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  1. Frances WALSINGHAM (C. Essex) 2. Mary WALSINGHAM. Son of William Walsingham of Scadbury, Chislehurst, Kent, by Joyce, dau. of Sir Edmund Denny of Cheshunt, sister of ...

  2. 9 de may. de 2024 · Francis Walsingham (1532-1590) on engraving from 1829. Getty. Meet the man who ordered the execution of Mary Queen of Scots while working as a spymaster for Queen Elizabeth I - Francis Walsingham. Throughout Elizabeth, I's reign England was in constant danger, both from external and internal threats. Spain and France looked north and regarded ...

  3. When Sir Francis Walsingham Knight was born about 1532, in Chislehurst, Kent, England, his father, Sir William Walsingham, was 45 and his mother, Joyce Denny, was 37. He married Anne Barne in January 1562. He died on 6 April 1590, in Tower Hamlets, London, England, United Kingdom, at the age of 59, and was buried in London, England. More.

  4. 14 de may. de 2013 · Considered the first British spymaster, Francis Walsingham held the position of the modern day Foreign Secretary and head of MI5 and MI6. A sixteenth-century ‘M’, he commanded a network of over 50 agents all over the country and throughout Europe as far east as Turkey, and usually supported this elaborate espionage network from his own pocket.

  5. Frances Devereux was born 30 September 1599 in Walsingham House, Seething Lane, London, England, United Kingdom to Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex (1566-1601) and Frances Walsingham (1567-1633) and died 24 April 1674 of unspecified causes. She married William Seymour, 2nd Duke of Somerset (1587-1660) 3 March 1616 in Drayton Bassett.

  6. 9 de sept. de 2018 · Biography: Sir Francis Walsingham. Son of William Walsingham and Joyce Denny. Married to Anne Barne and Ursula St. Barbe. Father of Frances Devereux, Countess of Essex and Mary Walsingham. Sir Francis Walsingham was Elizabeth I’s “Spy Master” and was one of her primary secretaries. It was Walsingham and his men who discovered the ...

  7. Walsingham and his second wife had one daughter, Frances. Diplomacy and espionage. The queen's secretary of state William Cecil (Lord Burghley; 1520–1598; see entry), soon discovered that Walsingham possessed great political talent. He employed Walsingham to find out whatever he could about foreign spies in London.