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  1. Sir Thomas Parr (1407 – November 1461 or 24 November 1464) was an English landowner and elected Member of Parliament six times between 1435 and 1459. He was great-grandfather of Queen Catherine Parr , the sixth wife of King Henry VIII .

  2. Thomas Parr (¿1483? - 14 de noviembre de 1635) fue un inglés supercentenario, que afirmaba haber vivido durante 152 años. [1] A menudo se le llama, simplemente, Old Parr (Viejo Parr) u Old Tom Parr (Viejo Tom Parr).

  3. 9 de feb. de 2017 · Sir Thomas Parr (1407– November 1464 [1] [2] or 24 November 1464 [3]) was an English landowner and elected Member of Parliament six times between 1435 and 1459. He was great-grandfather of Queen Catherine Parr, the sixth wife of King Henry VIII. The Parr family originally came from Parr, Lancashire.

    • Salisbury, England
    • Alice Tunstall, of Thurland And Lancaster
    • England
    • "Sir Thomas Parr", "Knight of Kendall"
  4. Sir Thomas Parr (c. 1483 – 11 de noviembre de 1517) fue un caballero inglés, cortesano y señor de la Mansión de Kendal, Westmorland (ahora Cumbria), durante el periodo Tudor. Es conocido por ser el padre de Catalina Parr, reina consorte de Inglaterra y última esposa de Enrique VIII.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Maud_GreenMaud Green - Wikipedia

    Maud had married Sir Thomas Parr, the eldest son of Sir William Parr and Elizabeth FitzHugh, in 1508. He was the Sheriff of Northamptonshire, master of the wards and comptroller to the King. Maud and Thomas had three surviving children.

  6. Catalina Parr. (Westmorlande, 1512 - Sudeley Castle, 1548) Sexta esposa de Enrique VIII de Inglaterra. Hija del oficial de la corte sir Thomas Parr, Catalina Parr había contraído matrimonio en dos ocasiones y enviudado otras tantas antes casarse en 1543 con Enrique VIII.

  7. tudortimes.co.uk › people › sir-thomas-parr-of-kendalTudor Times | Sir Thomas Parr

    Sir Thomas was later noted by Roger Ascham as a scholar of Greek and Latin. Like many of the gentry and nobles in the early sixteenth century, Parr was heavily in debt to the Crown, owing some 9,000 marks to the king at Henry VII's death. Fortunately, this debt was cancelled by the new king, and an annuity of 50 marks was granted to him to ...