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  1. Edmund Howard (1478 körül – 1539. március 19.) angol nemesember, VIII.Henrik angol király apósa, Howard Katalin királyné édesapja.. Élete. 1478 környékén születhetett, Thomas Howard, Norfolk 2. hercege és első felesége, Elizabeth Tilney harmadik fiaként és harmadik gyermekeként.

  2. Edmund Howard was born circa 1478 to Thomas Howard, 2nd Duke of Norfolk (1443-1524) and Elizabeth Tilney, Countess of Surrey (bef1445-1497) and died 19 March 1539 of unspecified causes. He married Jocasta Culpeper (c1480-c1531) 1515 JL .

  3. Lord Edmund Howard, third son of Thomas, 2nd Duke of Norfolk, was a spendthrift who soon dissipated his wife’s lands in Kent and Hampshire and fled abroad to avoid his creditors, leaving his numerous children to be brought up by relatives. Like his sister the future Queen Catherine, George Howard may therefore have spent his early years in ...

  4. CATHERINE HOWARD (d. 1542), the fifth queen of Henry VIII, was a daughter of Lord Edmund Howard and a granddaughter of Thomas Howard, 2nd duke of Norfolk (d. 1524).. Her father was very poor, and Catherine lived mainly with Agnes, widow of the 2nd duke of Norfolk, meeting the king at the house of Stephen Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester.

  5. Catherine Howard was the tenth child of Lord Edmund Howard and Joyce Culpeper. Catherine's exact date of birth is unknown, although the year has been estimated as being between 1520 and 1525. She was the niece of the Duke of Norfolk, and a first cousin to Henry's second wife, Queen Anne Boleyn , and her sister Mary Boleyn.

  6. 21 de jun. de 2021 · Catherine Howard (1523-1542) Catherine Howard was the fifth wife of Henry VIII and the last to be beheaded after Anne Boleyn. She was the daughter of Lord Edmund Howard and Joyce Culpeper. Catherine’s family, despite the aristocratic status of the Howard name was relatively poor. The family fortune spread thin between her father’s 20 siblings.

  7. Lord Home’s well-delivered pike attack shattered the cohesion of the shire levies. Even before the Scottish advance, the Cheshire levies fighting under Edmund Howard felt a great sense of unease. This stemmed from their having to go into battle under the youngest Howard when their regarded Lord Stanley as their rightful commander.