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  1. Fillol's Hall or Felix Hall, Kelvedon, Essex was an English manor house. [1] [2] It belonged to the Fillol family, which included Catherine Fillol, Duchess of Somerset , the first wife of the future Lord Protector of England Sir Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset , uncle of Edward VI .

  2. www.biographies.net › biography › catherine_fillolBiography of Catherine Fillol

    Catherine Fillol may have gone to a local convent, as this seems to be implied by a remark in her father's will. The will was challenged by Sir Edward Seymour in 1531, on the basis that his father-in-law was not of sound mind. In 1535, Sir Edward Seymour married his second wife Anne Stanhope, indicating that Catherine Fillol had probably died ...

  3. 25 de ago. de 2021 · Katherine (Catherine) Seymour formerly Fillol. Born about 1504 in Fillot Hall, Essex, England. Ancestors. Daughter of William Filliol and Dorothy (Ifield) Rogers. Sister of Anne (Filliol) Paulet. Wife of Edward Seymour KG — married before 1519 in Savernake, Wiltshire, England [uncertain] Descendants. Mother of John Seymour MP and Edward Seymour.

  4. 9 de jan. de 2019 · It appears likely that there was some kind of scandal in Jane Seymour’s family before she came to court. By 1519, her brother Edward had married an heiress called Catherine Fillol. She bore two sons, John in 1527 and Edward in 1529, then seems to have retired to a convent. Mysteriously, her father, Sir William Fillol, in his will of 1527 ...

  5. Dunn makes some interesting points about the case, noting that 40 pounds a year was double the Prioress of Shaftesbury's pension, and it was Catherine Fillol's entirely. However, her father's will was set aside in 1530, two years after he died, and we don't know how her maintenance was managed thereafter. (I read online the 1530 act divvying up ...

  6. Yes, Jacque, adultery was grounds for a kind of divorce under church law in the Tudor period. I say "a kind of divorce" because Roman Catholic canon law, which was still followed in England at the time of Seymour's reported separation from Katherine Fillol, is extremely precise on the issue of marriage. For example, canon law does not recognize ...

  7. English noblewoman. Catherine Fillol (or Filliol; c. 1507 – c. 1535), Lady Seymour, was the daughter and co-heiress of Sir William Fillol (or Filliol; 1453 – 9 July 1527), of Woodlands, Horton, Dorset, and of Fillol's Hall, Essex. She became the first wife of Sir Edward Seymour, who went on to become the first Duke of Somerset of a new ...