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  1. 8 de jun. de 2021 · [he] was cr. Baron Hunsdon of Hunsdon, co. Herts., . . .” 54 That he was not created “Baron Carey” as would be expected (there was no other Lord Carey) was very unusual, if not unique and is, given other evidence, highly suggestive. 55 When Queen Elizabeth I thought herself on her deathbed 17/18 October 1562, she especially commended Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon to the care of her Council.

  2. He was knighted by his relative Queen Elizabeth soon after her accession, and was created Baron Hunsdon on 13 Jan. 1558-1559, receiving on 20 March following a grant of the honour of Hunsdon and manor of Eastwick in Hertfordshire, together with other lands in Kent. Hunsdon was prominent in all the court tournaments and jousts of 1559 and 1560.

  3. 14 de mai. de 2024 · Anne Morgan, Baroness Hunsdon (c.1529 – 19 January 1607) was an English official. She was the wife of Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon, by whom she had a total of 13 children. On 14 December 1595, she was appointed by Queen Elizabeth I of England to the office of Keeper of Somerset House; a post which she held for life.

  4. 1526 - 1596. Margaretha Von Zuhmen. 1526 - 1596. View all 12 similar people. Surname meaning for CAREY 1ST BARON OF HUNSDON. from Hunsdon (Herts) which is recorded as Honesdone in 1086 and Hunnesdon in 1255. The place-name derives from the Old English personal name Hūn (genitive Hūnes) + Old English dūn ‘hill’. . . .

  5. In 1559, on the accession of Elizabeth to the throne, Henry Carey was ennobled as Baron Hunsdon, with lands in Hertfordshire, Kent, and Hampshire, and becomes Elizabeth's Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners, the Queen's personal bodyguard. Henry eventually gains the office of Lord Chamberlain as well.

  6. Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon was born 4 March 1526 in Hengrave, Suffolk, England, United Kingdom to Henry VIII of England (1491-1547) and Mary Boleyn (1503-1543) and died 23 July 1596 Somerset House, Strand, Greater London, England, United Kingdom of unspecified causes.

  7. Carey’s status was greatly enhanced at the accession of Elizabeth, who was his cousin if not his half-sister. After receiving a knighthood in November 1558, early in the following year he was created Baron Hunsdon of Hunsdon, a title probably deriving from his childhood connexion with the royal residence there.