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  1. 14 de mar. de 2023 · Edward Stafford, third duke of Buckingham, is one of the key examples that underpins this historiographical interpretation. He had royal blood from two sons of Edward III, from John of Gaunt via his Beaufort grandmother, and from Thomas of Woodstock, via his great-great-grandmother, Anne, countess of Stafford.

  2. Edward Stafford is the Duke of Buckingham in The Tudors, making him the second most powerful English noble after the King, and one of the few people who challenges King Henry's claim to the throne in favor of himself (though historically, he never did so, even though he was beheaded for treason). He is usually referred to simply as 'Buckingham ...

  3. Edward Stafford, né le 3 février 1478 au château de Brecon – décapité à Tower Hill le 17 mai 1521, 3 e duc de Buckingham, est un courtisan des cours d'Henri VII et d'Henri VIII. Soldat et diplomate sous le règne d’Henri VIII, il perdit toute influence politique après son échec dans la pacification du Pays de Galles (1518).

  4. Edward Stafford war der älteste Sohn von Henry Stafford, 2. Duke of Buckingham und von dessen Frau Katherine Woodville. Seine Mutter war eine Schwester der Königin Elizabeth Woodville. Über seine Urgroßmutter Anne Neville, Duchess of Buckingham war Edward mit den Königen aus dem Haus York verwandt.

  5. 11 de jun. de 2018 · Buckingham, Edward Stafford, 3rd duke of (1478–1521). Stafford's great-great-grandfather was killed at Shrewsbury in 1403 fighting for Henry IV; his great-grandfather, the 1st duke, died fighting for the Lancastrians at Northampton in 1460. His father, a prominent supporter of Richard III, was seized and executed at Salisbury in 1483, when ...

  6. Edward Stafford, New Zealand’s youngest leader, was William Fox’s great rival and a more stable influence on early colonial government. In 1842 this member of the Anglo-Irish gentry went to Nelson to farm but soon got mixed up in the democratic movement. He became Nelson’s superintendent in 1853 and entered Parliament two years later ...

  7. Edward Stafford continued on with his father's patronage of the Lord Stafford's Company, a travelling group of players, who were active until at least 1617. Death and succession. Stafford had one son, Edward (1602 – 6 April 1621). This son married Ann Wilford, daughter of James Wilford, Newman Hall, Quendon, Essex, and had two children: