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  1. Journey back to the 16th century as we unravel the intriguing life of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, the butcher's son who became England's second most powerful man...

    • 5 min
    • 1023
    • History and Coffee (also Books, Pens & Music)
  2. Biografia de Thomas Wolsey - Político y Cardenal Inglés. TOMAS WOLSEY (1475?-1530): Entre los hombres de estado de Inglaterra el primero verdaderamente renacentista es el cardenal Tomás Wolsey, el gran canciller de Enrique VIII. enacentista en todos los aspectos: por la rápida ascensión de su fortuna, por la inclinación de sus gustos, por ...

  3. 9 de nov. de 2015 · Thomas Wolsey fue un arzobispo, estadista y Lord Canciller de Enrique VIII, y una de los últimos eclesiásticos en jugar un papel dominante en la vida política de Inglaterra. Thomas Wolsey nació en Ipswich, Suffolk, alrededor de 1475. Su padre, que se cree era un carnicero, le proporcionó una buena educación enviándolo al Magdalen College ...

  4. Thomas Wolsey (1473. – 1530.) bio je engleski nadbiskup, državnik i kardinal Katoličke Crkve. Život pod Henrikom VII. Rođen kao sin ...

  5. THOMAS, CARDINAL WOLSEY was born in Ipswich, Suffolk, possibly in 1473. His father Robert Wulcy was a butcher, innkeeper, and cattle dealer. Wolsey studied at Magdalen College, Oxford, taking his B.A. in 1488, and an M.A. in 1491. On March 10, 1498 he was ordained priest, and in October, 1500 presented the rectory of Limington in Somerset by ...

  6. Below is the article summary. For the full article, see Thomas, Cardinal Wolsey . Cardinal Wolsey, (born c. 1475, Ipswich, Suffolk, Eng.—died Nov. 29, 1530, Leicester, Leicestershire), English prelate and statesman. He served as chaplain to Henry VII and later Henry VIII, for whom he organized the successful campaign against the French (1513).

  7. 30 de nov. de 2019 · Thomas Wolsey was a lucky man. Accused of treason, he narrowly avoided Henry VIII’s ‘justice’ on the scaffold and instead died of natural causes at Leicester Abbey on 29 November 1530. Earlier that month, Henry VIII’s once all-powerful minister had been arrested on charges of high treason at his archepiscopal palace of Cawood, near York.