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  1. Roger de Mortimer, 4th Earl of March, 6th Earl of Ulster (11 April 1374 – 20 July 1398) was an English nobleman. He was considered the heir presumptive to King Richard II , his mother's first cousin, as being a great-grandson of King Edward III .

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  3. The Mortimers were a powerful aristocratic family of the Welsh Marches, centered around Wigmore Castle in Herefordshire, who from the fourteenth century held the title of Earl of March.

  4. Problems with a neurotic Richard II Roger Mortimer, 4th Earl of March (d1398) and his uncle Sir Thomas Mortimer (d1403) The lives of these two Mortimers were closely linked. Sir Thomas Mortimer played a significant role in some of the most momentous events in the reign of Richard.

  5. The Earls of March When Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March was executed in 1330, most of his lands and titles were forfeited. His eldest son, Edmund, survived his father for only a year. Although never given the title Earl of March he was called to.

  6. Mortimer, Roger, 4th earl of March and Ulster (1374–98). Mortimer was a great-grandson of Edward III through his mother Philippa, sole heiress of Edward's second surviving son Lionel, duke of Clarence, whose wife was heiress to the earldom of Ulster.

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  8. Roger Mortimer, 3rd Baron Mortimer of Wigmore, 1st Earl of March (25 April 1287 – 29 November 1330), was an English nobleman and powerful Marcher Lord who gained many estates in the Welsh Marches and Ireland following his advantageous marriage to the wealthy heiress Joan de Geneville, 2nd Baroness Geneville.

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