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  1. 1 de set. de 2021 · Sir Andrew Trollope was a career soldier who was based in Calais as the Wars of the Roses broke out. Appointed as a sergeant-porter of Calais in the early 1450’s, his loyalties had seemed to lay with the Earl of Warwick and the Yorkist Lords, who he accompanied to England in 1459. Sir Andrew Trollope and Sir James Blount were sergeants of the ...

  2. Sir Andrew Trollope (morto em 29 de março de 1461) foi um chefe militar inglês no decurso da guerra das Rosas. Biografia [ editar | editar código-fonte ] Iniciou a sua carreira militar como homem de armas durante a guerra dos Cem Anos , na década de 1420 e serviu principalmente sob as ordens de João Fastolf e de João Beaufort .

  3. Trollope, Sir Andrew. Trollope, Sir Andrew. ( d. 1461) Having acquired a reputation for courage and skill in the French wars, Sir Andrew Trollope was perhaps the most famous professional soldier in England at the start of the WARS OF THE ROSES. Although Jean de Waurin claimed Trollope was of lower class origins, little is known of his early life.

  4. Andrew Trollope's Webpage. Hamilton, Ontario. 905-962-1267 (cell) Email: Andrew Trollope. View my Education. View my Activities & Interests. View or print résumé in PDF format. View or print résumé in MS Word format.

  5. Andrew Trollope was the first that he made. Andrew was killed on 29 March 1461 at the Battle of Towton. Research notes. Wikipedia credits him, unsourced, with a son, Sir David Trollope who is also said to have died at the Battle of Towton. Since Andrew was not himself knighted until 1461 this seems highly unlikely.

  6. Andrew Trollope (died 1461) was an English soldier during the Hundred Years' War and the Wars of the Roses. Andrew Trollope was born into a family of Durham dyers, and he began his long military career in France in the 1420s as a man-at-arms during the Hundred Years' War. By 1442, he had risen to the rank of lieutenant, and he became Master Porter of Calais in 1455. During the Wars of the ...

  7. Andrew Trollope kæmpede også i Det 2. slag ved St Albans (hvor han trådte på en fodangel) og blev slået til ridder af prins Edvard. Hans betydning for Lancaster-sagen kan ses i det faktum, at i marts 1461 tilbød den nyligt udråbte kong Edvard 4. en belønning på 100 £ til enhver, der dræbte "visse navngivne fjender af Huset York", som omfattede Trollope.