucestershire.

© 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
  M iv
Prince Edmund Plantagenet Prince of Kent.
  F v
Princess Eleanor Plantagenet was born 1267. She died 1298.
  M vi
Prince John Plantagenet.
  M vii
Prince Henry Plantagenet.
  M viii
Prince Alphonso Plantagenet.
  F ix
Princess Isabel Plantagenet was born 1214. She died 1241.
  F x
Princess Margaret Plantagenet.
  F xi
Princess Berengeria Plantagenet.
  F xii
Princess Alice Plantagenet.
  F xiii
Princess Beatrice Plantagenet.
  F xiv
Princess Blanche Plantagenet.
  F xv
Lucy Corona.

Edmund de Stafford [Parents] was born 15 Jul 1273. He married Margaret Basset.

Margaret Basset [Parents] died 17 Mar 1336. She married Edmund de Stafford.

They had the following children:

  M i Earl Ralph Stafford was born 24 Sep 1301 and died 31 Aug 1372.

Nicholas de Stafford [Parents] died 1287. He married Alonore Clinton.

Alonore Clinton married Nicholas de Stafford.

They had the following children:

  M i Edmund de Stafford was born 15 Jul 1273.

Ralph Basset [Parents] died 11 Dec 1299. He married Hawise Grey.

Hawise Grey was born about 1239. She married Ralph Basset.

They had the following children:

  F i Margaret Basset died 17 Mar 1336.
  M ii
Ralph Basset was born about 1279. He died 28 Oct 1343.

Robert de Stafford [Parents] married Alice Corbet.

Alice Corbet married Robert de Stafford.

They had the following children:

  M i Nicholas de Stafford died 1287.

King Of England Edward Plantagenet I [Parents] [scrapbook] "Longshanks" was born 17 Jun 1239 in Westminister, England. He died 7 Jul 1307 in Burgh-On-The-San, Cumberland, England and was buried 28 Oct 1307 in Westminster Abbey, London, England. Longshanks married Princess Margaret Of France on 8 Sep 1299.

Other marriages:
Of Castile, Eleanor

Edward I, called Longshanks (1239-1307), king of England (1272-1307), of the house of Plantagenet. He was born in Westminster on June 17, 1239, the eldest son of King Henry III, and at 15 married Eleanor of Castile. In the struggles of the barons against the crown for constitutional and ecclesiastical reforms, Edward took a vacillating course. When warfare broke out between the crown and the nobility, Edward fought on the side of the king, winning the decisive battle of Evesham in 1265. Five years later he left England to join the Seventh Crusade. Following his father's death in 1272, and while he was still abroad, Edward was recognized as king by the English barons; in 1273, on his return to England, he was crowned.

The first years of Edward's reign were a period of the consolidation of his power. He suppressed corruption in the administration of justice and passed legislation allowing feudal barons and the crown to collect revenues from properties willed to the church.

On the refusal of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, ruler of Wales, to submit to the English crown, Edward began the military conflict that resulted, in 1284, in the annexation of Llewelyn's principality to the English crown. In 1290 Edward expelled all Jews from England. War between England and France broke out in 1293 as a result of the efforts of France to curb Edward's power in Gascony. Edward lost Gascony in 1293 and did not again come into possession of the duchy until 1303. About the same year in which he lost Gascony, the Welsh rose in rebellion.

Greater than either of these problems was the disaffection of the people of Scotland. In agreeing to arbitrate among the claimants to the Scottish throne, Edward, in 1291, had exacted as a prior condition the recognition by all concerned of his overlordship of Scotland. The Scots later repudiated him and made an alliance with France against England. To meet the critical situations in Wales and Scotland, Edward summoned a parliament, called the Model Parliament by historians because it was a representative body and in that respect was the forerunner of all future parliaments. Assured by Parliament of support at home, Edward took the field and suppressed the Welsh insurrection. In 1296, after invading and conquering Scotland, he declared himself king of that realm. In 1298 he again invaded Scotland to suppress the revolt led by Sir William Wallace. In winning the Battle of Falkirk in 1298, Edward achieved the greatest military triumph of his career, but he failed to crush Scottish opposition.

The conquest of Scotland became the ruling passion of his life. He was, however, compelled by the nobles, clergy, and commons to desist in his attempts to raise by arbitrary taxes the funds he needed for campaigns. In 1299 Edward made peace with France and married Margaret, sister of King Philip III of France. Thus freed of war, he again undertook the conquest of Scotland in 1303. Wallace was captured and executed in 1305. No sooner had Edward established his government in Scotland, however, than a new revolt broke out and culminated in the coronation of Robert Bruce as king of Scotland. In 1307 Edward set out for the third time to subdue the Scots, but he died en route near Carlisle on July 7, 1307.

© 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

Princess Margaret Of France "Princess Of France, Queen Of England" was born 1275 in Paris, France. She died 14 Feb 1317 in Marlborough Castle, Wiltshire, England. Princess Of France, Queen Of England married King Of England Edward Plantagenet I on 8 Sep 1299.

They had the following children:

  M i
Prince Thomas of Brotherton 1 was born 1300. He died 1338 in England.

Earl of Norfolk
  M ii Edmund Prince Of Wales Plantagenet was born 5 Aug 1301.

Archibald Douglas Earl of Angus ( 6th.) [Parents] was born 1 about 1490 in Douglasdale, Lanarkshire, Scotland. He died 2 before 22 Jan 1556/1557 in Tantallon Castle and was buried in Perthshire, Scotland. Archibald married 3 Princess Margaret , Of England Tudor on 8 Aug 1514 in Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh, Scotland. The marriage ended in divorce.

Archibald 1513 1489; 6Th Earl Of Angus until 1557..

Other marriages:
Hepburn, Margaret
Maxwell, Margaret

[Peer18.FTW]
RIN: 267
FULL TITLE: Earl of Angus ( 6th.)
DIVORCE: 11 Mar 1527
This Earl had, for a time, supreme power in Scotland, but in 1528 the
young
King James V escaped his hands and the sentence of forfeiture was passed
against Angus and his kinsmen.  On the death of James V, Angus returned to
Scotland, and was restored to his honours and possessions.  In 1547 he
hada
charter changing the limitation of the Earldom to heirs male.

Princess Margaret , Of England Tudor was born 29 Nov 1489 in Westminster Palace, London, Middlesex, England. She died 24 Nov 1541 in Methven Castle, Perthshire, England and was buried Nov 1541 in St. John's Monastery, Perth, Perthshire, England. Princess married 1 Archibald Douglas Earl of Angus ( 6th.) on 8 Aug 1514 in Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh, Scotland. The marriage ended in divorce.

Princess 8 Aug 1503 Holyrood Abbey, Edinburg, Scotland. She Queen Of Scotland. She 29 Nov 1489 Westminster. She 18 Oct 1541 Methven Castle.

Other marriages:
Stewart, Henry Lord Methven ( 1st.)
Stewart, James IV

[Peer18.FTW]
RIN: 265
DIVORCE: 11 Mar 1527

They had the following children:

  F i Margaret Douglas Countess of Lennox was born 18 Oct 1515 and died 9 Mar 1577/1578.

King FERDINAND III @ of Castile and Leon "The Saint" was born 1199. He died 1252 in Seville, Spain. The Saint married Joanna de Dammartin on 1237.

Other marriages:
von Hohenstaufen, Beatrice

Ferdinand III, the Saint, (1198 - May 30, 1252), king of Castile (1217) and Leon (1230), was son of Alphonso IX and of Berenguela of Castile, daughter of Alfonso VIII.

In 1231 he united Castile and Leon permanently.

Ferdinand spent much of his reign fighting the Moors. He captured the towns of Cordoba in 1236, Jaen in 1246, and Seville in 1248, and occupied Murcia in 1243, thereby completing the reconquest of Spain excepting Granada, whose king nevertheless did homage to Ferdinand.

In 1219, Ferdinand married the daughter of the emperor Philip of Swabia, Beatrice, by whom he had six sons and one daughter. After Beatrice died in 1236, he married Joan of Dammartin (or Ponthieu). His daughter by Joan was Eleanor of Castile, wife of King Edward I of England.

He founded the University of Salamanca and the Cathedral of Burgos.

Ferdinand was canonized by Pope Clement X in 1671.

Ferdinand III (of Castile and León), called The Saint (1199-1252), king of Castile (1217-52) and of León (1230-52); he was the son of King Alfonso IX of León and Castile. In 1217 Ferdinand's mother, Berengaria, renounced her title to the Castilian throne in favor of her son. Alfonso, who had himself expected to acquire Castile, was angered at his wife's action, and, aided by a group of Castilian nobles favorable to his claim, made war upon his newly crowned son. Ferdinand, however, with the wise counsel of his mother, proved more than a military match for Alfonso, who at length was forced to abandon his plan of conquering Castile. Through the good offices of Berengaria, Ferdinand was able to effect the peaceful union of León and Castile upon the death of his father in 1230. Ferdinand devoted his energies to prosecuting the war against the Moors, conquering Córdoba in 1236 and Seville in 1248. He was rigorous in his suppression of the heretical Albigenses, a fact largely responsible for his canonization more than two centuries later. In 1242 Ferdinand reestablished at Salamanca the university originally founded by his grandfather.

© 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

Joanna de Dammartin died 1279. She married King FERDINAND III @ of Castile and Leon on 1237.

They had the following children:

  F i Princess Eleanor Of Castile was born 1244 and died 29 Nov 1290.

Sir Robert de Tregoz was born before 1169. He died about 1215. Robert married Sybilla de Ewyas.

Sybilla de Ewyas [Parents] was born 1178. She died 1236. Sybilla married Sir Robert de Tregoz.

Other marriages:
de Clifford, Roger

They had the following children:

  F i
Lucy de Tregoz was born 1210. She died 1294.

Filaec married Donada.

Donada [Parents] was born about 1005. She died 25 Nov 1034. Donada married Filaec.

They had the following children:

  M i MacBeth MacFindlaech was born about 1005 and died 15 Aug 1057.

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