-
Richard FitzUrse was an Anglo-Norman
nobleman and
feudal baron of
Bulwick in Northamptonshire.
Richard may have been the son of
Richard FitzUrse, who was...
- Sir
Reginald FitzUrse (1145–1173) was one of the four
knights who
murdered Thomas Becket in 1170. His name is
derived from
Fitz, the Anglo-Norman French...
- French. Reportedly, upon
hearing the king's words, four knights—Reginald
FitzUrse, Hugh de Morville,
William de
Tracy and
Richard le Breton—travelled from...
- William,
Count of Poitou[citation needed] and was a near
neighbour of the
FitzUrse family of
Williton in Somerset,[citation needed] a
member of
which family...
- a Free
Companion (mercenary)
Waldemar Fitzurse,
Prince John's
advisor - a
fictional son of
Reginald FitzUrse, a
murderer of
Archbishop Becket. Hugh de...
-
books are now rare. 24 books. 1.
Frances Cornford Different Days 2. G.
Fitzurse It Was Not
Jones 3.
Dorothy Wellesley Matrix 5. Ida
Affleck Graves The...
- Fitzwygram. In the arts, the
prefix Fitz has been used to
connote nobility.
Walter Scott's
Ivanhoe includes a Lord
Waldemar Fitzurse, a
noble advisor of prince...
-
Alicia FitzUrse,
daughter and co-heiress of
Ralph FitzUrse of
Williton in Somerset, son and heir of Sir
Reginald FitzUrse. The
canting arms of
FitzUrse showed...
-
Henry said, it was
interpreted as a
royal command. Four knights,
Reginald FitzUrse, Hugh de Morville,
William de
Tracy and
Richard le Breton, set out to confront...
-
signifies "a bear".
Similarly the proto-heraldic
emblem of Sir
Reginald FitzUrse (1145–1173), one of the four
knights who
murdered Thomas Becket in 1170...