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  1. Edmund Dudley (c. 1462 or 1471/1472 – 17 August 1510) was an English administrator and a financial agent of King Henry VII. He served as a leading member of the Council Learned in the Law, Speaker of the House of Commons and President of the King's Council.

  2. Edmund Dudley (born c. 1462—died Aug. 18, 1510, London) was a minister of King Henry VII of England and author of a political allegory, The Tree of Commonwealth (1509). In 1506 Dudley was “president of the king’s council,” a small body of lawyers and fiscal administrators that helped reestablish the payment of feudal dues and of fines ...

  3. Edmund Dudley, (c.1462–1510) Dudley was educated at Oxford, and pursued a career as a lawyer. He specialised in the prerogative rights of the king, which qualified him very well for Henry VII’s purposes. He was elected to parliament in 1491–2, and again in 1495 as knight of the shire for Sussex.

  4. 17 de ago. de 2016 · On 17th August 1510, the second year of King Henry VIII's reign, Henry VII's former chief administrators, Sir Edmund Dudley and Sir Richard Empson, were beheaded on Tower Hill after being found guilty of treason. Chronicler Edward Hall records:

  5. 19 de set. de 2016 · The University of York Student History Magazine. The Rise and Fall of Edmund Dudley: the “hawk” of Henry VII? September 19, 2016. On the morning of 17th August 1510, Edmund Dudley – notorious minister, lawyer, and general agent of King Henry VII – made his way to Tower Hill in London to be beheaded.

  6. BORN: c. 1462. EXECUTED: 17 AUGUST 1510. Edmund Dudley, along with King Henry VII and Richard Empson. The Duke of Rutland. Father of John Dudley, grandfather of Robert, Ambrose, Guildford, etc. Was a minister of Henry VII, where he became unpopular and was impeached and executed early in Henry VIII 's reign.

  7. 25 de mai. de 2006 · Abstract. Although Richard Empson and Edmund Dudley were executed in 1510 in part for their rabid prosecution of written bonds, their activities at the time were only quietly recognized as part of a royal policy encouraged by Henry VII (1485–1509).