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  1. Henry Sidney (1529 - 5 de mayo de 1586), Lord Diputado de Irlanda, era el hijo mayor de Sir William Sidney de Penshurst, un influyente político y cortesano durante los reinados de Enrique VIII de Inglaterra y Eduardo VI, que le concedieron extensas posesiones, incluyendo la mansión de Penshurst en Kent, que se convertiría en la principal ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Henry_SidneyHenry Sidney - Wikipedia

    Bibliography. External links. Henry Sidney. Sir Henry Sidney KG (20 July 1529 – 5 May 1586) was an English soldier, politician and Lord Deputy of Ireland. Background. He was the eldest son of Sir William Sidney of Penshurst (1482 – 11 February 1553) and Anne Pakenham (1511 – 22 October 1544). [1] .

  3. 20 de jul. de 1998 · Sir Henry Sidney (born July 20, 1529, probably London—died May 5, 1586, Ludlow, Shropshire, Eng.) was an English lord deputy of Ireland from 1565 to 1571 and from 1575 to 1578 who cautiously implemented Queen Elizabeth I’s policy of imposing English laws and customs on the Irish.

  4. 28 de ago. de 2021 · Cuando Sir Henry Sidney, Lord Diputado de Irlanda, conoció a O'Malley en 1577, registró una descripción fascinante: " Una capitana de mar femenina muy famosa (...) por la fortaleza de su coraje...

  5. 8 de nov. de 2021 · In 1566, Sir Henry Sidney, the new English Lord Deputy of Ireland, set about curbing the power of The O’Neill. ‘Lucifer was never more puffed up with pride and ambition than O’Neill is,’ he wrote to Elizabeth.

  6. Sidney, Sir Henry (1529–86), lord deputy of Ireland, was the eldest and only surviving son of the prominent Henrician courtier Sir William Sidney (c.1482–1554) and his wife Anne (nee Pagenham). Sidney commenced a promising career at court in the later 1530s as companion of Prince Edward.

  7. 18 de abr. de 2024 · Henry Sidney, earl of Romney (born 1641, Paris—died April 8, 1704, London) was an English statesman who played a leading role in the Revolution of 1688–89. The son of Robert Sidney, 2nd earl of Leicester, he entered Parliament in 1679 and supported legislation to exclude King Charles II’s Roman Catholic brother James, duke of ...