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  1. Katherine Willoughby was born on March 22, 1519, the daughter of the eleventh Baron Willoughby and his wife Maria De Salinis, one of Katherine of Aragon’s original Spanish Ladies in Waiting. In March 1528, the Baron died without a son, making nine-year-old Katherine his only heir. Henry VIII controlled the little girl’s wardship- but that ...

  2. He married his ward, Catherine Willoughby, who had previously been betrothed to his son, Henry. Catherine was only fourteen years of age at the time, and Suffolk was significantly older, being forty-nine. Not long after his marriage, Suffolk's son Henry died, but in September 1535, Catherine gave birth to a son and the couple named him Henry.

  3. Katherine Willoughby, Porträtminiatur Hans Holbein des Jüngeren, entstanden vor 1543. Katherine Willoughby, 12. Baroness Willoughby de Eresby (auch Katheryn, Katharine) (* 22. März 1519 oder 1520, Parham Old Hall bei Framlingham; † 19. September 1580) war eine englische Adelige und gehörte zu den ersten energischen Befürwortern und ...

  4. Catherine Willoughby, MA Sr Academic Advisor. UCBA-Academic Advising Ctr BA MUNTZ 125A 9555 Plainfield Dr Blue Ash OH 45236-0086. Tel: (513)558-9442 Fax: (513)745-5768 E-mail: catherine.willoughby@uc.edu. Business cards from Printing & Duplicating Services.

  5. April 2015. Katherine Willoughby is today little known beyond the confines of history books, but was one of the most remarkable – and interesting – women of the Tudor period. Married in 1533 to Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk, Henry VIII’s closest friend, when she was just fourteen and he nearly fifty, she was later romantically linked ...

  6. 20 de ene. de 2022 · Catherine Willoughby, Duchess of Suffolk, fleeing Catholic England with her husband Richard Bertie, her daughter Susan and a wetnurse. Credit: Extraordinary Women of the Medieval and Renaissance World. A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Press 2000

  7. 1 ‘As Earnest as Any’: Catholicism and Reform among the Willoughby Family and its Affinity in Henrician England; 2 ‘Tasting the Word of God’: Evangelicalism and the Religious Development of Katherine Willoughby, Duchess of Suffolk; 3 Living Stones and Faithful Masons: Women and the Evangelical Church during the Early English Reformation