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  1. Event. 1503. The marriage of James IV, king of Scotland, to Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII, leads a century later to the Union of the Crowns. Go to James IV (b. 17 Mar. 1473) in The Kings and Queens of Britain (2 rev ed.) See this event in other timelines: 16th century. Politics. Dynasties and royalty.

  2. Daniel Smith Sr. was born in November 1650, in Marlborough, Wiltshire, England, United Kingdom as the son of Daniel Smith and Abigail Smith. He was buried in Dedham, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States.

  3. The Emergence of a Ruling Order: English Landed Society 1650-1750. London, Longman, 1997, ISBN: 9780582087422; 290pp. James M. Rosenheim is the author of The Townshends of Raynham (1989) and a number of other studies of landownership and county government, with particular reference to the county of Norfolk. In this new book he draws on a wide ...

  4. 1 de mar. de 2000 · The 1630s in England began effectively in 1629 with the abrupt dismissal of Charles I’s third parliament and ended in 1640 at the first meeting of what would become the Long Parliament. Similarly we may start the 1650s with the regicide of January 1649 and finish with the surprising return of monarchy in May 1660, which rounded off a decade, less coherent than that of ‘the personal ...

  5. When Joseph Slack was born in 1650, in Sheffield, Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom, his father, Abraham Slack, was 31 and his mother, Ann Thompson, was 29. He married Maria Turner on 15 July 1677, in Sheffield, Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 1 son and 3 daughters. He died in 1688, in Yorkshire, England ...

  6. 24 de nov. de 2020 · Between 1626 and 1650, the new American colonies chafed at being so close to political rivals, and squabbled with one another over borders, religious freedom, and self-government. The key events during this time include the ongoing wars with Indigenous residents and disputes with the government of Charles I of England.

  7. Inigo Jones (1573-1652). England's greatest Renaissance architect brought back from his travel in Italy a fevered imagination full of all he had seen plus the exactingly classical theories of Palladianism. He used them to construct such edifices as Queen's House in Greenwich, the Queen's Chapel in St. James's Palace, London, the Banqueting ...