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  1. 28 de ene. de 2015 · File: Hans Holbein the Younger - William Fitzwilliam, Earl of Southampton RL 12206.jpg From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository Jump to navigation Jump to search

  2. 17 de oct. de 2023 · Sir William FitzWilliam, Alderman & Sheriff of London left a will on 28 May 1534.11,2,6 He died on 9 August 1534 at St. Thomas the Apostle, London, Middlesex, England; Buried at Marholm, Northamptonshire.1,11,2,3,6,7 His estate was probated on 5 September 1534.2,6. Family 1 Anne Hawes b. c 1460, d. b 1514 Children.

  3. The seventh Earl was William Wentworth-Fitzwilliam (25 July 1872 – 15 February 1943), the eldest son of Viscount Milton (William Wentworth Fitzwilliam). He represented Wakefield in Parliament as a Liberal Unionist. When he died the titles passed to his son, the eighth Earl. The eighth Earl was Peter Wentworth-Fitzwilliam (31 December 1910 ...

  4. In 1537 Sir William Fitzwilliam ( c. 1490–1542), lord high admiral of England, was created earl of Southampton. A son of Sir William Fitzwilliam of Aldwarke, near Rotherham, Fitzwilliam was a companion in boyhood of Henry VIII., and was knighted for his services at the siege of Tournai in 1513. Later he was treasurer of Cardinal Wolsey’s ...

  5. WILLIAM FITZWILLIAM, Earl of Southampton (d. 1542), lord high admiral of England, was the younger son of Sir Thomas Fitzwilliam of Aldwarke, West Riding of Yorkshire, by Lucy, daughter and coheiress of John Neville, marquis of Montacute. From the time when he was not more than ten years of age he had been brought up with the king [ Henry VIII ...

  6. 22 de may. de 2004 · William FitzWilliam, 1st and last Earl of Southampton was born circa 1490. 1 He was the son of Sir Thomas FitzWilliam and Lady Lucy Neville. 1 He married Mabel Clifford, daughter of Henry Clifford, 10th Lord Clifford and Anne St. John, in November 1513. 1 He died on 15 October 1542, from 'his ordinary malady of the stone', without legitimate issue. 1,2 His will (dated 10 September 1542) was ...

  7. It was this Sir William Fitzwilliam, later Earl of Southampton, who first employed his young namesake and who by 1536 considered him a trusted servant and secretary. Fitzwilliam assisted the earl in his examination of prisoners in Surrey in 1538 and in the same year Southampton appointed him the principal feoffee of all his extensive property in Hampshire, Surrey and Sussex.