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Enguerrand VII de Coucy, KG (1340 – 18
February 1397), also
known as
Ingelram de
Coucy and
Ingelram de Couci, was a
medieval French nobleman and the last Lord of...
-
medieval French name,
derived from a
Germanic name
Engilram (Engelram,
Ingelram), from Angil, the
tribal name of the Angles, and
hramn "raven".[citation...
-
Enguerrand V, Lord of
Coucy (died 1323)
inherited the
title of Lord of
Coucy and
castle from his
maternal uncle,
Enguerrand IV in 1311. He was also lord...
- and also
spelled Lyon) is an
eminent Anglo-Norman
family descended from
Ingelram de Lyons, Lord of Lyons, who
arrived in
England with the
Norman Conquest...
-
widow lived until 1572. Northumberland's two brothers, Sir
Thomas and Sir
Ingelram Percy, took an
active part in the
management of his estates. They were...
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Ingram Lindsay [Ingeram de Lindesay],
Doctor in
Canon Law, was a 15th-century
Scottish cleric.
Despite being of
illegitimate birth - one of
several sons...
-
mention a lady
called Idonea de Herst, who
married a
Norman nobleman named Ingelram de Monceux.
Around this time, the
manor began to be
called the "Herst of...
- of whom
appeared in the
Durham Liber Vitae: Hugh,
Enguerrand (Ingram or
Ingelram), Bernard, and Henry; his
eldest son Hugh
succeeded him,
while his younger...
- his
father and died
during the
Third Crusade Ida (d. c. 1205),
married Ingelram,
Count of
Saint Pol and secondly,
castellan William IV of Saint-Omer Fastrad...
- Justice, in 1982. In the sequel, the protagonist, now
named as
Raymond Ingelram, goes
undercover in **** Germany,
looking for a
second chance to hunt the...