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Some Related Sentences

1513 and Henry
* 1513 – Edmund de la Pole, Yorkist pretender to the English throne, is executed on the orders of Henry VIII.
* 1513 – Battle of Guinegate ( Battle of the Spurs ) – King Henry VIII of England and his Imperial allies defeat French Forces who are then forced to retreat.
At the very time of Leo's accession Louis XII of France, in alliance with Venice, was making a determined effort to regain the duchy of Milan, and Leo, after fruitless endeavours to maintain peace, joined the league of Mechlin, on 5 April 1513, with the emperor Maximilian I, Ferdinand II of Aragon, and Henry VIII of England.
Anne stayed with Margaret from spring 1513 until her father arranged for her to attend Henry VIII's sister, Mary Tudor, Queen of France, for Mary's marriage to Louis XII of France in October 1514.
James had been excommunicated, and although Henry VIII had obtained a breve from the Pope on 29 November 1513 to have the King buried in consecrated ground at St. Pauls, the embalmed body lay unburied for many years at Sheen Priory in Surrey.
Thomas More, a Tudor loyalist ( and later Chancellor under Henry VIII ), composed his History of King Richard III around the year 1513.
Deptford Dockyard was established in 1513 by Henry VIII as the first Royal Dockyard, building vessels for the Royal Navy, and was at one time known as the King's Yard.
The next king, Henry VIII, did not feel bound to this agreement and had Suffolk executed in 1513.
The Lancastrian victor at Bosworth, Henry VII, granted Framlingham Castle to John de Vere, but Thomas finally regained the favour of Henry VIII after fighting at the victory of Flodden in 1513.
It was conquered in 1513 by Henry VIII of England, making it the only Belgian city ever to have been ruled by England.
In the United Kingdom, for example, shipyards were established on the River Thames ( King Henry VIII founded yards at Woolwich and Deptford in 1512 and 1513 respectively ), River Mersey, River Tees, River Tyne, River Wear and River Clyde – the latter growing to be the World's pre-eminent shipbuilding centre.
Howard's first wife Anne died in 1510, and early in 1513 he married Elizabeth, the daughter of Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham and Eleanor Percy, the daughter of Henry Percy, 4th Earl of Northumberland.
* Ellis, Henry, ed., Original Letters Illustrative of English History, 3rd Series, vol. 1, Richard Bentley, London ( 1846 ) pp. 163 – 164, Dr. William Knight to Cardinal Bainbridge, 20 September 1513, Lille ( Latin )
In 1513, when Henry VIII of England routed the French at the Battle of the Spurs ( Guinegate, where Bayard's father had received a lifelong injury in a battle of 1479 ), Bayard, trying to rally his countrymen, found his escape cut off.
Books I-VI describe the early history of England up to the Norman conquest ; Book VII deals with the reigns of William I and William II ; and the following books cover one reign per book, ending in book XXV with the beginning of Henry VIII ’ s reign to 1513.
Stephen published a play with his son Henry Kemble ( 1789 – 1836 ) entitled Flodden Field ( 1819 ) based on the Battle of Flodden ( 1513 ).
* Henry Sinclair, 3rd Lord Sinclair ( d. 1513 )
He went with Henry VIII to France in 1513, captaining 651 men, was part of the entourage when Thomas Wolsey was made Cardinal on 18 November 1515 and was present at the Field of Cloth of Gold in 1520.
In 1513 he was appointed governor of Tournai, and his letters to Wolsey and Henry VIII describing his vigorous government of the town are preserved in the British Library.
Sir John Blount was a loyal, if unremarkable, servant to the Royal Family, who accompanied King Henry to France in 1513 when he waged war against Louis XII of France.
Henry VIII appointed Sir Brian Tuke " Master of Posts " in 1513.
He was one of the ambassadors who arranged the Holy League in 1513, and accompanied Henry VIII during the ensuing campaign.
The peace did not last in " perpetuity ", it was disturbed in 1513 when Henry VIII King of England and Lord of Ireland, who had succeeded his father four years before, declared war on France.

1513 and VIII
Agathocles was cited as from the lowest, most abject condition of life and as an example of “ those who by their crimes come to be princes ” in Chapter VIII of Niccolò Machiavelli ’ s treatise on politics, The Prince ( 1513 ).
After the marriage of Anne of Brittany to Charles VIII of France in 1513 Breton independence began to slip away.
Subsequently, his indebted heir Pierre Marques sold the castle to Thomas Bohier, Chamberlain for King Charles VIII of France in 1513.
For Henry VIII he fought at the Siege of Tournai in 1513, and he was present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold.
After her death, and that of his father, in 1513, on 6 August 1514 the new Earl of Angus married the dowager queen and regent, Margaret Tudor, widow of James IV and elder sister of Henry VIII of England.
His younger brother Edmund de la Pole, 3rd Duke of Suffolk became the leading Yorkist claimant to the throne until his execution by orders of Henry VIII of England in 1513.
* Edward Howard ( admiral ) ( 1476 / 7 – 1513 ), early naval commander and Lord High Admiral of England, close friend of Henry VIII

1513 and crossed
Spanish explorer Vasco Núñez de Balboa crossed the Isthmus of Panama in 1513 and named it Mar del Sur ( South Sea ).
Balboa's expedition crossed the Isthmus of Panama and reached the Pacific Ocean in 1513.
In 1513, Vasco Núñez de Balboa crossed the Isthmus of Panama and led the first European expedition to see the Pacific Ocean from the west coast of the New World.
In 1513, Vasco Núñez de Balboa crossed the Isthmus of Panama, to find gold but instead led the first European expedition to the Pacific Ocean and the west coast of the New World.
In late May 1513, a French army commanded by Louis de la Trémoille crossed the Alps and advanced on Milan ; at the same time, Bartolomeo d ' Alviano and the Venetian army marched west from Padua.

1513 and English
The earliest instance of the term in English, used to mean " the profession or practice of the Jewish religion ; the religious system or polity of the Jews ", is Robert Fabyan's The newe cronycles of Englande and of Fraunce a 1513.
* The second dates to the Battle of Flodden in 1513 (" a landmark in the history of archery, as the last battle on English soil to be fought with the longbow as the principal weapon ...").
* August 12 – Thomas Smith, English scholar and diplomat ( b. 1513 )
** Elizabeth Seymour, Marchioness of Winchester, English noblewoman ( b. 1513 )
** John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford, English Lancastrian leader ( d. 1513 )
Their output included guns for the Scottish flagship, Great Michael, and the " Seven Sisters ", a set of cannon described by a Venetian writer as powerful and beautiful weapons which were captured by the English at Flodden in 1513.
During the Anglo-Scottish Wars, John Ross, 2nd Lord Ross of Halkhead, died when leading his forces against the English at the Battle of Flodden Field on September the 9th, 1513.
Following the English victory over the Scots at the Battle of Flodden in 1513, a city wall was built around Edinburgh known as the Flodden Wall, some parts of which still survive.
In 1513, Moldavia started to pay annual tribute to the Ottoman Empire, but remained autonomous and was governed as before by a native Voivod / Prince, also known as Domnitor or Hospodar ( Lord in English ).
The Battle of Flodden Field ( 1513 ) was a classic match between Continental-style Pikes formations ( Scots ) and Billmen ( English ).
The battle was fought in the county of Northumberland in northern England on 9 September 1513, between an invading Scots army under King James IV and an English army commanded by the Earl of Surrey.
John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford ( 8 September 1442-10 March 1513 ), the second son of John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford, and Elizabeth Howard, was one of the principal Lancastrian commanders during the English Wars of the Roses.
Sir Thomas Smith ( 23 December 1513 – 12 August 1577 ) was an English scholar and colonialist diplomat.
The Oxford English Dictionary reports that the first mention of the word was in 1513.
* Robert Fabyan, ( died 1513 ), English chronicler
The first recorded use of coral as a color name in English was in 1513.
The word trophy coined in English in 1550, was derived from the French trophée in 1513, " a prize of war ", from Old French trophee, from Latin trophaeum, monument to victory, variant of tropaeum, which in turn is the latinisation of the Greek τρόπαιον ( tropaion ), the neuter of τροπαῖος ( tropaios ), " of defeat " or " for defeat ", but generally " of a turning " or " of a change ", from τροπή ( tropē ), " a turn, a change " and that from the verb τρέπω ( trepo ), " to turn, to alter ".
The Oxford English Dictionary's entry cites the earliest uses of the word from 1513, where it was found in the phrase widdersyns start my hair, i. e. my hair stood on end.
* Sir Thomas Smith ( diplomat ) ( 1513 – 1577 ), English scholar and diplomat
George Manners, 12th Baron de Ros of Helmsley ( born c. 1470 ; died 12 October 1513 at Siege of Tournai or Tournay, Belgium ), was an English nobleman of the reign of King Henry VII of England.
# REDIRECT List of 1513 English incumbents
The definition of the term is not always precise, and institutional definitions such as museum " Departments of Antiquities " often cover later periods, but in normal usage Gothic objects, for example, would not now be described as antiquities, though in 1700 they might well have been, as the cut-off date for antiquities has tended to retreat since the word was first found in English in 1513.

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