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  1. Hace 4 días · Thomas Cromwell ( / ˈkrɒmwəl, - wɛl /; [1] [a] c. 1485 – 28 July 1540), briefly Earl of Essex, was an English statesman and lawyer who served as chief minister to King Henry VIII from 1534 to 1540, when he was beheaded on orders of the king, who later blamed false charges for the execution.

  2. Hace 5 días · Thomas Cromwell is a good subject for fact and fiction. He was and remains somewhat of an enigma both as a visionary for government efficiency and as an ambitious ‘new man’ rising from the obscurity of a blacksmith’s son to perhaps the most powerful man in England save his king, Henry VIII.

  3. Hace 2 días · His fervent beliefs, for example, are increasingly tempered by the political goals of his boss, the monarch’s capable chief minister, Thomas Cromwell (Sean Bean). With Henry having split from ...

  4. Hace 4 días · Henry put Thomas Cromwell in charge of getting rid of the monasteries. Cromwell started by sending royal commissioners to all the monasteries in 1535 - 1536 to find out what they own, how much money they have coming in, and to report on what is happening inside the monasteries.

  5. Hace 2 días · Cromwell followed Charles into England, leaving George Monck to finish the campaign in Scotland. Monck took Stirling on 14 August and Dundee on 1 September. [138] The next year, 1652, saw a mopping up of the remnants of Royalist resistance, and under the terms of the " Tender of Union ", the Scots received 30 seats in a united Parliament in London, with General Monck as the military governor ...

    • August 1642 – September 1651
  6. Hace 4 días · Sir Ralph Warren. His daughter Joan married Sir Henry Cromwell, and was grandmother of the Protector and of John Hampden. His widow married Sir Thomas Whyte (Lord Mayor 1553–4). 1530. Sir William Roche. His second wife was widow of John Long (Alderman, Sheriff 1528–9).

  7. Hace 4 días · Sends his servant to learn his pleasure in that which Cromwell desires him to accomplish. If anyone should complain that the law is unjust, although many escape notwithstanding their abominable lives, begs Cromwell will not hear them until Becansaw has had opportunity of answering their complaints.