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  1. 5 de fev. de 2010 · William Cecil married secondly Mildred, daughter of Sir Anthony Cooke of Gidea Hall, Essex. Cecil's second marriage was celebrated 21 Mar 1545.. In 1547 the office of Custos Brevium in the Court of Common Pleas, the reversion to which his father had obtained some years before, fell in, and Cecil found himself independant.

  2. Firma. William Cecil, I barone Burghley ( Bourne, 13 settembre 1520 – Londra, 4 agosto 1598 ), è stato un politico e nobile inglese, primo consigliere della regina Elisabetta I d'Inghilterra, per due volte Segretario di Stato ( 1550 - 1553 e 1558 - 1572) e Lord custode del sigillo privato ( 1571 - 1572 e 1590 - 1598 ); fu anche Lord gran ...

  3. If there is one man who shaped the State Papers it was William Cecil, first Baron of Burghley, Elizabeth I’s Secretary (1558-72) and Lord Treasurer (1572-1598). Burghley was many men rolled into one, the consummate servant of the Crown: in Britain today he would be Prime Minister, Foreign Secretary, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Cabinet ...

  4. William Cecil, primul baron Burghley (scris uneori Burleigh ), Bourne 13 septembrie 1520 - 4 august 1598, a fost un om de stat englez, primul consilier al reginei Elisabeta I a Angliei (17 noiembrie 1558 - 24 martie 1603 ), de două ori Ministru de Externe ( 1550 - 1553 și 1558 - 1572) și Ministru de Finanțe din 1572.

  5. Breakfast is light, hearty, or kick-started with spiced-as-you-like bloody Marys. Lunch and dinner feature star ingredients in classics, our own signatures and divine desserts. For groups of 8 or more please call or email. 01780 750070. enquiries@thewilliamcecil.co.uk.

  6. 21 de mai. de 2018 · Burghley, William Cecil, 1st Baron (1520–98) English statesman and chief minister of Elizabeth I of England. He was secretary of state (1550–53) under Edward VI but failed to win Mary I 's favour on her accession to the throne. On Mary's death, Elizabeth I made Burghley secretary of state (1558–72) and then lord high treasurer (1572–98).

  7. During the 1590s new threats arose – rebellion in Ireland, faction at home as Burghley’s former ward, the Earl of Essex and his son, Robert Cecil, clashed for supremacy. Spain, too, was undefeated and there were always fears of invasion. By 1598, Burghley was weakening, but he continued to attend Council meetings whenever he could, his last ...