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  1. English: Elizabeth Seymour, Lady Cromwell (c.1518–1568) was the daughter of Sir John Seymour (d.1536) and Margery Wentworth. She married three times: she married Sir Anthony Ughtred (d.1534) in 1530 and Gregory Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell (c.1520–1551) in 1537.

  2. 18 de ene. de 2018 · Elizabeth Seymour was a younger daughter of Sir John Seymour and his wife, Margery Wentworth. Her date of birth is unknown but is estimated to have been between 1511 and 1518. She married her first husband, Sir Anthony Ughtred, in January 1531; since sixteenth-century women could marry, at the earliest, at the age of twelve, realistically Elizabeth could have been born no later than January ...

  3. 19 de mar. de 2022 · On this day in Tudor history, 19th March 1568, Elizabeth Seymour, Lady Cromwell, died. She was around fifty years old at her death. Elizabeth was the sister of a queen, and a lord protector, and two of her brothers were executed as traitors, but what else do we know about Elizabeth Seymour and how is she linked to the Cromwell family and a portrait once thought to be of Queen Catherine Howard?

  4. Holbein, Hans (II) - Portrait of a lady, probably of the Cromwell Family formerly known as Catherine Howard - WGA11565.jpg. 1,031 × 1,500; 265 KB. 2 references. sex or gender. female. 0 references. name in native language. Elizabeth Seymour (English) 1 reference.

  5. 15 de oct. de 2023 · El diario secreto de Adelaide Horatia Elizabeth Seymour, tatarabuela de Diana de Gales, sale a subasta.El diario –con un precio de venta previsto entre 300 y 400 libras– se subastará este ...

  6. Margery Seymour (died c. 1528) Elizabeth Seymour (c. 1518 – 19 Mar 1568) Dorothy Seymour (c. 1519 – 4 January 1574) married firstly, Sir Clement Smith (c. 1515 – 26 August 1552) of Little Baddow, Essex and secondly, Thomas Leventhorpe of Shingle Hall, Hertfordshire.

  7. 3 de ago. de 2016 · Published by janetwertman on August 3, 2016. Elizabeth Seymour (probably), by Hans Holbein the Younger (public domain via Wikimedia Commons) In March 1537, Jane Seymour’s sister Elizabeth, a widow in a somewhat impoverished state, had written to Thomas Cromwell hoping to be considered for an award of lands from one of the dissolved abbeys.