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  1. Mary Arundell may refer to: Mary Arundell (courtier) (died 1557) Mary Arundell, Baroness Arundell (c. 1563–1607) Mary or Margaret Arundell (died 1691), wife of John Arundell, 2nd Baron Arundell of Trerice. Category: Human name disambiguation pages.

  2. The next prominent members of the Lanherne family are Sir Thomas (d.1552) and Humphry Arundell (1513-1549-50), of both of whom accounts are given below. From Sir John Arundell, the knight-banneret of Therouenne, descended the Arundells of Wardour Castle; and by the marriage of Lady Mary Bellings-Arundell, in 1739, to Henry, seventh Baron ...

  3. Mary Arundell. Mary Arundell, comtessa d'Arundel (m. 20 o 21 d'octubre de 1557) va ser una noble i cortesana anglesa. Va ser l'única filla de Sir John Arundell de Lanherne ( Cornualla ), i de la seva segona esposa, Katherine Grenville. Va ser dama de la cort anglesa durant el regnat d' Enric VIII, servint a dues de les reines i a la filla del ...

  4. Mary Arundell was the only child of Sir John Arundell of Lanherne, Cornwall, by his second wife, Catherine Grenville, a daughter of Sir Thomas Grenville (d.1513). She came to court in 1536, maid of honor to Queen Jane Seymour before she married the Earl of Sussex , 1537, as his third wife.

  5. On this day in Tudor history, 20th October 1557 (or possibly 21st), in the reign of Queen Mary I, courtier Mary Arundell died at Bath Place in London. Mary is a very interesting Tudor lady. She served at least two of King Henry VIII’s wives, and she was a countess twice over, having been married to both the Earls of Sussex and Arundel.

  6. 28 de abr. de 2022 · She died on 20 October 1557 at Arundel House, The Strand, London, England. [1] She was buried on 28 October 1557 at St. Clement Danes Church, The Strand, London, England. [4] She was buried at Arundel Castle, Arundel, Sussex, England. [4] As a result of her marriage, Mary Arundell was styled as Countess of Sussex on 14 January 1536/37.

  7. 8 de ago. de 2023 · The first three signatures—those ofLady Mary Percy and her cousins Dorothy Arundell and Gertrude Arundell—on a Latin letter dated October 1599 from the prospective founding members of the newly established English Benedictine convent in Brussels, the Abbey of the Glorious Assumption of Our Lady, to the papal nuncio and the Archbishop of Mechelen, stating the nuns’ choice of abbess.