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  1. Sir Henry Knollys of Kingsbury, Warwickshire (ca. 1542 – 21 December 1582) was an English courtier, privateer and Member of Parliament. Biography [ edit ] He was born the eldest son of Sir Francis Knollys , Treasurer of the Royal Household, and Catherine Carey , Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Elizabeth I. [2] He was reputedly ...

  2. Sir Henry Knollys KCVO (20 June 1840 – 1 March 1930) was an officer in the Royal Artillery, British Army, and from 1896 to 1919 a private secretary to Princess Maud of Wales (from 1905 Queen of Norway).

  3. Henry Knollys may refer to: Sir Henry Knollys (privateer) (c. 1542–1582), English privateer, courtier and MP for Reading and Oxfordshire; Henry Knollys (Portsmouth MP), MP for Portsmouth in 1547; Henry Knollys (politician, died 1583), MP for Grampound, New Shoreham, Guildford and Christchurch

  4. Henry Knollys (d.1582) Born: circa 1542 probably at Rotherfield Greys, Oxfordshire Captain Died: 21st December 1582 in the Netherlands. Henry Knollys was the eldest son of the Treasurer of the Royal Household, Sir Francis Knollys Senior, and his wife, Catherine Carey, a maternal cousin of Queen Elizabeth I.

  5. Sir Henry Knollys. 1542–1592. Margaret Cave. 1549–1606. Marriage: 16 July 1565. Lady Elizabeth Knollys. 1579–1621. Lady Lettice Knollys, Baroness Paget. 1583–1655. Sources (4) Henry Knollys, "Find A Grave Index" Royal Birkshire History. UK and Ireland, Find A Grave Index, 1300s-Current. View All. Spouse and Children. Sir Henry Knollys.

  6. Sir Henry Knollys KCVO (20 June 1840 – 1 March 1930) was an officer in the Royal Artillery, British Army, and from 1896 to 1919 a private secretary to Princess Maud of Wales (from 1905 Queen of Norway). Knollys was the third and last surviving son of General the Right Hon. Sir William Thomas...

  7. Henry Knollys, a major in a less prestigious Artillery Regiment, complained that his experiences in the social sphere would be comparatively limited: ‘inasmuch as nine-tenths of those, who can afford the expense, take refuge from the heat at the cooler Peak’.