Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. When Lady Anne Seymour was born in 1538, in Somerset, England, her father, Sir Edward Seymour 1st Duke of Somerset, was 32 and her mother, Anne Stanhope, was 29. She married Sir John Dudley on 3 June 1549, in London, England.

  2. Anne Dudley (née Seymour) Countess of Warwick (1538–1588) was a writer during the sixteenth century in England, along with her sisters Lady Margaret Seymour and Lady Jane Seymour. She was the eldest daughter of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, who from 1547–1549 was the Lord Protector of England during the minority of her cousin, Edward VI. Being educated by the French humanist and ...

  3. Anne Dudley (née Seymour) Countess of Warwick (1538–1588) was a writer during the sixteenth century in England, along with her sisters Lady Margaret Seymour and Lady Jane Seymour. She was the eldest daughter of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset , who from 1547–1549 was the Lord Protector of England during the minority of her cousin, Edward VI .

  4. Anne Dudley (née Russell), Countess of Warwick (1548/1549 – 9 February 1604) was an English noblewoman, and a lady-in-waiting and close friend of Elizabeth I. She was the third wife of Ambrose Dudley, 3rd Earl of Warwick.

  5. Anne Dudley (née Seymour) Countess of Warwick (1538–1588) was a writer during the sixteenth century in England, along with her sisters Lady Margaret Seymour and Lady Jane Seymour. She was the eldest daughter of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset , who from 1547–1549 was the Lord Protector of England during the minority of her cousin, Edward VI .

  6. The Duchess of Somerset and the Countess of Warwick then arranged a marriage between their respective eldest daughter and son, Anne Seymour and John Dudley. Somerset fell again into disgrace in October 1551, when he was arrested on charges of conspiring against Warwick, who had recently been created Duke of Northumberland.

  7. 16 de jan. de 2015 · Anne Seymour, Countess of Hereford and Duchess of Somerset, is one of Tudor England’s most reviled women: in her own lifetime, continuing up until the present day, she has been labelled a ‘wicked woman’. 5 The duchess has been slandered and criticised similarly to other defamed and misunderstood high-profile women such as Frances Grey, Duchess of Suffolk.