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  1. Brief Life History of Henry. When Captain Henry Dudley was born in 1517, in Dunstall, Staffordshire, England, his father, Lord John Sutton, was 23 and his mother, Lady Cecily Grey, was 20. He married Lady Elizabeth Anne Ashton in 1545, in Fyfield, Berkshire, England. They were the parents of at least 3 sons and 6 daughters.

  2. 19 de sept. de 2016 · Edmund Dudley was born in 1462, just a year after the 18 year old Edward of York had dramatically seized the throne from Henry VI at the Battle of Towton. Dudley’s grandfather was John Sutton, first Baron Dudley, one of the many noblemen in England to swap camps from the Lancastrian army of King Henry to the Yorkist forces of Edward – and ...

  3. Henry Ernest Dudeney (10 April 1857 – 23 April 1930) was an English author and mathematician who specialised in logic puzzles and mathematical games. He is known as one of the country's foremost creators of mathematical puzzles .

  4. 25 de may. de 2006 · Abstract. Although Richard Empson and Edmund Dudley were executed in 1510 in part for their rabid prosecution of written bonds, their activities at the time were only quietly recognized as part of a royal policy encouraged by Henry VII (1485–1509).

  5. Then in 1504 Dudley was appointed by Henry VII as speaker of the Commons, and from October 1504 was paid £66 as a councilor of the king. By July 1506 he was president of the king’s council, the first layman to hold the position. His rise to power had been real and rapid. By 1504 he was also part of the council learned in the law, chaired by ...

  6. 7 de jul. de 2019 · The marriage led to the couple's banishment from court. Devonshire died in 1606. On this day in Tudor history, 7th July 1556, in the reign of Queen Mary I, Henry Peckham and John Danyell were hanged, drawn and quartered after being found guilty of treason for their involvement in the Dudley Conspiracy.

  7. 17 de ago. de 2016 · Richard Empson and Edmund Dudley became symbols of everything that was wrong with the kingdom, and their executions “fixed” all that even though tax rates stayed the same. Two years after their deaths, an Act of Parliament restored their lands to their families. Empson’s heirs lived quiet lives, while Dudley’s returned to court.