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1538 and estate
The house, built around the gatehouse of the monastery of Beaulieu Abbey ( the extensive ruins of which are a major feature of the estate ), was purchased in 1538 by Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton, when the abbey was dissolved by Henry VIII.
Bryan only held the estate for a short while before selling it in 1538 to Sir John Cope, a wealthy Banbury lawyer.
Shortly after the Reformation in the Faroe Islands in 1538, all the real estate of the Catholic Church was seized by the King of Denmark.

1538 and including
The marriage contract was finalized in January 1538 with a dowry including that of her first marriage.
While at Cambridge he published several works, including Libellus de re herbaria, in 1538.
Another Spanish explorer coming from the village of Cartagena de Indias named Juan de Vadillo commanded a second group of explorers and entered Cali on 23 December 1538, but he returned to Cartagena leaving many of his men behind including Pedro Cieza de León 1967.
The abbey was dissolved in 1538 ; however, the town flourished, and many of the oldest existing houses in the village date from the 14th and 15th centuries, including The Seven Stars Inn on the historic High Street.
Jud is responsible for several other influential publications, including large and small catechisms in 1534, which were published in German, followed by a Latin edition in 1538, and another catechism in 1541.
The test car cost £ 1538 including taxes.
Altamura was ruled by various feudal families, including the Orsini del Balzo and the Farnese ( 1538 – 1734 ), the latter responsible of the construction of numerous palaces and churches.
In 1538, Henry VIII dissolved the Collegiate churches, including Howden.

1538 and other
Almagro was condemned to death and decapitated while in confinement on July 8, 1538 ( other sources suggest he was garrotted, which would have been more likely for a Christian man of fame ).
In 1538, William Marshall enjoined his readers to " henseforth ... forget suche prayers as seynt Brigittes & other lyke, whyche greate promyses and perdons haue falsly auaunced.
The Roche Abbey records were lost or destroyed so there are no accounts of what went on in the abbey, other than there were 14 monks and an unknown number of novices at the time of dissolution in 1538.
The Order was dissolved in 1538, along with other monastic orders in England, by Henry VIII.
It was founded decades after other major Spanish settlements in the region, such as Quito ( 1534 ), Guayaquil ( 1538 ), and Loja ( 1548 ).
Very little is known about Clavius ' early life other than the fact that he was born in Bamberg in either 1538 or 1537 ( the exact year is somewhat unknown and depends on when one assumes a new year begins ).
Following the break with Rome under Henry VIII in 1538, the vestments, silver and gold plate and other gifts of the cathedral were sold to provide money to repair the mediaeval church.
Although the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo was founded in 1538, it was not officially recognized by Royal Decree until 1558, and, as many other universities in the Americas that closed during independence wars and other political conflicts, it was closed due to the occupations of the Dominican Republic by Haiti and then the United States.
On the other hand, he moved to unify Ōsumi Province and captured Takaoka Castle in 1538 to capture the majority of the province.
Guru Nanak Dev ( 1469 – 1538 ), the founder of Sikhism visited Mithankot in 1518 ; he held a lively debate on theology, God and other spiritual matters with Mian Mitha, a noted Muslim saint residing at Mithankot, and then returned to Kartarpur in north Punjab.
Between 1536 and 1538, when the Spanish colonist founded the city of Gracias, there was Lepaera already, as well as other municipalities.
In 1476 Wallachia and in 1538 Moldavia came under initially formal Ottoman suzerainty ; however, they preserved their self-rule in all aspects but foreign affairs, except for periods when individual princes defied Ottoman suzerainty and established extensive foreign relations as well — one such rule, that of Michael the Brave, also brought a brief personal union of the Danubian Principalities with each other and with Transylvania in 1600.
The word ' rauschpfeife ', in addition to referring to a specific wind instrument, was sometimes used to denote woodwind instruments in general: for example an order placed for instruments by the Nuremberg town council in 1538 indicated a need for ' rauschpfeiffen ', but when the order was filled, it included recorders, cornetts, shawms and other instruments, but none specifically named ' rauschpfeife '.

1538 and along
In 1538 the house was taken from Archbishop Thomas Cranmer by King Henry VIII along with Otford Palace.
The shrine was suppressed during the English Reformation, and its famous statue was taken to Chelsea to be burnt, along with the statue of Our Lady of Walsingham on 20 September 1538.

1538 and passed
After the dissolution of the monasteries the lord of the manor was the family of John Horsey of Clifton Maybank from 1538 – 1610 and then by the Phelips family until 1846 when it passed to the Harbins of Newton Surmaville.
The Cornaro controlled Karpathos until 1538, when it finally passed into the possession of the Ottoman Turks.
The monastery closed on 30 November 1538 during the dissolution, and the site passed into the ownership of the Blithman family.
In 1538 the Roman Catholic Church was disestablished by King Henry VIII, and the area became the possession of The Crown, until under an arrangement with Henry, the possessions of Bordesley Abbey passed to Andrew Lord Windsor, and therefore to the stewardship of the Earl of Plymouth at adjacent Hewell Grange.
By the early 16th century Birmingham had already evolved into a well established arms manufacturing town, in 1538 churchman John Leialand passed through the Midlands and wrote:
After the dissolution of Abingdon Abbey in 1538, the school passed through a difficult phase: the sixteenth century endowments by Old Abingdonians attempted to overcome the loss of monastic support.
The manor passed to the Duchy of Cornwall in 1538 but some of the manor house remains.
The land, and the title Lord of the Manor, were purchased by Francis Dawtrey in 1538, and passed through several hands before being bought by Giles Stibbert in 1771.

1538 and Tudor
Nonsuch Palace was a Tudor royal palace, built by Henry VIII in Surrey, England ; it stood from 1538 to 1682 – 3.
* Jane Suarez de Figueroa ( 1538 – 1612 ), Lady in Waiting to Queen Mary Tudor of England

1538 and diplomat
Giovanni Battista Guarini ( 10 December 1538 – 7 October 1612 ) was an Italian poet, dramatist, and diplomat.
On 10 March 1538, Holbein arrived in Brussels with the diplomat Philip Hoby to meet Christina.

1538 and Sir
In November 1538, using evidence acquired from Sir Geoffrey Pole under interrogation in the Tower, he imprisoned the Marquess of Exeter, Sir Edward Neville, and Sir Nicholas Carew on charges of treason ; all were executed in the following months.
After William's death, his widow, Joyce, married the courtier Sir John Carey in 1538.
* Lady Anne Seymour ( 1538 – 1588 ), married firstly John Dudley, 2nd Earl of Warwick ; she married secondly Sir Edward Unton, MP, by whom she had issue.
Sir Geoffrey Pole was arrested in August 1538 ; he had been corresponding with Reginald, and the investigation of Henry Courtenay, Marquess of Exeter ( Henry VIII's first cousin and the Countess ' second cousin ) had turned up his name ; he had appealed to Thomas Cromwell, who had him arrested and interrogated.
Rather, he appears to have been in 1538 rector of Liddington, Wiltshire, a benefice in Sir Thomas Arundell's gift, though he must have been a non-resident incumbent.
In 1538, Herbert married Anne Parr, daughter of Sir Thomas Parr of Kendal and sister of King Henry VIII's last Queen, Catherine Parr and William Parr, 1st Marquess of Northampton.
* Sir John Alan ( 1538 – 1546, 1548 – 1551 ).
On November 1538 Keeper of the Sewer Sir Edward Neville was beheaded for his part in the conspiracy.
The Manor of Sully reverted to Crown ownership and is recorded as being sold in its entirety to Sir Thomas Stradling in 1538.
* 1538: Sir Richard Long
Yet there is no evidence to suggest that Courtenay ever had the means to or intended to muster any kind of rebellion against the King, the charges brought against Lord Exeter were based on the correspondence he had with Cardinal Pole and the testimony of Sir Geoffrey Pole, whose brother Henry Pole, 1st Baron Montagu was also arrested and beheaded alongside Courtenay and another supposed plotter Sir Nicholas Carew KG, the Master of the Horse to Henry VIII on 9 December 1538 on Tower Hill.
Sir Thomas Craig ( c. 1538 – 26 February 1608 ) was a Scottish jurist and poet.
After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the Crown sold the Priory and its estates in 1538 to Sir Michael Stanhope of Rampton, Nottinghamshire.

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