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  1. Catherine Willoughby (22 de marzo de 1519 - 19 de septiembre de 1580) fue una influyente cortesana que vivió en la Corte inglesa durante la época Tudor. Fue la cuarta esposa de Charles Brandon , I duque de Suffolk , después de que falleciera su esposa María Tudor, reina de Francia , aunque anteriormente había estado prometida con Henry ...

  2. Katherine Brandon, Duchess of Suffolk, suo jure 12th Baroness Willoughby de Eresby (née Willoughby; 22 March 1519 – 19 September 1580), was an English noblewoman living at the courts of King Henry VIII, King Edward VI and Queen Elizabeth I.

  3. Después de la muerte de María Tudor el 24 de junio de 1533, Brandon se casó en 1534 con su pupila Catherine Willoughby (1520–1580), suo jure baronesa Willoughby de Eresby, entonces una muchacha de apenas quince años. De Catherine Willoughby tuvo dos hijos que eran grandes promesas, Henry (1535–1551) y Charles (c. 1537-1551 ...

  4. Catherine Willoughby (22 de marzo de 1519 - 19 de septiembre de 1580) fue una influyente cortesana que vivió en la Corte inglesa durante la época Tudor. Fue la cuarta esposa de Charles Brandon , I duque de Suffolk , después de que falleciera su esposa María Tudor, reina de Francia , aunque anteriormente había estado prometida con Henry ...

  5. His bride was Katherine Willoughby and the scandal wrote itself: Katherine was 14 years old to Brandon’s 49; she was meant to be marrying Brandon’s son; and as his ward, she had been raised for the past five years by his recently deceased wife.

  6. 16 de feb. de 2018 · After Mary: Charles Brandon & Katherine Willoughby. On February 16, 2018 By RSB In The House of Tudor. We’ve covered before how Henry VIII’s younger and favorite sister, Princess Mary, married his best friend, Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, shortly after the death of her first husband, King Louis XII of France, without her ...

  7. The Willoughbys were married for several years before they had a living child – born in March 1519, at Parham, near Framlingham in Suffolk, she was named Katherine, after the queen who was probably her godmother. By October, her mother was back in the queen’s service, being granted ‘livery of court’ – that is board at the king’s expense.