Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Joan Butler (née Beauchamp ), Countess of Ormond (1396 – 3 or 5 August 1430) was the first wife of James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond, and the mother of his five children. Their principal residence was Kilkenny Castle in Ireland.

  2. Joan Butler, married James Butler of Dunboyne, by whom she had issue Ellice (1481–1530). Married firstly to MacMorrish; and secondly in 1503 to Gerald Fitzgerald, 3rd Lord Decies (1482–1533), grandson of James FitzGerald, 6th Earl of Desmond .

  3. Joan Fitzgerald, Countess of Ormond, Countess of Desmond (Irish: Siobhán Nic Gearailt) (died 1565), was an Irish noblewoman and heiress, a member of the Old English FitzGerald family, who were also known as the "Geraldines". She married three times.

  4. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Joan Butler (neé de Beauchamp), Countess of Ormond (1396 – 3 August 1430) was a Cambro-Norman noblewoman, and the first wife of Irish peer, James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond, and the mother of his five children. Their principal residence was Kilkenny Castle, Kilkenny, Ireland.

  5. The death of Joan Fitzgerald, countess of Ormond, Ossory and Desmond, at Askeaton, County Limerick, on 2 January 1565 represented more than the demise of one of the most politically influential and wealthy women in late sixteenth-century Ireland; it also heralded the collapse of the peace between her husband and her son that she had brokered and...

  6. 26 de mar. de 2021 · ‘You have too Piteous a Face to be a Warrior’: Joan Fitzgerald, Countess of Ormond, Ossory and Desmond – Agent, Peace Broker, Advocate Damien Duffy Book: Aristocratic Women in Ireland, 1450-1660

  7. 5 Family, Marriage and Politics: The six Daughters of Margaret Fitzgerald and Piers Butler and the Ongoing Revival of the Earldom in the Sixteenth Century. 6 ‘You have too Piteous a Face to be a Warrior’: Joan Fitzgerald, Countess of Ormond, Ossory and Desmond – Agent, Peace Broker, Advocate.