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  1. Hace 5 días · Elizabeth was living in March 1538, but John Dudley, her eldest son by Edmund Dudley, had evidently already sold the reversion of the half of the manor to Sir John Ernley, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, whose son William made a settlement of this moiety of the manor in 1538.

  2. Hace 3 días · 436. [1002.] EDMUND DUDLEY. Onus compoti of Thomas Budde, bailiff of Huysshe in co. Wilts, from 23 Hen. VII. to 1 Hen. VIII. The manor formerly belonged to Edmund Dudley. Names mentioned: Richard Benger, Thomas Ranger, John Combe, Thomas Terraunt, Thomas Budde, Will.

  3. Hace 3 días · By this grant, made in 1511, a third of the manors of Fishwick and Eccleston, forfeited by Edmund Dudley, was allowed to Arthur Plantagenet and Elizabeth his wife, Dudley's widow, the remainder being given to Dudley's trustees (see ibid. no. 1212). John Dudley, the son and heir, was restored in blood soon afterwards; ibid. no. 2082.

  4. Hace 5 días · Edmund Dudley was beheaded for plotting to overthrow King Henry VIII. At the time of the beheading, a curse was allegedly placed on the Dudleys for their treason. The curse states all Dudleys from Edmund Dudleys lineage would find themselves surrounded by horrors.

  5. Hace 3 días · for the son of the Earl of Northumberland read the son of Edmund Dudley, and later created Earl of Warwick and Duke of Northumberland (d. 1553)." 318 b, line 16, for 1537 read 1536" 319 a, lines 44-45, delete, part of . . . Heath" 319 a, last line, for which was made a civil parish in 1831 read which had become a separate civil parish by the ...

  6. Hace 4 días · Dudley town was founded by the descendants of Edmund Dudley, a man who was beheaded by Henry VIII for treason and was said to have cursed the land and had a cursed family. This town, Dudley town was built in the 18th century and was abandoned by the inhabitants in the 19th century with visible ruins being left behind.

  7. Hace 5 días · Although the Dudleys cannot be traced back to Edmund Dudley, strange deaths and people going mad seemed common in the small village that eventually died out after the Civil War when the legend spread.