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  1. Everard Digby, Spenser's Cambridge contemporary, has furnished us with a virtual charter for the poet's allegorical invention. Discover the world's research. 20+ million members;

  2. 8 de nov. de 2007 · 10 Notably young Everard Digby. Digby's letters smuggled out of the Tower, and discovered after the death of his son, are printed in Thomas Barlow, ed., The Gunpowder-treason, with a discourse of the manner of its discovery (London, 1679), pp. 229–63; see especially p. 250. See also an information touching Fawkes, n.d., SP 14/16/25.

  3. 14 de abr. de 2023 · Conspirators Sir Everard Digby, Robert Wintour, John Grant, and Thomas Bates were executed in St. Paul’s Churchyard on January 30th, with the remaining conspirators to suffer the same fate a day later in the Old Palace Yard at Westminster. That’s what happened to Thomas Wintour, Ambrose Rookwood, and Robert Keyes.

  4. 2 de abr. de 2024 · Father Everard (Edward) Digby1 d. 29 Mar 1461. Mother Agnes (Ann) Clerk4. ' Everard Digby, Esq. married Jacquette Ellis, daughter of Sir John Ellis and Eleanor Russell.1,2,3 Everard Digby, Esq. left a will on 16 January 1509 at of Tilton, Drystoke, Leicestershire, England.1,2 His estate was probated on 12 February 1509.1. 'Family Jacquette ...

  5. The Life Of A Conspirator: Being A Biograhy Of Sir Everard Digby By One Of His Descendants Thomas Longueville Creative Media Partners, LLC , Mar 22, 2019 - Biography & Autobiography - 326 pages

  6. DIGBY, Sir EVERARD (1578–1606), conspirator, son of Everard Digby of Stoke Dry, Rutland, by Maria, daughter and coheiress of Francis Neale of Keythorpe, Leicestershire, was born on 16 May 1578, and was in his fourteenth year when his father died on 24 Jan. 1592.

  7. Everard Digby, Spenser’s Cambridge contemporary, has furnished us with a virtual charter for the poet’s allegorical invention. This essay affords a look at intellectual activity in the Cambridge of Spenser’s day by way of an introduction to a large Neo-Latin volume of metaphysics entitled the Theoria Analytica, published by Everard Digby in 1579.