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  1. Sir William Boleyn, KB (1451 – 10 October 1505) of Blickling Hall in Norfolk and Hever Castle in Kent, was a wealthy and powerful landowner who served as Sheriff of Kent in 1489 and as Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1500. He was the father of Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire, whose daughter was Queen Anne Boleyn, the second wife of ...

  2. 18 de jan. de 2024 · James Butler, the 9th Earl of Ormond and the 2nd Earl of Ossory, was born circa.1496 in Ireland as the eldest son of Piers Butler, the 8th Earl of Ormond, and his wife Margaret FitzGerald. His parents’ marriage, along with the one they would later attempt for their son, was a political one; their marriage was a way of ending the long-standing ...

  3. Lady Margaret Boleyn was an Irish noblewoman, the daughter and co-heiress of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond. She married Sir William Boleyn and through her eldest son Sir Thomas Boleyn, was the paternal grandmother of Anne Boleyn, second wife of King Henry VIII of England, and great-grandmother of Anne and Henry's daughter, Elizabeth I of England.

  4. Father to Anne Boleyn (r. 1533-1536) and maternal grandfather to Queen Elizabeth I (r. 1558-1603). Born in 1477 at Blickling Manor in Norfolk, Thomas Boleyn was the son of Sir William Boleyn (1451-1505) of Blickling and Lady Margaret Butler (1454-1539), daughter of Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond.

  5. 3 de jan. de 2021 · Amata or Amy Boleyn, sometimes called Jane, was the daughter of William Boleyn (1447-October 10, 1505) and Margaret Butler. (1465-1539/40), daughter of the Earl of Ormond. [1] She married Sir Philip Calthorpe of Ewerton, Suffolk (1480-April 7,1549) on November 4, 1518. They had one daughter, Elizabeth (1521-May 26,1578).

  6. In 1477, Thomas Boleyn was born to William Boleyn and Margaret Butler at Blickling Hall, Norfolk. Inheriting Hever Castle from his father. He was an ambitious man who became a successful courtier and diplomat.

  7. In 1491 Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond, William's father-in-law, received royal licence to empark, licence to crenellate and machicolate, and to build walls and towers of brick at his manor of New Hall at Boreham and Little Waltham in Essex. Through Margaret Butler, wife of William Boleyn, this came to the Boleyn family.