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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_PerrotJohn Perrot - Wikipedia

    John Perrot. Sir John Perrot (7 November 1528 [1] – 3 November 1592) was a member of the Welsh gentry who served as Lord Deputy of Ireland under Queen Elizabeth I of England during the Tudor conquest of Ireland. It was formerly speculated that he was an illegitimate son of King Henry VIII, though the idea is rejected by modern historians. [2]

  2. John Perrot (c. 1527 - septiembre de 1592) ejerció el cargo de Lord Diputado de Irlanda bajo el reinado de Isabel I de Inglaterra. Es recordado por su participación en la reconquista Tudor de Irlanda y por ser considerado hijo ilegítimo de Enrique VIII .

    • Inglesa
  3. 1 de abr. de 2024 · Sir John Perrot was the lord deputy of Ireland from 1584 to 1588, who established an English colony in Munster in southwestern Ireland. Perrot was long reputed to be the illegitimate son of King Henry VIII of England, but that claim has been strongly challenged in contemporary scholarship.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. www.wikiwand.com › es › John_PerrotJohn Perrot - Wikiwand

    John Perrot (c. 1527 - septiembre de 1592) ejerció el cargo de Lord Diputado de Irlanda bajo el reinado de Isabel I de Inglaterra. Es recordado por su participación en la reconquista Tudor de Irlanda y por ser considerado hijo ilegítimo de Enrique VIII.

  5. Sir John Perrot (c1527/30 – 1592) On this day in 1592, Sir John Perrot, Privy Councillor and former Lord Deputy of Ireland, died at the Tower of London. He was buried in the Chapel of St Peter ad Vincula at the Tower.

  6. wrote Sir John Perrot to the earl of Leicester on 23 September 1585,1 when there still seemed a frail hope of salvaging a battered victory from the wreck of a parliamentary session. There is, however, little sense of destiny hanging by a thread to be found in the current histories of Perrot's turbulent deputyship, which has, indeed, almost too

  7. Perrot, Sir John. Perrot, Sir John (1528–92), lord deputy of Ireland, was son of Mary Perrot (neé Berkeley) and Thomas Perrot of Harroldston, Pembrokeshire, Wales. His paternity was the subject of much scandalmongering in his own lifetime, but the rumour (spread by the inveterate gossip Robert Naunton) that he was the illegitimate son of ...