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  1. If there is one man who shaped the State Papers it was William Cecil, first Baron of Burghley, Elizabeth I’s Secretary (1558-72) and Lord Treasurer (1572-1598). Burghley was many men rolled into one, the consummate servant of the Crown: in Britain today he would be Prime Minister, Foreign Secretary, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Cabinet ...

  2. Chapter 5 : The 1553 Succession Crisis. In early 1553, Edward VI drew up a ‘ Devise for the Succession ’ which attempted to overturn the Act of Succession 1544 (see Chapter 2 ). The King’s initial plan had been to find a male, Protestant, successor (overlooking the male, Catholic Lord Darnley, and his own half-sisters).

  3. William Cecil, 1. baron Burghley, KG, PC (ur. 13 września 1520 w Bourne, zm. 4 sierpnia 1598 w Londynie) – angielski polityk, kanclerz i doradca Elżbiety I, Lord Wielki Skarbnik od 1572 do 1598. Był synem Richarda Cecila i Jane Heckington. W latach 1535-41 studiował w St John’s College na Uniwersytecie Cambridge [1].

  4. In the Summer of 2011 the newly refurbished hotel William Cecil opened on The Burghley Estate, one of the foremost Treasure Houses of the United Kingdom. Add this to the beauty of Stamford and The William Cecil must be one of the best located hotels in the Country. Within a 2 minute drive from the A1, the hotel, formerly known as The Lady Anne ...

  5. William Cecil was born on 28 Mar. 1591, the only son of Robert Cecil, secretary of state to both Elizabeth I and James I. He was created a knight of the Bath on 6 Jan. 1605 and four months later, when his father was created earl of Salisbury, became known by the courtesy title of Viscount Cranborne. As the only heir to the earldom he lived an ...

  6. Book The William Cecil at Stamford, Lincolnshire on Tripadvisor: See 1,339 traveller reviews, 354 candid photos, and great deals for The William Cecil at Stamford, ranked #2 of 5 hotels in Lincolnshire and rated 4 of 5 at Tripadvisor.

  7. 31 de may. de 2018 · William Cecil. David Cecil, William’s grandfather had turned up at Bosworth on the victorious side. he went on to become one of Henry VII’s newly formed yeomen of the guard. His son meanwhile settled down to the business of being a Lincolnshire gentleman with court connections. William, born in 1520, went to Grantham Grammar school and then ...