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  1. Edmund Dudley (c. 1462 or 1471/1472 – 17 August 1510) was an English administrator and a financial agent of King Henry VII. He served as a leading member of the Council Learned in the Law, Speaker of the House of Commons and President of the King's Council.

    • English financial officer
    • Blackfriars, London
  2. Edmund Dudley (a. 1462 - 17 de agosto de 1510 ), ministro de Enrique VII de Inglaterra , fue nieto de John Sutton el primer barón Dudley. Después de estudiar en Oxford y en Gray's Inn , Dudley captó el interés de Enrique VII, siendo su consejero privado a la edad de 23 años.

    • Decapitación
    • 17 de agosto de 1510, Tower Hill
  3. Edmund Dudley, (born c. 1462—died Aug. 18, 1510, London), minister of King Henry VII of England and author of a political allegory, The Tree of Commonwealth (1509). In 1506 Dudley was “president of the king’s council,” a small body of lawyers and fiscal administrators that helped reestablish the payment of feudal dues and of fines for ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 19 de sept. de 2016 · September 19, 2016. On the morning of 17th August 1510, Edmund Dudley – notorious minister, lawyer, and general agent of King Henry VII – made his way to Tower Hill in London to be beheaded. No account of the execution itself survives, though one can imagine the anticipation and satisfaction with which the crowd witnessed the ...

  5. Edmund Dudley (a. 1462 - 17 de agosto de 1510 ), ministro de Enrique VII de Inglaterra , fue nieto de John Sutton el primer barón Dudley. Después de estudiar en Oxford y en Gray's Inn , Dudley captó el interés de Enrique VII, siendo su consejero privado a la edad de 23 años.

  6. 17 de ago. de 2016 · 17 August 1510 – The Executions of Sir Edmund Dudley and Sir Richard Empson. On 17th August 1510, the second year of King Henry VIII's reign, Henry VII's former chief administrators, Sir Edmund Dudley and Sir Richard Empson, were beheaded on Tower Hill after being found guilty of treason.

  7. 9 de may. de 2022 · At the top of this list, as the ministers gathered, was one man in particular, a seemingly unimportant lawyer from a lesser branch of a baronial family: Edmund Dudley. Edmund owed his rise to prominence to Henry VII. By 1504, he had become one of the king’s central ministers in the exaction of coin from his subjects.