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  1. 24 de mai. de 2024 · AllThingsTudors (@allthingstudors). 26 Likes. Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, died on 24 May 1612. Robert’s health had been deteriorating for some time. In the Spring of 1612, he travelled to Bath to take the waters in hopes that he be cured. Robert died, possibly from cancer, on the journey home at Marlborough, Wiltshire. Robert Cecil was laid to rest at St. Etheldredra’s Church in ...

  2. 30 de mai. de 2024 · Cecil, Robert, 1st Earl of Salisbury, Secretary of State, and, later, Lord High Treasurer -, promised horses by Count of Emden, 5 -, receives gift of preserved fruit from Caron, 5 -, receives present of capons from Caron, 9 -, 121, 126, 128, 140, 182, 188, 205(3), 206 -, is sent a hind by St. Paul, 10, 20 -, requested to intercede with King for removal of impost on French wines at Chester, 28 ...

  3. Há 4 dias · Anthony Elcock to the Earl of Salisbury. [ c November, 1605]. He is a mercer of London, and declares that Ambrose Rookwood, one of the conspirators of the late Gunpowder Plot, purchased black and crimson velvets worth £30:15 from petitioner a few days before his arrest, promising to pay for them within thirteen days.

  4. Há 2 dias · Sir Robert Cecil. Of all the statesmen who were gathered round Elizabeth in her last years none was so prominent or so necessary to the Queen as Sir Robert Cecil. He was a younger son of Lord Burghley, and is perhaps better known as the first Earl of Salisbury, having been so created by James I. in 1605.

  5. Há 6 dias · Lady Dacre, who died in 1595, left the house to Lord Burleigh, who is said to have lived here, and he was followed by his youngest son, Sir Robert Cecil, afterwards Earl of Salisbury, who took possession in 1597.

  6. Há 6 dias · John Mylles. [Before 25 Feb., 1601]. "Words spoken by John Mylles of Redborne, servant to the Earl of Essex in office of a pastler, in derogation of Sir Robert Cecil, secretary to the Queen's most excellent Majesty." The said Mylles envied the said knight for that he had entered on an office which the Queen had granted to the Earl of Essex.