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  1. When George III surrendered his income from Crown lands in exchange for the Civil List, the Duchy of Lancaster was not mentioned at all as it was bankrupt for most of the century, due to previous monarchs selling its assets or granting leases for political favours. [11]

  2. www.duchyoflancaster.co.uk › about-the-duchy › historyHistory | Duchy of Lancaster

    The ancient Lancaster inheritance we know as the Duchy of Lancaster began in 1265, when Henry III gifted the baronial lands of Simon de Montfort to his son, Edmund. A year later, Henry added the estate of Robert Ferrers, Earl of Derby and then the ‘honour, county, town and castle of Lancaster’, giving Edmund a new title, Earl of Lancaster.

  3. The Duchy of Lancaster, however, was not mentioned in this arrangement. This may have been because its revenues were not thought worth taking or because the Duchy was seen as separate from the hereditary revenues of the Crown.

  4. The Duchy of Lancaster. The earldom of Lancaster was created in 1267 by King Henry III for his second son, Edmund. This came in the aftermath of England's first revolution, in which Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, had seized power.

  5. A violent rebellion in the thirteenth century laid the foundations of the Duchy of Lancaster. The Lancaster inheritance is created. A dispute between King Henry III of England and his powerful barons led in 1262 to an uprising known as the Barons’ War. The King emerged victorious.

  6. Sep 26, 2020 · A vast collection of properties in Northern England and London called the Duchy of Lancaster produces a sizable income for Queen Elizabeth. Here's what you need to know about it.

  7. The earldom of Lancaster was a vast state within a state. It became the Duchy of Lancaster, and the earldoms of Hereford and Northampton were added to it in 1384. In 1399 the heir to the Duchy, Henry of Bolingbroke, seized the throne as Henry IV.

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