Hij heeft/had een relatie met NN Breton woman.
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Suffolk, other creations: Shortly after the Norman Conquest and Earldom conbining Norfolk and Suffolk was conferred on one Ralph the Staller [Staller was a functionary of some sort in the Saxon Royal Court]. At that time, and seemingly for nearly three centuries afterwards, no distinction was made between Norfolk and Suffolk for the purpose of conferring titles based on county names, the two areas being conflated as the land of the East Angles. In any case, with Ralph's death a few years after he was created Earl the title apparently passed back into the possession of the Crown, though within another year it seems to have been conferred on Ralph's son, called Ralph de Gael from a fief he held in Britanny. The second Ralph, Earl of this somewhat shadowy creation, rebelled against William I (The Conqueror) in 1075 and was stripped of his titles and lands. [Burke's Peerage, p. 2761]
Suffolk, other creations: Shortly after the Norman Conquest andEarldom conbining Norfolk and Suffolk was conferred on one Ralph theStaller [Staller was a functionary of some sort in the Saxon RoyalCourt]. At that time, and seemingly for nearly three centuriesafterwards, no distinction was made between Norfolk and Suffolk forthe purpose of conferring titles based on county names, the two areasbeing conflated as the land of the East Angles. In any case, withRalph's death a few years after he was created Earl the titleapparently passed back into the possession of the Crown, though withinanother year it seems to have been conferred on Ralph's son, calledRalph de Gael from a fief he held in Britanny. The second Ralph, Earlof this somewhat shadowy creation, rebelled against William I (TheConqueror) in 1075 and was stripped of his titles and lands. [Burke'sPeerage, p. 2761]
{geni:about_me} Please see the excellent and well-researched biography of Raoul l'Anglais at https://broceliande.brecilien.org/Ralph-de-Gael, with many references to academic research of Katherine Keats-Rohan and others.
'''Ralph "the Staller" of Norfolk''', also called Radulfus Anglicus (Ralph "the Englishman"), was part English by birth, given his cognomen "Anglicus". He was the first known lord of Gaël at Rennes County, Normandy. He was possibly, tantalizingly, indicated in unreliable sources, as distantly related to the rebel English noble, Hereward the Wake.
Ralph was an influential figure as the steward of King Edward the Confessor, acting as Staller, or constable, between 1043 and 1066. Ralph held land in eastern England, in the counties of Essex, Suffolk, and Norfolk, as well as Lincolnshire.
Ralph supported William of Normandy in his conquest of England in October 1066. He was granted the earldom of East Anglia by William the Conqueror. An 1890 edition of the [http://books.google.com/books?id=4Z4UAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA622&lpg=PA622&dq=le+guader&source=bl&ots=DveJaOX-vV&sig=44vroq8tjsY0K3cBX25Z27rkmv0&hl=en&ei=gbFdTdSIMYactwfuhp2vCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CBwQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=le%20guader&f=false Encyclopedia Britannica] notes that "The Earldom of Norfolk and Suffolk was Bestowed by the Conqueror upon Ralph le Guader."
Ralph held land in eastern England, in the counties of Essex, Suffolk, and Norfolk, as well as Lincolnshire.
Ralph supported William of Normandy in his conquest of England in October 1066.
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