Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Tomás Butler Butler, 10.º Conde de Ormond e 3.º Conde de Ossory KG PC (Ire) (em irlandês: Tomás Dubh de Buitléir, Iarla Urmhamhan ; c. 1531 – 1614), foi um cortesão influente em Londres na corte de Isabel I de Inglaterra. Fi o Senhor Tesoureiro da Irlanda de 1559 até sua morte.

  2. Thomas Butler, 10th Earl of Ormond and 3rd Earl of Ossory KG PC (Ire) (Irish: Tomás Dubh de Buitléir, Iarla Urmhamhan; c. 1531 – 1614), was an influential courtier in London at the court of Elizabeth I. He was Lord Treasurer of Ireland from 1559 to his death.

  3. 29 de mar. de 2024 · Thomas Butler, 10th earl of Ormonde was an Irish nobleman who sided with the English in the rebellions in the mid-16th century. The son of the 9th earl (James Butler), he was brought up a Protestant at the English court after his father’s death in 1546. He returned to Ireland in 1554 and was.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Contributed by. Edwards, David. Butler, Thomas (1531–1614), 10th earl of Ormond , nobleman, was born in southern Ireland, eldest son of James Butler (qv), 9th earl of Ormond, and his wife Joan, daughter and heiress of James Fitzgerald, 10th earl of Desmond. He had six brothers, Edmund, John, Walter, James, Edward, and Piers.

  5. 23 de mai. de 2018 · Ormond, Thomas Butler, 10th earl of [I] (1531–1614). ‘Black Tom’ Ormond inherited the title from his father at the age of 15 and was brought up as a protestant at the English court. From 1559 he was treasurer of Ireland and in 1588 was given the Garter, for zeal in tracking down the survivors of the Spanish Armada.

  6. Quartered arms of Sir Thomas Butler, 10th Earl of Ormond, KG.png 1,158 × 1,158; 958 KB Steven van der Meulen Thomas Butler Earl of Ormonde NGI.jpg 2,605 × 3,600; 1.39 MB Steven van der Meulen Thomas Butler Earl of Ormonde.jpg 577 × 800; 155 KB

  7. Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond PC (1426 – 3 August 1515) was the youngest son of James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond. He was attainted, but restored by Henry VII's first Parliament in November 1485, and the statutes made at Westminster, by Edward IV, which declared him and his brothers traitors, were abrogated.