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Ranulf was a
masculine given name in Old
French and Old Occitan, and is a
masculine given name in the
English language.
Ranulf was
introduced into England...
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Ranulf Flambard (c. 1060 – 5
September 1128) was a
medieval Norman Bishop of
Durham and an
influential government official of King
William Rufus of England...
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Ranulf II (also
known as
Ranulf de Gernon), 4th Earl of
Chester (1099–1153), was an Anglo-Norman
baron who
inherited the
honour of the
palatine county...
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Ranulf le Meschin, 3rd Earl of
Chester (1070–1129) was a
Norman magnate based in
northern and
central England.
Originating in
Bessin in Normandy, Ranulf...
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Ranulf de Blondeville, 6th Earl of
Chester and 1st Earl of
Lincoln (1170 – 26
October 1232),
known in some
references as the 4th Earl of
Chester (in the...
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Ranulf Higden or
Higdon (c. 1280–1363 or 1364) was an
English chronicler and a
Benedictine monk who
wrote the Polychronicon, a Late
Medieval magnum opus...
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Ranulf II (also
spelled Rannoux, Rannulf, Ramnulf, and Ranulph) (850 – 5
August 890) was
Count of
Poitou from 866 and Duke of
Aquitaine from 887. On the...
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Ranulf I (also Ramnulf, Rannulf, and Ranulph) (820–866) was a
Count of
Poitiers (from 835) and Duke of
Aquitaine (from 852). He is the son of Gerard, Count...
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Ranulf de
Glanvill (alias Glanvil, Glanville, Granville, etc., died 1190) was
Chief Justiciar of
England during the
reign of King
Henry II (1154–89) and...
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Ranulf fitz Walter, also
known as
Randolph fitz Walter, was a
prominent 11th-century noble. A
Norman knight,
Ranulf parti****ted in William, Duke of Normandy's...