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  1. This chapter focuses on the political situation from 1549–1551. By July 1549, the ‘camping movement’ spread far and wide through East Anglia, from King's Lynn to Bury St. Edmunds and beyond. The grievances which inspired such widespread anger were mostly concerned with the misappropriation of common land and with systematic overgrazing ...

  2. 25 de jul. de 1996 · This book reconstructs the personal and political life of John Dudley (1504–1553), Viscount Lisle, Earl of Warwick, and Duke of Northumberland. For three and a half years (1549–1553) as Lord President of the Council, he was leader of Edward VI's minority government. His involvement in the notorious attempt to frustrate Mary's claim to the ...

  3. John Dudley now became the king's main adviser and in October 1551 he was granted the title, Duke of Northumberland. It has been claimed that the secret of his power was that he took the young king seriously. To be successful he "knew that he must accommodate the boy's keen intelligence and also his sovereign will".

  4. 25 de feb. de 2024 · John Dudley, professeur à l'Université de Franche-Comté est considéré comme l'un des leaders mondiaux de la photonique, une science qui promet d'encore révolutionner le 21e siècle.

  5. John Dudley, or as others will have it, Sutton; he was famous for the renown of his exploits and was duke of Northumberland, but he was an ambitious man descended of an ambitious father. After a notable victory on Norwich heath against the peasants…he sought with excessive impudence to control both the king and the kingdom…

  6. Abstract. This chapter details the life and career of John Dudley from 1551–1553. The Tudors commonly signalled important shifts in policy, or in the structure of power, with clusters of peerage creations or promotions. On October 1551, the second and final fall of the Duke of Somerset was immediately preceded by three promotions and one new ...

  7. 21 de feb. de 2017 · Dudley, like his father before him, was executed on 22 August 1553. Two of his sons would follow him to the block. His oldest son, John Dudley, was spared in 1553 because like his father he turned to catholicism. Unfortunately Wyatt’s rebellion saw an end to that and he was executed in 1554.