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Page "Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester" ¶ 6
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1549 and Robert
Wymondham's most famous inhabitant was Robert Kett ( or Ket ), who in 1549 led a rebellion of peasants and small farmers who were protesting the enclosure of common land.
This was a rare practice and occurred a total of seven times within the 16th century, the first being Robert Flynt in 1549.
Robert Estienne, known as Stefanus ( 1503 – 1559 ), a printer from Paris, edited the Greek New Testament four times, in 1546, 1549, 1550 and 1551, the last in Geneva.
In August 1549 Dudley went to Norfolk with his father and his younger brother Robert to fight against the rebel peasant army of Robert Kett.
Printed in 1549, it was the work of Robert Crowley and was printed by him, Richard Grafton and / or Stephen Mierdman.
It is a brass piece, made in 1549 by the Owine Brothers, John and Robert, so that the town might be defended from French invasion.
In 1549 Robert Kett, rebelling against agricultural hardships, led a large group of men who camped for six weeks on the heath before the uprising, known as Kett's Rebellion, was suppressed.
On Reception, is also available in an English translation by Robert Hand from the Latin edition by Joachim Heller of Nuremberg in 1549.
The date of this is generally given as 1549, when he is said to have been confirmed by a charter of novodamus in all the estates, honours, and dignities that belonged to his grandfather ( Robert Boyd, 1st Lord Boyd ).

1549 and Dudley
During the country-wide uprisings of 1549 Dudley put down Kett's Rebellion in Norfolk.
Dudley still had the troops from the Norfolk campaign at his disposal, and in October 1549 he joined the Earl of Southampton and the Earl of Arundel, prominent religious conservatives, to lead a coup of councillors to oust the Protector from office.
In December 1549 Southampton tried to regain predominance by charging Dudley with treason, alongside Somerset, for having been an original ally of the Protector.
Having inherited a failed government, Dudley set out to restore administrative efficiency and maintain public order to prevent renewed rebellion as seen in 1549.
John Dudley recovered the post of Lord Admiral immediately after the Protector's fall in October 1549, Thomas Seymour having been executed by his brother in March 1549.
Somerset was deposed and sent to the Tower of London in October 1549, with Arundel, Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton, and John Dudley, Earl of Warwick ( later Duke of Northumberland ) among the leaders of the new governing group.
Lord Howard was an ally of John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland, then Earl of Warwick, in his coup against the Protector Somerset in October 1549, and on 19 March 1551 received the manor of Effingham, Surrey, and other properties by way of reward.
After the execution of Thomas Seymour in 1549 and the downfall of the Duke of Somerset in the same year, Throckmorton managed to distance himself from those affairs and eventually became the part of the circle of John Dudley and confidant of the young king Edward VI.

1549 and participated
In the Conclave of 1549 – 50 to elect a successor to Paul III, fifty-one cardinals, including Marcello Cervini, participated at the opening on 3 December 1549.
The ferry's captain, Mohamed Gouda, had also commanded one of the ferries that participated in the flight 1549 rescue.

1549 and Kett's
* Kett's Rebellion ( 1549 )
According to the leaders of Kett's Rebellion ( 1549 ), " all bond men may be made free, for God made all free with his precious blood-shedding.
Kett's rebellion, or " the commotion time " as it was also called in Norfolk, began in July 1549 in the small market town of Wymondham, nearly ten miles south-west of Norwich.
Two or possibly three of Kett's brothers were dead by 1549, but his eldest brother William joined him in the rebellion.
1977 Kett's Rebellion: the Norfolk rising of 1549.
* Virtual Norfolk: The ' Commotion Time ' in Norfolk: Kett's Rebellion of 1549
The duke's family descended from Sir Edmund Sheffield, second cousin of Henry VIII, who in 1547 was raised to the Peerage of England as Baron Sheffield and in 1549 was murdered in the streets of Norwich during Kett's Rebellion.
The Sheffield family descended from Sir Edmund Sheffield, second cousin of Henry VIII, who in 1547 was raised to the Peerage of England as Baron Sheffield of Butterwick and in 1549 was murdered in the streets of Norwich during Kett's Rebellion.
The first creation, as Baron Sheffield of Butterwick, was in the Peerage of England in 1547 for Edmund Sheffield ( 1521 – 1549 ), second cousin of Henry VIII, who was murdered in Norwich during Kett's Rebellion.
In 1549 he assisted in suppressing Kett's Rebellion, and received £ 272, 19. 6 for his services.
During Kett's rebellion in 1549 the house was broken into and looted.

1549 and Rebellion
Because of religious persecution during the Prayer Book Rebellion in 1549, the Drake family fled from Devonshire into Kent.
Then followed a long period of contention which included the Cornish Rebellion of 1497, the 1549 Prayer Book Rebellion, the Persecution of Recusants, the Poor Laws, and the English Civil War and Commonwealth ( 1642 – 1660 ).
The Prayer Book Rebellion, Prayer Book Revolt, Prayer Book Rising, Western Rising or Western Rebellion was a popular revolt in Cornwall and Devon, in 1549.
* 1549 Prayer Book Rebellion
After a period of conflict with the Kingdom of Wessex, it became part of the Kingdom of England by the late 11th century and was eventually incorporated into the Great Britain and the United Kingdom, yet maintained an independent language and culture into the Early Modern period, demonstrated by the Cornish Rebellion of 1497 and Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549.
The Cornish also rose up in the Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549.
Following the Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549, William Mayow the Mayor of St. Columb was hanged by Provost Marshal, Anthony Kingston outside a tavern in St Columb as a punishment leading an uprising in Cornwall.
* The Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549 in Cornwall and Devon.
The dissolution of Glasney College helped trigger the Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549.
He wrote an eye-witness account of the siege of Exeter that took place during the Prayer Book Rebellion in 1549.
During the Prayer Book Rebellion in 1549 he experienced at first hand the siege of Exeter, leaving a vivid account of its events in which he made no effort to conceal his religious sympathies.

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