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  1. Frances Cromwell. Father. Sir John Seymour. Mother. Margery Wentworth. Elizabeth Seymour ( c. 1518 [5] – 19 March 1568 [3]) was a younger daughter of Sir John Seymour of Wulfhall, Wiltshire and Margery Wentworth. [6] Elizabeth and her sister Jane served in the household of Anne Boleyn, the second wife of Henry VIII.

  2. Margaret Wentworth, also known as Margery Wentworth, was a prominent figure in English nobility as the mother of Queen Jane Seymour and grandmother of King Edward VI. Her marriage to Sir John Seymour and her family’s connections positioned her within the intricate web of Tudor politics and court life.

  3. Margaret Seymour. Margaret Seymour may refer to: Margery Wentworth, married name Margery or Margaret Seymour, mother of Queen Jane Seymour, third wife of Henry VIII and muse of the poet John Skelton. Lady Margaret Seymour (writer), influential female writer and granddaughter of the above. Margaret Seymour, Lady Wadham (died 1520), aunt of Queen ...

  4. Mother. Anne Stanhope. Lady Margaret Seymour (1540 – ?) was a writer during the sixteenth century in England, along with her sisters, Anne Seymour, Countess of Warwick and Lady Jane Seymour, including of the Hecatodistichon. [1] She was the daughter of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, who from 1547 was the Lord Protector of England after ...

  5. Roger Wentworth. Margery le Despencer. Sir Philip Wentworth of Nettlestead, Suffolk ( c. 1424 – 18 May 1464) was an English knight and courtier. Wentworth was a great-grandfather of Queen Jane Seymour, [1] third wife of King Henry VIII. He was beheaded at Middleham, Yorkshire .

  6. Marjorie Woodworth. Woodworth in Niagara Falls (1941) Born. ( 1919-06-05) June 5, 1919. Inglewood, California. Died. August 23, 2000. (2000-08-23)

  7. Sir John Seymour, born circa 1474, was an English soldier and courtier serving under Henry VII and Henry VIII. He was the eldest son of John Seymour and Elizabeth Darell. Seymour married Margery Wentworth, and the couple had ten children. He was knighted for his services against Cornish rebels at Blackheath and later became a Knight banneret.