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  1. When Sir Thomas FitzAlan was born about 1387, in Betchworth, Surrey, England, his father, Sir John FitzAlan 2nd Baron Arundel, was 24 and his mother, Elizabeth Despenser, was 27. He married Johanna Moyne. They were the parents of at least 1 daughter. He died about 1430, at the age of 45. More.

  2. Thomas Howard, IV duque de Norfolk ( Kenninghall, 10 de marzo de 1536 - Londres, 2 de junio de 1572) fue un noble inglés, también primer conde de Southampton . Hijo del poeta Henry Howard, conde de Surrey, fue educado por John Foxe, martirologista protestante. Su padre falleció antes que su abuelo, por lo que heredó el ducado de Norfolk ...

  3. THOMAS ARUNDEL (1353-1414), Archbishop of Canterbury, was the third son of Richard Fitzalan, Earl of Arundel, the title of his father being, according to a very common custom, used as a family surname. His mother was Eleanor, daughter of Henry Plantagenet, Earl of Lancaster, and was his fathers second wife.

  4. Thomas Arundel. (1353–1414). In the late 14th and early 15th centuries Thomas Arundel was both the archbishop of Canterbury and an influential figure in English politics. He is remembered particularly for his strong opposition to the religious reform movement of the Lollards during the reign of King Henry IV. Thomas Arundel was born in 1353.

  5. The third son of Richard Fitz Alan, 8th earl of Arundel, Thomas was an Oxford undergraduate when he became bishop of Ely in 1374. When the baronial critics of Richard II took control in 1386, Arundel was appointed chancellor and promoted to the archbishopric of York in 1388. He was replaced as chancellor after Richard's resumption of authority ...

  6. Sir Thomas Arundell of Wardour Castle in Wiltshire (c. 1502 – 26 February 1552) was a Cornish administrator and alleged conspirator. Arundell was connected by birth and marriage to the crown and to several of the most important families in England, and by the time of the death of King Henry VIII was one of the most experienced government officers in England.

  7. 11 de jul. de 2014 · Extract. In July 1399, the exiled Henry of Lancaster returned to England with the exiled archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Arundel, and a few followers and successfully wrested the English throne from Richard II. Historians have long debated the events of the revolution of 1399 and Henry's subsequent reign.