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Page "Counts and Dukes of Alençon" ¶ 5
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1524 and reverted
He married Filiberta ( 1498 – 1524 ), daughter of Philip II, Duke of Savoy, on 22 February 1515, at the court of France, thanks to the intercession of his brother Giovanni, now Pope as Leo X, in the same year Francis I of France ( Filiberta's nephew ) invested him with the title of Duke of Nemours ( which had recently reverted once again to the French crown ) on the occasion.

1524 and crown
In 1524, Italian explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano, in service of the French crown, sailed past the Chesapeake but did not enter the bay.
The last person known to have been crowned in Brittany with their royal crown was Francis III, Duke of Brittany in 1524.
Claude's death in 1524 separated the Duchy from the crown once more, and ( it would transpire ) for the final time.
In 1524, Giovanni da Verrazzano, an Italian explorer in the service of the French crown, explored the Atlantic coast of North America between the Carolinas and Newfoundland, including New York Harbor and Narragansett Bay.
In 1524 he made his son Tirumala Raya the Yuvaraja though the crown prince did not survive for long.

1524 and death
After the death of Mosellanus, he went to Italy from 1524 to 1526, where he took his doctor's degree.
From 1524 until his death he lived at Magdeburg, where he occupied the post of teacher or cantor in the Protestant school.
Selim II ( Ottoman Turkish: سليم ثانى Selīm-i < u > s </ u > ānī, Turkish: II. Selim ; 28 May 1524 – 12 December / 15 December 1574 ), also known as " Selim the Sot ( Mest )" or " Selim the Drunkard "; and as " Sarı Selim " or " Selim the Blond ", was the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1566 until his death in 1574.
In 1498 ( fifteen years after the death of Louis XI of France ), Commines's work was completed ( first published in 1524 in Paris ), and is considered a historical record of immense importance, largely because of its author's cynical and forthright attitude to the events and machinations he had witnessed.
Ottavio Farnese ( 9 October 1524 – 18 September 1586 ) reigned as Duke of Parma and Piacenza from 1547 and Duke of Castro from 1545 until his death.
After his death, Nesîmî's work continued to exercise a great influence on many Turkic language poets, and authors such as Fuzûlî ( 1483 ?– 1556 ), Khata ' i ( 1487 – 1524 ), and Pir Sultan Abdal ( 1480 – 1550 ) can be counted among his followers
Following Pandolfo ’ s death, the Petrucci family ruled Siena until 1524.
At Philip's death, in 1524, Mabuse designed and erected his tomb in the church of Wijk bij Duurstede.
Since Edmund had no children, his sisters were his heirs ; and Elsinges became the property of his brother in law, Sir Thomas Lovel, who, at his death, in 1524, bequeathed it to his great-nephew, Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland, in 1526.
* Sir Thomas Lovell, 6 February 1510 – 25 May 1524 ( jointly with Dorset until his death )
The story of the famous kiss bestowed by Margaret of Scotland on la précieuse bouche de laquelle sont issus et sortis tant de bons mots et vertueuses paroles (' The invaluable mouth from which issued and which left so many witty remarks and virtuous words ') is mythical, for Margaret did not come to France till 1436, after the poet's death ; but the story, first told by Guillaume Bouchet in his Annales d ' Aquitaine ( 1524 ), is interesting, if only as a proof of the high degree of estimation in which the ugliest man of his day was held.
He was knighted some years before his death, which occurred about 1524.
Though it was vaulted over by 1524, the ambitious projects of its sculpture and the intervention of events, such as the temporary exile of the Medici ( 1527 ), the death of Giulio, now Pope Clement VII and the permanent departure of Michelangelo for Rome in 1534, meant that Michelangelo never finished it.
On Lovell's death in 1524 it passed to his great-nephew, Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland.

1524 and Duke
# Katharina ( b. Meissen, 24 July 1468 – d. Göttingen, 10 February 1524 ), married firstly on 24 February 1484 in Innsbruck to Duke Sigismund of Austria, and secondly on 1497 to Duke Eric I of Brunswick-Calenberg.
# Elisabeth, ( 29 October 1451, Ansbach – 28 March 1524, Nürtingen ), married Eberhard II, Duke of Württemberg.
# Sibylle ( 31 May 1467, Ansbach – 9 July 1524, Kaster ), married Duke Wilhelm IV of Jülich and Berg.
Isabella di Aragona, princess of Naples and widow of the Duke of Milan Gian Galeazzo Sforza, enlarged the castle, which she made her residence, 1499 – 1524.
* John Stuart, Duke of Albany ( c. 1481 – 1536 ) was Governor and Protector of the Realm ( 12 July 1515 – 16 November 1524 ) for James V of Scotland ( 1512 – 1542 )
* Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk ( 1443 – 1524 ), English soldier and statesman
He became Earl of Surrey in 1524 when his grandfather died and his father became Duke of Norfolk.
* Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk, Earl of Surrey ( 1443 – 21 May 1524 ), married firstly on 30 April 1472 as her second husband Elizabeth Tilney by whom he had nine children including Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk and Elizabeth Howard, wife of Sir Thomas Boleyn ; he married secondly, in 1497, Agnes Tilney, by whom he had eight children.
* Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk 1509 – 1524
* Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk 1524 – 1547
On 13 July 1524, Müntzer apparently delivered his Sermon to the Princes, a sermon allegedly given to Duke John of Saxony and his advisors in Allstedt, though the circumstances surrounding this event are unclear.
Probably as a result of this event, combined with Luther's Letter to the Princes of early July 1524, which attacked Müntzer and Andreas Karlstadt, Müntzer and others from Allstedt were called to a hearing at Weimar before Duke John of Saxony on 31 July or 1 August.
Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk, KG, Earl Marshal ( 1443 – 21 May 1524 ), styled Earl of Surrey from 1483 to 1514, was the only son of John Howard, 1st Duke of Norfolk by his first wife, Katherine Moleyns.
Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, was the eldest son of Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk ( 1443 – 1524 ), and his second wife, Elizabeth ( d. 1497 ), the daughter of Frederick Tilney and widow of Sir Humphrey Bourchier.
On 4 December 1522 Surrey was made Lord Treasurer upon his father's resignation of the office, and on 21 May 1524 he succeeded his father as 3rd Duke of Norfolk.
At Framlingham Castle the Duke kept two silver-gilt cups engraved with the arms of James IV, which he bequeathed to Cardinal Wolsey in 1524.
* Tucker, M. J., The Life of Thomas Howard, Earl of Surrey and Second Duke of Norfolk, 1443 – 1524, 1964.
* Wenceslaus III Adam, Duke of Cieszyn ( December 1524 – 4 November 1579 ), Duke of Cieszyn ( 1528 – 79 )

1524 and Charles
Philip of Burgundy, 57th Bishop of Utrecht ( 1517 – 1524 ), through a family connection with Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, secured a significant concession from Pope Leo X, granting internal autonomy in both church and temporal affairs for himself and his successors without interference from outside their jurisdictional region.
In 1524, as part of his longtime battle against Emperor Charles V and the Holy Roman Empire, King Francis I of France completed a powerful new fort, the Tour Royale, Toulon, at the entrance of the harbour.
He has been confused with his twin brother Alfonso ( a courtier of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, who attended Charles's coronation in Aachen in 1520 and was Latin secretary of state from 1524 ).
Chepstow was granted a town charter in 1524 by its Marcher Lord, Charles Somerset, 1st Earl of Worcester.
The need for a reinforcement of the defensive system became even more obvious in 1524 after the siege of the city by the constable Charles III of Bourbon who joined with Charles Quint, where the city was taken with little effort.
Charles de Lorraine ( 17 February 1524 – 26 December 1574 ), Duke of Chevreuse, was a French Cardinal, a member of the powerful House of Guise.
In 1524, Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, arrived at Valenciennes, and — even when Henry II of France allied with him against the Protestants in 1552 — Valenciennes became ( c. 1560 ) an early center of Calvinism and in 1562 was location of the first act of resistance against persecution of Protestants in the Spanish Netherlands.
* Charles, Duke of Chevreuse, Archbishop of Reims and Cardinal of Guise ( 1524 – 1574 )
This makes the book an eloquent, realistic testimony of the manners and life in the Roman underworld from the years 1513 to 1524 and the ulterior attack by the imperial forces of Charles V in 1527 that led to the finalisation of the first period of the Renaissance.
The German Peasants ' War broke out in Germany in 1524 and ravaged the country until it was brutally put down in 1526 ; Charles, even as far away from Germany as he was, was committed to keeping order.
* Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine ( 1524 – 1574 )
He left an illegitimate son, to whom was paid in 1524 one hundred and twenty livres for a copy of the Chronique intended for Charles V's sister Mary, queen of Hungary.

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