Hugh LACY, LORD OF MEATH

Birth:
Abt 1115
Ewas Lacy, Herefordshire, England
Death:
1186
Ireland
Burial:
Abt 1185
Father:
Gilbert LACY, KNIGHT TEMPLAR
Mother:
Notes:
                   Note: Hugh de Laci was employed in the conquest of Ireland, and for his services there obtained from King Henry II, the whole county of Meath. He was subsequently constituted governor of Dublin and justice of Ireland. But incurring the displeasure of his royal master by marrying without license the king of Connaught's dau., he was divested in 1181 of the custody of the metropolis. In four years afterwards he was murdered by one Malvo Miadaich, a mean person, in revenge for the severity with which he had treated the workmen employed by him in erecting the castle of Lurhedy. He left issue, Walter, his successor; Hugh, constable of Ireland; Elayne, m. to Richard de Beaufo. [Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd, London, 1883, p. 310, Lacy, Earls of Lincoln]
Source includes, but is not limited to:
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.
                  
Blocked
Birth:
Father:
Mother:
Pedigree
Sources:
TITLE
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
Abt 1160
Meath, Ireland
Death:
Bef 15 Nov 1241
Marr:
Nov 1200
 
Notes:
                   Note: Walter de Lacy obtained, 9 King John [1208], a confirmation of his dominion of Meath, to be held by him and his heirs for the service of fifty knights' fees; as also of all his fees in Fingall, in the valley of Dublin, to be held by the service of seven knights' fees. In three years afterwards, King John passing into Ireland with his army, Laci was forced to deliver himself up and all his possessions in that kingdom and to abjure the realm. He was subsequently banished from England, but in the 16th of the same reign [1215], he seems to have made his peace, for he was then allowed to repossess Ludlow, with his castle; and the next year he recovered all his lands in Ireland, except the castle and lands of Drogheda, by paying a fine of 4,000 marks to the crown. After this we find him sheriff of Herefordshire in the 18th of John [1217], and 2nd of Henry III [1218], and in the 14th of the latter king [1230], joined with Geffrey de Marisco, then justice of Ireland, and Richard de Burgh, in subduing the King of Connaught, who had taken up arms to expel the English from his territories. So much for the secular acts of this powerful feudal baron. In Ireland he founded the abbey of Beaubec, which was first a cell to the great abbey of Bec, in Normandy, and afterwards to Furneise, in Lancashire. Walter Laci m. Margaret, dau. of William de Braose, of Brecknock, and in the year 1241, being then infirm and blind, departed this life, Vir, inter omnes nobiles Hiberniae, eminentissimus, leaving his great inheritance to be divided amongst females, viz.., the daus. of Gilbert de Lacy, his son (who d. in his life time), and Isabel, his wife, sister of John Bigod, which daughters were Maud, wife of Peter de Geneva, and Margery, m. to John de Verdon. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 310, Lacy, Earls of Lincoln]
Source includes, but is not limited to:
Ancestral File and the IGI, International Genealogical Index,both
resource systems developed and solely owned by The Church of JesusChrist of
Latter Day Saints.
                  
FamilyCentral Network
Hugh Lacy, Lord of Meath - Blocked

Hugh Lacy, Lord of Meath was born at Ewas Lacy, Herefordshire, England Abt 1115. His parents were Gilbert Lacy, Knight Templar and .

He married Blocked .

They were the parents of 1 child:
Walter Lacy, Lord of Meath born Abt 1160.

Hugh Lacy, Lord of Meath died 1186 at Ireland .