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  1. Hace 4 días · From the Welsh commoner Owen Tudor who found himself in the bosom of the English Monarchy to the struggle that his grandson Henry VII had in securing a line of succession, de Lisle’s thrilling ...

  2. Hace 2 días · Logan argues that Katherine’s key role as ‘daughter, sister, wife, widow and mother of kings’ (p. 158) is greatly minimized by Elizabethan authors, reducing her to the recalcitrant object of Henry V’s affections and a ‘Desiring Dowager Queen’ in her clandestine relationship with Owen Tudor.

  3. Hace 1 día · Local author and campaigner Owen Lewis, who was instrumental in the Save Tudor Street Day Centre campaign, told the Chronicle, “As someone who used to work with vulnerable adults who attended the day centre I saw firsthand how much the service had been cut to the bone since COVID struck in 2020. Owen admits that the success of the campaign ...

  4. Hace 4 días · In a discovery branded the most exciting Thomas Cromwell finding ‘in a generation’, historians Kate McCaffrey and Dr Owen Emmerson chart their discovery of a Book of Hours that once belonged to Thomas Cromwell, King Henry VIII’s Chief Minister. Hidden in plain sight, and recognised by Hever Castle’s curator Alison Palmer, the book is one…

  5. Hace 2 días · One of London’s last remaining Tudor houses, Sutton House was built in 1535 by Sir Ralph Sadleir as his family home, and is now the oldest house in Hackney. Explore its atmospheric Tudor rooms with their original features and discover its surprising recent history.

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  6. Hace 5 días · 10. 1461 - Owen Tudor, executed after Mortimer's Cross was once married to. Answer: Katherine de Valois. Owen Tudor had been married to Henry V's widow, Katherine de Valois. Their sons (Edmund, Jasper and Owen) were Henry VI's half-brothers. Edmund Tudor was the father of Henry Tudor (later Henry VII).

  7. Hace 5 días · Tudor Explorers. The golden age of exploration began in the 15th century and lasted more than 200 years. During the reign of Elizabeth 1, many sailors went in search of unknown lands. There were two main reasons: one was adventure and the other was money. Portugal and Spain led the way, exploring the coasts of Africa, Asia and the 'New World ...