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  1. Death. Footnotes. References. Additional reading. Henry Wyatt (courtier) Sir Henry Wyatt KB (c. 1460–1536) was an English nobleman, knight, courtier, and politician. Early life to 1485 [ edit] A younger son of a Yorkshire family, little is known of Henry Wyatt before he adopted the cause of Henry Tudor, later to become king Henry VII.

  2. The Questionable Legend of Henry Wyatt. by Annette Carson. From time to time the exploits of Sir Henry Wyatt (c.1460-1537) crop up in books, both fiction and non-fiction, for he was a fascinating character whose career encompassed espionage as well as military action and high office under the Tudors.

  3. Sir Henry WYATT, Knight. Born: 1460 . Died: 10 Nov 1536/7, Allington Castle, Kent, England. Buried: Milton, near Gravesend. Father: Richard WYATT. Mother: Margaret (Jane) CLARKE. Married 1: Margaret BAILIFF (dau. and heiress of Richard Bailiff of Barnsley) Married 2: Anne SKINNER (dau. of John Skinner) 1485, Ardleigh, Essex, England Children: 1.

  4. Early life. Thomas Wyatt was born at Allington, Kent, in 1503, the son of Sir Henry Wyatt by Anne Skinner, the daughter of John Skinner of Reigate, Surrey. [5] . He had a brother Henry, assumed to have died an infant, [6] and a sister, Margaret who married Sir Anthony Lee (died 1549) and was the mother of Queen Elizabeth's champion, Sir Henry Lee.

  5. Henry Wyatt is a long-necked Joy Mutant, whose neck intertwines with the floors and the walls of his cave. He has dark, untamed hair, and his face has been distorted: his eyes are black and beady, his nose and eyebrows are completely gone, and two of his front teeth elongated and stick out of...

  6. Henry Wyatt (artist) Rear-Admiral Sir Charles Cunningham (1833–34) Mrs. Henry William Wilson (1827) Henry Wyatt (17 September 1794 – 27 February 1840), was an English portrait, subject and genre painter. [1]

  7. Wyatt's father, Sir Henry Wyatt (c. 1460–1536), politician and courtier, was a younger son of Richard Wyatt, of Yorkshire, and Margaret, the daughter and heir of William Bailif, of Reigate. His skill as a soldier and reliability as a financier made him one of the longest-serving courtiers of Henry VII and Henry VIII.