Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cecily_HeronCecily Heron - Wikipedia

    Cecily married Giles Heron (by 1504 – August 1540), a former ward of her father's, [8] in 1525. The couple had two sons and a daughter. [9] Heron was a landowner and Member of Parliament for Thetford but politics under the Tudors were precarious and he was hanged for treason in 1540. Their eldest son, Thomas, was eventually able to reclaim ...

  2. Explore genealogy for Cecily (More) Heron born abt. 1507 England died 1540 England including ancestors + children + 1 photos + more in the free family tree community.

    • Female
    • Giles Heron
  3. 17 de abr. de 2022 · 1507. Birthplace: Bucklersbury, London, England. Death: England (United Kingdom) Immediate Family: Daughter of Sir Thomas More, Chancellor of England and Saint and Lady Joan Colt. Wife of Giles Heron. Mother of Thomas Heron; Anne Heron and John Heron.

    • Giles Heron
  4. The three women in low-cut dresses in the centre are his daughters Cecily Heron (seated, with a closed book), Elizabeth Dauncey (standing) and Margaret Roper (seated, with an open book). The four figures with pleated ruffs are his grandson, also called Thomas More, with his wife Maria Scrope and their sons, John and Christopher Cresacre More.

  5. Cecily Heron (née More) (born 1507), Youngest daughter of Sir Thomas More. Sitter in 8 portraits. Identify; Anne More (née Cresacre) (1511-1577), Wife of John More, son of Sir Thomas More. Sitter in 8 portraits. Identify; Cresacre More (1572-1649), Great-grandson and biographer of Sir Thomas More.

  6. A portrait drawing of Cicely Heron (b.1507), daughter of Sir Thomas More, bust-length to front, facing three-quarters right. She wears a headdress, a dress with a square décolletage, and a pendant. The sitters bodice has been loosened to reveal her yellow kirtle beneath, showing her to be pregnant.

  7. Cicely Heron, the youngest daughter of Sir Thomas More, has loosened the bodice of her gown, revealing her yellow kirtle beneath, to accommodate her changing body shape during pregnancy. Another practical option was to insert an additional piece of fabric known as a placard or stomacher between the two sides of a bodice.