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  1. 29 de dic. de 2021 · In this letter Arthur Gregory, a skilled counterfeiter, informed Walsingham that he had discovered a technique using alum to create secret writing. He wrote, ‘The writing with alum is discovered divers ways … but most apparently by rubbing of coal dust thereon.’. Gregory used the letter’s postscript to demonstrate his secret writing ...

  2. Sir Francis Walsingham (c. 1532 – April 6, 1590) is remembered by history as the "spymaster" of Queen Elizabeth I of England. An admirer of Machiavelli, Walsingham is remembered as one of the most proficient espionage-weavers in history, excelling in the use of intrigues and deception to secure the English Crown.

  3. Walsinghamin tytär Frances Walsingham oli naimisissa tärkeän hovimiehen Philip Sidneyn kanssa. Sidneyn kuoltua vuonna 1586 Walsingham joutui vastaamaan tämän veloista ja oli siksi viimeisinä vuosinaan taloudellisesti heikossa tilanteessa. Hän kuoli vuonna 1590. Hänet haudattiin Saint Paulin katedraaliin Lontoossa.

  4. 8 de ene. de 2018 · In another, Walsingham gently reprimands Sadler for taking Mary “hawkyng” with him. Mary, Walsingham notes disapprovingly, had been given “more lybertye now then at any tyme when she was in ...

  5. William Walsingham (died 1534) MOTHER: Joyce Denny (died 1560) NATIONALITY: English. RELIGION: Protestant. EDUCATION: Cambridge University. KEY POSITION: Secretary of State (1573-1590) SPOUSE: Anne Barne (died 1564) Ursula St Barbe (died 1602) CHILDREN: By Ursula St Barbe: Frances Walsingham (Lady Sidney, Countess of Essex, Countess of ...

  6. When Frances Walsingham was born in 1567, in Chislehurst, Kent, England, United Kingdom, her father, Sir Francis Walsingham Knight, was 36 and her mother, Ursula St. Barbe, was 35. She married Sir Philip Sidney on 20 September 1583, in Penshurst, Kent, England. They were the parents of at least 1 son and 2 daughters.

  7. 5 de nov. de 2019 · Walsingham died in 1590 and since there was no structure in place to maintain the spy network, much of his work was lost. The Earl of Essex and Sir Robert Cecil both tried to take Walsingham’s ...