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Ligulf (sometimes
Liulf or
Ligulf of Lumley; died 1080) was an Anglo-Danish
nobleman with
landholdings in the
north of England.
Ligulf was
married to Ealdgyth...
-
occurred as
revenge for the
murder of Walcher's
English right-hand man,
Ligulf.
Ligulf had been
connected into the
Bamburgh kindred marrying,
according to...
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Queen consort of Scotland. A
fourth daughter Ealdgyth (Algitha)
married Ligulf, who was
murdered in 1080.
Before his
death they had two sons:
Uhtred and...
-
members of the
related Audley and
Stanley families are two
apparent brothers,
Ligulf de
Aldelegha and Adam de Standlega, who
during the
reigns of
kings Stephen...
- was
Ligulf of Lumley, who was
connected by
birth to the old
Northumbrian line and was
married to the
daughter of Ealdred, Earl of Bernicia.
Ligulf's presence...
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public access. In 1069,
after the
Norman conquest the
English landlord Ligulf de
Greystoke was re-granted his land and he
built a
wooden tower surrounded...
- built, and is the
supposed location of the
murder of
Ligulf by
Bishop Walcher's
officers after Ligulf complained to the
bishop of
their cruelty. The Northumbrians...
- of
Derby then
merged in the Crown. The
Stanley family was
descended from
Ligulf of Aldithley, who was also the
ancestor of the
Audleys (see Audley-Stanley...
- in the
Domesday Book as
having two
ploughlands and
being the
property of
Ligulf in 1066, but King
William in 1086. The name was
recorded as
either Elrebec...
-
Uhtred may have been
identical with the man of that name who was a son of
Ligulf, a
great Northumbrian thegn killed at
Durham in 1080. Dolfin,
called in...