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  1. Follow @tudorhistory. Who's Who in Tudor History. About this Site. Contact Information. MILDRED COOKE, LADY CECIL AND BARONESS BURGHLEY. BORN: 1526 DIED: 1589. Second wife of William Cecil, mother of Robert Cecil. Daughter of Sir Anthony Cooke. Made translations of Greek texts which were never formally published in her lifetime.

  2. Mildred Cecil, Baroness Burghley was an English noblewoman and translator. She was the wife of William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, the most trusted adviser of Elizabeth I, and the mother of Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury, adviser to James I.

  3. Chapter 5 : The 1553 Succession Crisis. In early 1553, Edward VI drew up a ‘ Devise for the Succession ’ which attempted to overturn the Act of Succession 1544 (see Chapter 2 ). The King’s initial plan had been to find a male, Protestant, successor (overlooking the male, Catholic Lord Darnley, and his own half-sisters).

  4. His grandson William Cecil, Lord Burghley (1520–98), was Elizabeth I's chief adviser for 40 years, and his descendants have remained politically powerful and culturally influential in Britain ever since. They were originally minor Welsh gentry; their name is found in a variety of forms, including Sitsylt, Ceyssel, and Sisseld.

  5. 28 de abr. de 2022 · Notes: Mildred was ranked with Lady Jane Grey for her erudition, known to speak Greek fluently, and had some fame as a translator. By the time Elizabeth Tudor became queen, Mildred had been the second wife of William Cecil, later Lord Burghley since Dec 1545. Mildred had six children, three of whom died young.

  6. Anne Cecil, Countess of Oxford (1556–1588) Elizabeth Cecil, Lady Wentworth (1564-1583) DIED: 4 August 1598. BURIED: St. Martin's Church, Stamford, Lincolnshire. Fact Profile of William Cecil Baron Burghley 1520-1598, Secretary of State to Queen Elizabeth I, Lord High Treasurer, Chief Minister, biography, married, education,

  7. In the Summer of 2011 the newly refurbished hotel William Cecil opened on The Burghley Estate, one of the foremost Treasure Houses of the United Kingdom. Add this to the beauty of Stamford and The William Cecil must be one of the best located hotels in the Country. Within a 2 minute drive from the A1, the hotel, formerly known as The Lady Anne ...