Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 29 de ene. de 2017 · Catherine Willoughby. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. English: Catherine Willoughby, Duchess of Suffolk, suo jure 12th Baroness Willoughby de Eresby (1519-1580), was an English noblewoman. Português: Catherine Willoughby, Duquesa de Suffolk, suo jure 12ª Baronesa de Willoughby Eresby (1519-1580), foi uma fidalga inglesa.

  2. 24 de ago. de 2021 · Katherine Willoughby, (later Brandon and Bertie), Duchess of Suffolk (1519–1580) was an influential patron of clerics, printers, and writers who promoted religious reform and continental-style worship in sixteenth-century England. In 1547, two texts declared her religious and political allegiances. The first, “Then they asked me of my lady ...

  3. The accession of Mary Tudor to the throne in 1553 had devastating consequences for Willoughby, her kin, and her patronage network. In the first year of Mary’s reign, Willoughby’s step-granddaughter, Jane Grey, and Grey’s husband, father, and father-in-law were executed for treason after a failed attempt to install Grey as queen to protect the religious reforms of the Edwardine regime.

  4. Katherine Willoughby was born on March 22, 1519, the daughter of the eleventh Baron Willoughby and his wife Maria De Salinis, one of Katherine of Aragon’s original Spanish Ladies in Waiting. In March 1528, the Baron died without a son, making nine-year-old Katherine his only heir. Henry VIII controlled the little girl’s wardship- but that ...

  5. Hace 3 horas · Catherine Poduka (nee Habeeb), age 94, passed away Oct. 31, 2015 at Lake West Medical Center in Willoughby. She was born Aug. 29, 1921 in Cleveland and has been a Lake County resident for 70 years.

  6. 20 de ene. de 2022 · Catherine Willoughby, Duchess of Suffolk, fleeing Catholic England with her husband Richard Bertie, her daughter Susan and a wetnurse. Credit: Extraordinary Women of the Medieval and Renaissance World. A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Press 2000

  7. 1 ‘As Earnest as Any’: Catholicism and Reform among the Willoughby Family and its Affinity in Henrician England; 2 ‘Tasting the Word of God’: Evangelicalism and the Religious Development of Katherine Willoughby, Duchess of Suffolk; 3 Living Stones and Faithful Masons: Women and the Evangelical Church during the Early English Reformation