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  1. 12 de abr. de 2020 · 1549 (18th February) Thomas Seymour was charged with having committed treason. The treasonable offences included trying to marry the King’s sister, Lady Elizabeth, without permission and of trying to depose his brother by winning over the young King’s affections and abducting him.

  2. Thomas Seymour (1509 ou avant 1 – 20 mars 1549 1 ), 1er baron Seymour de Sudeley, est un homme politique anglais. Il est le frère de Jane Seymour, troisième épouse du roi Henri VIII 2. Avec son frère, Édouard Seymour, premier duc de Somerset et Lord Protecteur de l'Angleterre, il se dispute le contrôle de leur neveu, le jeune roi ...

  3. 9 de jun. de 2022 · A new Starz series, “Becoming Elizabeth,” dramatizes the future queen’s controversial relationship with her much-older stepfather, Thomas Seymour. In 1547, Elizabeth's brother, 9-year-old ...

  4. 21 de ago. de 2017 · Thomas Seymour felt he deserved a lot more as an uncle to the king and no matter what he did to obtain that goal he was thwarted, either by others or himself. During all these arguments with his brother, Thomas was continuously trying to get a bill passed through Parliament that would make him Governor to the King.

  5. 20 de mar. de 2018 · 1549: Thomas Seymour, more wit than judgment. Having been elevated to the shadow of the throne by one sibling, Thomas Seymour on this date in 1549 was seen to the block by another sibling. The brother of Henry VIII’s favorite queen, Jane Seymour, our Thomas was when that burly king kicked the bucket beautifully positioned for a share of power ...

  6. Thomas Seymour, the fourth of six sons of Sir John Seymour and Margery Wentworth, was probably born at Wolf Hall, Wiltshire, in about 1509. Through the Wentworths, the Seymours claimed royal blood through descent from Edward III. Edward's father had been knighted in 1497 by Henry VII after the Battle of Blackheath.

  7. 3 de mar. de 2010 · Thomas Seymour had been Henry VIII’s ambassador to the King of the Roman and it was on his return to England in January 1543 that he met Catherine. While is has been suggested that Seymour was nothing but a gold digger, Elizabeth Norton points out that in 1543 Catherine Parr “was no great catch”, being the widow, or nearly widow, of “a mere baron”.