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  1. 13 de abr. de 2023 · Death: November 20, 1559 (42) Northumberland, England, United Kingdom (Illness) Place of Burial: Westminster Abbey, Westminster, London, England. Immediate Family: Daughter of Charles Brandon and Mary Tudor, Queen consort of France. Wife of Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Suffolk, 3rd Marquess of Dorset and Adrian Stokes, MP.

  2. Frances Brandon married Henry Grey in the chapel of his London house in Southwark. This lady's ancestry combined royal and middle-class blood and, from her husband's point of view, her kinship with the King was of incalculable value; its results were to prove fatal to every member of the family but herself.

  3. Frances Brandon. 1517 - 1559. Full bio coming soon. Image: Portrait of a Woman, tentatively identified as Lady Frances Brandon, c.1560, RCIN 402655, Royal Collection ...

  4. Dr. Frances Brandon. Frances Brandon is a fully qualified orthodontist. She worked as a general dentist with special interest in childrens dentistry until 1995, when she began 3 years of specialised training in how to diagnose, prevent and treat dental and facial irregularities. She received her Membership of Orthodontics from the Royal college ...

  5. Frances Brandon. English nobility, Duchess of Suffolk. The daughter of Princess Mary Rose Tudor, Dowager Queen of France and her second husband, Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk. She married Henry Grey, marquis of Dorset, in 1535. Frances was a ceaseless political schemer who used the advantage of her royal blood to the best of her...

  6. The sitter has been linked tentatively to Frances Brandon, Duchess of Suffolk. A portrait at Petworth (see Collins Baker, 'Catalogue of the Petworth Collection of Pictures', 1920) appears to represent the same woman on a larger scale and is inscribed with the date 1560 and the sitter's age (24).

  7. 24 de nov. de 2015 · Frances Grey nee Brandon is another ‘not quite Tudor princess.’ She was the elder daughter of Henry VIII’s sister Mary Tudor the Dowager Queen of France and her second husband Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk- based on modern rules she would not be defined as a princess but her nearness to the crown at a time when there was a shortage of Tudor heirs created tragedy for her three daughters.