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  1. Lettice Knollys was born on 8 November 1543 at Rotherfield Greys in Oxfordshire. She was the eldest of sixteen children born to Sir Francis Knollys and his wife, Katherine Carey. Lettice’s mother was the daughter of Mary Boleyn, meaning that Lettice was the great niece of Anne Boleyn. She was also a kinswoman of Elizabeth I. Francis and Katherine Knollys departed for the Continent in the mid ...

  2. Sir Francis Knollys (1592–1643) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons variously between 1624 and 1643. Knollys was the son of Sir Francis Knollys of Battle Manor at Reading in Berkshire and his wife, Lettice, daughter of John Barrett of Hanham in Gloucestershire .

  3. Catherine Carey, after her marriage Catherine Knollys and later known as both Lady Knollys and Dame Catherine Knollys, (c. 1524 – 15 January 1569), was chief Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Elizabeth I, who was her first cousin.

  4. 23 de mar. de 2024 · Husband of Lettice (Barrett) Knollys — married 21 Dec 1588 in London All Hallows London Wall, Middlesex, England. Father of Lettice (Knollys) Hampden, Francis Knollys and Elizabeth (Knollys) Hammond. Died Mar 1648 at age 94 in Reading, Berkshire, England. Francis, son of Francis Knollys and Catherine Carey was born on Monday 14 August 1553. [1]

  5. 1 de sept. de 2006 · A Latin dictionary once owned by Sir Francis Knollys has come to light containing his records of his marriage to Katherine Carey, daughter of Mary Boleyn, and the births of their fourteen children. These previously unpublished details (here transcribed) strengthen the argument that Katherine was an illegitimate child of Henry VIII, born during his affair with Anne Boleyn's sister.

  6. 29 de dic. de 2020 · Sir Robert Knollys ( d. 1659), her son by her first husband, was knighted 10 Jan. 1612–13, and acquired Rotherfield Greys from his uncle William 4 March 1630–1. The estate was finally alienated from the family in 1686. Francis, sixth son, leased from the crown the manor of Battel, near Reading.

  7. The elder Sir Francis Knollys proved extraordinarily long-lived, and consequently Knollys himself was denied local office until his father was in his dotage: the claim that he was a magistrate as early as 1627 is questionable.10 Both men were returned to Parliament for Reading in April 1640, and were subsequently elected to the Long Parliament later that year.