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  1. Lady Elizabeth de Montfort, Baroness Montagu (died August 1354) was an English noblewoman. Life. Elizabeth de Montfort was the daughter of Peter de Montfort (d. before 4 March 1287) of Beaudesert Castle in Warwickshire and his wife, Maud de la Mare.

    • August 1354
    • Maud de la Mare
  2. Montacute House is a late Elizabethan mansion in Montacute, South Somerset, England. An example of English architecture created during a period that was moving from the medieval Gothic to the more classically-inspired Renaissance style, Montacute is one of the few prodigy houses to have survived

  3. A masterpiece of Elizabethan Renaissance architecture and design, with towering walls of glass, glowing ham stone and surrounding garden. While the upper floors of the house will remain closed for 2024 there is plenty to see on the ground floor, and in the garden and parkland. Montacute, Somerset, TA15 6XP. Opening times.

    • Elizabeth Montacute1
    • Elizabeth Montacute2
    • Elizabeth Montacute3
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  4. 6. Mai 2015 · Biography. The Pope granted a dispensation for Hugh to marry Elizabeth de Montacute, the daughter of the Earl of Salisbury, Edward III’s closest friend. In the dispensation, the Pope noted that the petition had received the king’s support. Elizabeth was the widow of Giles de Badlesmere and had no children from the marriage.

    • Female
  5. Catalogue description The recumbent figure of Lady Elizabeth de Montacute (died 1354) on top of the tomb-chest with mourners carved in arches on the sides, in the north side of the Lady Chapel.(Interior view)

  6. Set in the beautiful village of Montacute, this magnificent home is a masterpiece of Elizabethan Renaissance architecture and design. With its towering walls of glass, the glow of Ham stone and surrounding garden and parkland, it was always intended to be a symbol of power and wealth.

  7. The Phelips Family and Montacute House Sir Edward Phelips, the builder of Montacute House, and his son Sir Robert Phelips knew many of the courtiers who are represented in portraits on this floor. Sir William Petre (Room 2) was granted the lease of the monastic lands at Montacute after the dissolution of the priory here in 1539. The Phelips family