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  1. edmund dudley and the church513 At one level, then, Dudley’s comments were commonplace. Yet many of them had a very specific context in the last years of Henry vii’s reign. Simony was an issue on the king’s mind and on the minds of others at court. In 1504 Henry, anxious about the state of his soul, obtained from ...

  2. 22 de jul. de 2023 · Edmund Dudley was a member of the aristocracy in England. Different sources give Edmund's birth year as 1462 or 1471/2. He was the son of John Dudley of Atherington, Sussex, and Elizabeth Bramshot. [1] [2] He was sent to Oxford in 1578 and then he studied law at Gray's Inn. He was politically very active during the reign of Henry VII, for whom ...

  3. 26 de dez. de 2020 · Edmund Dudley's widow married, about 1515, Sir Arthur Plantagenet [q. v.], Edward IV's natural son, by Lady Elizabeth Lucy. Sir Arthur was created Viscount Lisle, in right of his wife, in 1523, and was for many years governor of Calais.

  4. 25 de mar. de 2024 · John Dudley, son of an executed traitor suffered the same fate as his father in 1554 when he failed to place his daughter-in-law Lady Jane Grey on the throne. He’d risen to the highest place in the country and become the first non-royal duke in the land. John’s father Edmund was one of Henry VII’s key administrators and tax collectors.

  5. 7 de jan. de 2012 · Edmund Lux Obituary. LUX, Edmund Dudley George (Eddie). Suddenly on 4th January 2012. Loving father to Chris and Diana. Granddad to James and Kimberlea. Poppa to wee Savahna. Go gentle into the good night Dad. We love you. To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

  6. Richard Empson and Edmund Dudley were arrested within a few days of the death of Henry VII and imprisoned in the Tower.2 Dudley was indicted on a charge of constructive treason at the Guild-hall on I 2 July I509 and on i 8 July he was found guilty and sentenced. He was then returned to the Tower to await his execution.3 i.

  7. The curse, they say, began with Edmund Dudley, beheaded by Henry VIII on a charge of treason. Then Edmund’s son John, Duke of Northumberland, plotted to install his daughter-in-law, Lady Jane Grey, as queen of England. The plot failed, and he and Jane both lost their heads.