Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 弗朗西斯·沃尔辛厄姆(Walsingham, Francis1532?~1590.4.6)英格兰政治家,受封为弗朗西斯爵士·(Sir Francis)1573~1590年为伊丽莎白一世的首席秘书。长于外交,其语言知识和组织间谍活动的能力在推行伊丽莎白女王外交政策方面具有无可估量的作用。

  2. Francis Walsingham. Sir Francis Walsingham, född cirka 1532, död 6 april 1590 i London, var Elisabet I:s underrättelsechef och grundare av Englands första hemliga polis. Walsingham omnämns ofta som den förste i Europa att bygga upp ett statligt system för spionage och underrättelseinsamling.

  3. Francis Walsingham. BORN: 1532 • Kent, England DIED: September 6, 1590 • London, England English statesman; spy. Francis Walsingham, who served as secretary of state to Queen Elizabeth I (1533–1603; see entry), organized and ran a vast spy network that kept the English informed about the potentially dangerous activities of rival powers, especially France and Spain.

  4. 15 de jul. de 2022 · Francis Walsingham came from a family that held several minor offices within the English court. His father was a lawyer who died when Francis was only two. In 1548, when he was approximately 16, Walsingham was enrolled in King’s College, a protestant and reformist college based in the University of Cambridge , before being enrolled in Gray’s Inn to study law in 1552.

  5. 23 de may. de 2018 · Walsingham, Sir Francis ( c. 1532–90). Walsingham matriculated at King's College, Cambridge, in 1548 and was taught by the prominent humanist (and Cecil's father-in-law) Sir John Cheke. He travelled abroad 1550–2, began common law training at Gray's Inn in 1552, and studied civil law at Padua from 1555. He became privy counsellor and ...

  6. Sir Francis Walsingham. On this day in history, 6th April 1590, Sir Francis Walsingham died at about the age of 58. He was an incredibly important man during Elizabeth I’s reign being a statesman, private secretary, adviser, diplomat and spymaster, and he probably saved the Queen’s life many times by uncovering various plots against her.

  7. Who was Sir Francis Walsingham? Under the reign of Mary I, Walsingham fled England. As a devout Protestant, he worried that his beliefs would lead to persecution or death. He fled to Padua, Italy and studied law. After Elizabeth’s succession in 1558, he became involved in the government. He entered Parliament in January 1559