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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Anne_BoleynAnne Boleyn - Wikipedia

    In 1528, sweating sickness broke out with great severity. In London, the mortality rate was great and the court was dispersed. Henry left London, frequently changing his residence; Anne Boleyn retreated to the Boleyn residence at Hever Castle, but contracted the illness; her brother-in-law, William Carey, died.

  2. Elizabeth died early in 1529, of what is believed to be the sweating sickness, and was survived by her three children, her husband, and her mother. Her daughters, Anne and Grace, are believed to have died not long after their mother of the same disease.

  3. 10 de feb. de 2015 · By Derek Gatherer, Lecturer at Lancaster University. In the first episode of BBC historical drama Wolf Hall, based on Hilary Mantel’s novel of the same name, Thomas Cromwell returns home to find his wife and two daughters have all died during the night, victims of a pestilence – the “sweating sickness” – that is scything through the ...

  4. fr.wikipedia.org › wiki › SuetteSuette — Wikipédia

    La suette est une ancienne maladie infectieuse épidémique caractérisée par une fièvre importante, une transpiration profuse et une mortalité élevée. On en distingue deux variétés : la suette anglaise (en latin : sudor anglicus) qui a sévi sur un mode épidémique à cinq reprises aux XVe et XVIe siècles en Angleterre ;

  5. Alma mater. St John's College, Cambridge. Henry Brandon, 2nd Duke of Suffolk (18 September 1535 – 14 July 1551), styled Lord Henry Brandon before 1545, was an English nobleman, the son of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, by his fourth wife, Catherine Willoughby . His father had previously been married to Mary Tudor, sister of King Henry ...

  6. 27 de may. de 2016 · By: Matthew Wills. May 27, 2016. 2 minutes. The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR. Epidemics, by their very nature, come and go. The dramatic 16th-century series The Tudors and Wolf Hall have renewed interest in the long-gone “English sweating sickness,” an obscure but deadly malady whose origins are still debated.

  7. 1 de dic. de 2007 · Sweating sickness was a disease of unknown cause and very high mortality that first appeared in England in 1485. John Caius's book is our main source of knowledge about the disease, outbreaks of which recurred until 1578. John Caius was born in Norwich in 1510.