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  1. Hace 5 días · On 28 December, 1538, John Foster reported to Sir Thomas Seymour as to the state of the house of Romsey. He pronounced the house out of debt; that the plate and jewels were worth £300; the bells worth £100.

  2. Hace 16 horas · The challengers included Sir John Dudley, Sir Thomas Seymour, Sir Thomas Poyninge, Sir George Carew, Anthony Kingston, and Richard Cromwell. The challengers entered the lists that day richly dressed, their horses trapped in white velvet, with knights and gentlemen riding ahead of them, dressed in white velvet and white sarcenet, and all their servants in white sarcenet doublets and hose, in ...

  3. Hace 3 días · The abbey itself and all its possessions were granted in fee to Sir Thomas Seymour on 23 March, 1538, at a rent of £25 2s. 2½d. yearly. Part, including the site, were sold back by him to the crown on 12 May, 1541.

  4. Hace 3 días · In 1543 Bratton was granted to Sir Thomas Seymour of Sudeley Castle (Glos.), brother of the Protector, who had already acquired the bulk of the Edington property. After Seymour's execution in 1548–9, Bratton appears to have remained with the Crown until 1591 when it was granted by the queen to Richard Knollis and Richard Swale.

  5. Hace 1 día · Daughter of Sir Philip Timbury. Married 1st Thomas Swinbourne; 2ndly Sir Thomas Trivet, who died 1388. F27 Lady Joan FitzAlan: 1375 – 1435 1390 Daughter of Richard Fitzalan, 4th Earl of Arundel, married Sir William Beauchamp, later Baroness Bergavenny. 81 William I, Duke of Guelders and Jülich: d. 1402 c.1399 82 William VI, Count of Holland ...

  6. Hace 1 día · On 30th May 1536, eleven days after his second wife, Anne Boleyn, had been executed, Henry VIII married Jane Seymour in the Queen’s Closet at Whitehall, a property that he’d renovated with Anne…. Transcript: On this day in Tudor history, Tuesday 30th May, just eleven days after the execution of his second wife, Queen Anne Boleyn, King ...

  7. Hace 2 días · Thomas Cromwell ( / ˈkrɒmwəl, - wɛl /; [1] [a] c. 1485 – 28 July 1540), briefly Earl of Essex, was an English statesman and lawyer who served as chief minister to King Henry VIII from 1534 to 1540, when he was beheaded on orders of the king, who later blamed false charges for the execution.