When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. De Carteret family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Carteret_family

    Renaud de Carteret V (1316-Hellier de Carteret (1563-1578) Philippe de Carteret II (1584–1643) Philippe de Carteret I (1552–1594) Jason De Carteret (19xx-) Sir Francis de Carteret Attorney-General of Jersey; George William de Carteret (1869 Jersey-4 September 1940) Cecil de Carteret (1886–3 January 1932) Philip de Carteret, 8th of St Ouen ...

  3. Category:Carteret family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Carteret_family

    The de Carteret family originated in Normandy. They colonised the island of Sark as Seigneurs. At the time of the restoration, some became Barons Carteret and were granted lands in the Carolinas and in the State that became New Jersey. Their ancestral seat is Saint Ouen's Manor, Jersey, still today owned by persons of that name.

  4. Renaud de Carteret, Baron of Carteret and Lord of Saint Ouen

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaud_De_Carteret,_Baron...

    Sir Renaud, (Reginald), de Carteret, Seigneur of Carteret ., (1063–1125) is first found in a charter, dated 1125, from the Abbey of Mont Saint-Michel. He went on the First Crusade , 1096-99, with Robert Curthose , Duke of Normandy .

  5. Sir Philip Carteret, 1st Baronet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Philip_Carteret,_1st...

    Philip Carteret was the son of Philippe de Carteret II.He succeeded to the Seigneurie of Sark on the death of his father in 1643.. During the English Civil War, Carteret was lieutenant to his kinsman George Carteret, and was knighted on the beach of St Aubin's Bay in Jersey by the exiled Charles, Prince of Wales in 1645.

  6. Reginald de Carteret, 1st Seigneur of Saint Ouen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reginald_De_Carteret,_1st...

    With the separation of Normandy from England, (1204), Renaud de Carteret had to choose (with many others) between his possessions in Jersey and those in continental Normandy. Although he had far greater lands on the continent, of which the town of Carteret still bears the name, he chose to throw in his lot with Jersey and remain faithful to the ...

  7. Carteret (name) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carteret_(name)

    Carteret (earlier, de Carteret) is a surname of Norman origin. It derives from Carteret, Normandy [], an inhabited place on the northwest coast of the Cotentin peninsula, facing the Channel Islands.

  8. Sir Philippe de Carteret, 3rd Seigneur of Saint Ouen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_Philippe_De_Carteret...

    Sir Philippe de Carteret, 3rd Seigneur of Saint Ouen, (1205-1285) was the Seigneur of Saint Ouen of Saint Ouen's Manor during the reign of King Edward I. [1] He inherited the title from his father Sir Philippe de Carteret, 2nd Seigneur of Saint Ouen, who was unsuccessful in his attempts to regain the family's Norman holdings that were lost under King John.

  9. History of Jersey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Jersey

    The fief of St Ouen, the most senior fief in Jersey's feudal structure, was by 1135 in the hands of the de Carteret family. They held extensive lands in Carteret as well, but these were lost by them after King John's loss of Normandy, so they decided to settle on the island. Between the 12th and 20th centuries, there were an estimated 245 fiefs ...