Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Charles Brandon, 3rd Duke of Suffolk" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

1541 and Lord
Henry's direct authority, as Lord of Ireland, and from 1541 as King of Ireland, only extended to the area of the Pale immediately around Dublin.
The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland ( plural: Lords Lieutenant ) was the British King's representative and head of the Irish executive during the Lordship of Ireland ( 1171 – 1541 ), the Kingdom of Ireland ( 1541 – 1800 ) and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland ( 1801 – 1922 ).
* Canford, Dorset: Lord Wimborne, Sir Ivor Guest, opened the court at Canford in 1879 although there had been an earlier court built in the grounds of the manor house dating back to 1541.
* Leonard Grey, Viscount Graney ( c. 1479 – 28 July 1541 ), served as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland but was executed.
The Lord Steward had formerly three courts besides the Board of Green Cloth under him — the Lord Steward's Court, superseded in 1541 by the Marshalsea Court, and the Palace Court.
* The Lord Audley of Walden, at the trial of The Lord Dacre, 1541
Sir James Ogilvy's descendant, James Ogilvy, 5th Lord Ogilvy of Airlie ( c. 1541 – 1606 ), a son of James Ogilvy, master of Ogilvy, who was killed at the Battle of Pinkie in 1547, took a leading part in Scottish politics during the reigns of Mary, Queen of Scots, and of James VI.
* Patrick Gray, 3rd Lord Gray ( d. 1541 )
While on an embassy to France in 1541 Lord Howard was charged with concealing the sexual indiscretions of his young niece, Katherine Howard, Henry VIII's fifth Queen, and was recalled to England to stand trial.
On 22 December 1541 Lord Howard, his wife, and a number of servants who had been alleged witnesses to the Queen's misconduct were arraigned for misprision of treason, convicted, and sentenced to life imprisonment and loss of goods.
They were one of the original great Irish families to submit to Henry VIII, and as a result, in 1541, Brian, the first to assume the surname Fitzpatrick in place of Mac Gìolla Phádraig, was created Lord Baron of Upper Ossory.
# Robert Tailboys, 3rd Baron Tailboys of Kyme, de Jure Lord Kyme, born c. 1523, died 1541.
In 1541, Sir Thomas Fiennes, Lord Dacre, was tried for murder and robbery of the King's deer after his poaching exploits on a neighboring estate resulted in the death of a gamekeeper.
In May 1536 he was elected Upper Master of the Grocer's Company and, after serving as Sheriff of London for 1541, became Lord Mayor of London in 1544.
******* Charles I of Egmont ( d. 1541 ), 3rd Count of Egmont, 10th Lord of Purmerend, Purmerland and Ilpendam
He was Sheriff of Fife from 1529 to 1540 and a Lord of Session from 1541 and a Lord of the Articles from 1544.
William Ruthven, 1st Earl of Gowrie ( c. 1541 – 1584 ), known as The Lord Ruthven between 1566 and 1581, was a son of Patrick Ruthven, 3rd Lord Ruthven.
In 1541 he became dean of Hereford, and in 1555 Queen Mary nominated him to the archbishopric of Dublin, and in the same year he was appointed Lord Chancellor of Ireland.

1541 and Charles
The Barbary States of Tripolitania, Tunisia, and Algeria became autonomous provinces of the Empire, serving as the leading edge of Suleiman's conflict with Charles V, whose attempt to drive out the Turks failed in 1541.
In the October 1541 it housed the Emperor Charles V.
On 3 March 1541, the French Ambassador, Charles de Marillac, reported in a letter that the King was now said to be lamenting that " under pretext of some slight offences which he had committed, they had brought several accusations against him, on the strength of which he had put to death the most faithful servant he ever had.
He accompanied Charles V on the ill-fated Algiers expedition of 1541, of which he disapproved, and which ended in disaster.
* In 1541 the finest Charles ' City was damaged by fires, and devastating wars.
* Louise of Guise ( 10 January 1520, Bar-le-Duc – 18 October 1542 ), married Charles I, Duke of Arschot on 20 February 1541
The last recorded Master was Charles Chalfont, who ran the hospital from 1541 to 1548.
After the disastrous campaign of Algiers ( 1541 ) where " wind and rain " prevented the firing of arquebuses, Charles V might have expressed to his gunmakers the urgent need to devise an ignition mechanism less prone to failure in bad weather.
In 1540 he went, as secretary to Sir Henry Knyvett, to the court of Charles V, whom he accompanied in his expedition against Algiers in 1541, and was wrecked on the Barbary coast.
Charles Brandon, portrait miniature by Hans Holbein the Younger, 1541
By 1541, at the age of 2, 437 years old, he was living in Spain, working as the Chief Metallurgist to King Charles V under the name of " Ramírez.

1541 and older
Even though each 1541 had its own on board disk controller and disk operating system, it was not possible for a user to command two 1541 drives to copy a disk ( one drive reading and the other writing ) as with older dual drives like the 4040 and 8050 that were often found with the PET computer, and which the 1541 was backward compatible to ( it could read 4040 disks but not write to them since its internal Operating System was essentially the same ).
When using the 1581 together with the older C64, however, it is almost as slow as the older 1541 drive, due to limitations of the C64's ROM code.

1541 and brother
The king's marriage in July 1543 to the reformist Catherine Parr, whose brother Holbein had painted in 1541, established Denny's party in power.
Her removal to Orvieto and Viterbo in 1541, on the occasion of her brother Ascanio Colonna's revolt against Paul III, produced no change in their relations, and they continued to visit and correspond as before.
Upon his return to Quito, Gonzalo learned that the Almagristas ( as the followers of Almagro were called ) had assassinated his brother Francisco Pizarro on June 26, 1541 in retaliation for Almagro's execution.
However, these titles became extinct on his death in 1541 while he was succeeded in the Barony of Kerry by his younger brother.
Along with Olaus Petri and his brother Laurentius, Andreae completed the full translation of the Bible into Swedish, known as the " Gustav Vasa Bible " of 1541.

1541 and Henry
At the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1541 the priory's endowment went towards the foundation of a free grammar school, King Henry VIII Grammar School, the site itself passing to the Gunter family.
* 1541 – Thomas Culpeper and Francis Dereham are executed for having affairs with Catherine Howard, Queen of England and wife of Henry VIII.
* 1473 – Henry IV the Pious, Duke of Saxony ( d. 1541 )
In 1541, Henry had the Countess of Salisbury, Mary's old governess and godmother, executed on the pretext of a Catholic plot, in which her son ( Reginald Pole ) was implicated.
Between 1536 and 1541, King Henry VIII of England dissolved the monasteries, sending their monks out into the general public.
* November 28 – Margaret Tudor, Queen of James IV of Scotland, daughter of Henry VII of England ( d. 1541 )
* Margaret Pole, 8th Countess of Salisbury ( 14 August 1473 – 27 May 1541 ); married Sir Richard Pole ; executed by Henry VIII.
The Catholic emphasis of the doctrine commended in the articles is not matched by the ecclesiastical reforms Henry undertook in the following years, such as the enforcement of the necessity of the English Bible and the insistence upon the abolition of all shrines, both in 1541.
*" The King's School " most often refers to one of the seven schools established, or re-endowed and renamed, by King Henry VIII in 1541 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, to pray for his soul:
Margaret Tudor, Queen Consort of Scotland, Countess of Angus, Lady Methven ( 28 November 1489 – 18 October 1541 ) was the elder of the two surviving daughters of Henry VII of England and Elizabeth of York, and the elder sister of Henry VIII.
One of the few surviving members of the Plantagenet dynasty after the Wars of the Roses, she was executed in 1541 at the command of King Henry VIII, who was her cousin Elizabeth's son.
This custom was abolished by Henry VIII in 1541, restored by the Catholic Queen Mary I and again abolished by Protestant Elizabeth I, though here and there it lingered on for some time longer.
The Dissolution of the Monasteries, sometimes referred to as the Suppression of the Monasteries, was the set of administrative and legal processes between 1536 and 1541 by which Henry VIII disbanded monasteries, priories, convents and friaries in England, Wales and Ireland ; appropriated their income, disposed of their assets, and provided for their former members and functions.
Henry remained resolute however, and from 1541 as part of the Tudor conquest of Ireland, he continued to press for the area of successful dissolution to be extended.
* 1541 Refounded as a Cathedral by King Henry VIII.
In the case of Catherine Howard, in 1541 King Henry VIII was the first monarch to delegate Royal Assent, to avoid having to assent personally to the execution of his wife.
Before these Acts, Ireland had been in personal union with England since 1541, when the Irish Parliament had passed the Crown of Ireland Act 1542, proclaiming King Henry VIII of England to be King of Ireland.
These remedies were insufficient to cover all cases where money or other properties had been obtained by false pretences, and the offence was first partially created by a statute of Henry VIII ( 1541 ), which enacted that if any person should falsely and deceitfully obtain any money, goods, & c., by means of any false token or counterfeit letter made in any other man's name, the offender should suffer any punishment other than death, at the discretion of the judge.
Their descendant the Countess of Salisbury was beheaded by King Henry VIII in 1541.
It is thought that after the Dissolution of the Monasteries in England by Henry VIII between 1536 and 1541, the book passed to collectors.
His apprenticeship ended in 1541, and he became a London grocer during the reign of King Henry VIII.
In 1541, however, Incent applied to the King, Henry VIII, in pursuit of a licence " to purchase £ 40 in land by the year ," and was successful.
King Richard III in 1483 and King Henry VIII in 1541 both stayed at the Old Hall.
After the dissolution of Reading Abbey in 1539, the school fell under the control of the corporation of Reading, its status being confirmed by Letters Patent issued by Henry VIII in 1541.

0.345 seconds.