Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Thomas Audley, the son of Geoffrey Audley, was born at Hay House, Earls Colne, in about 1487. He attended Buckingham College ( Magdalene College) and in July 1510 was admitted to the Inner Temple. In 1514 Audley became town clerk of Colchester. About 1519 he married Christina Barnardiston, the daughter of Sir Thomas Barnardiston.

  2. When Thomas Audley 1st Baron Audley of Walden was born in 1488, in Earls Colne, Essex, England, his father, Sir Geoffrey Audley, was 35 and his mother, Martha Isabell Wydeville, was 35. He married Christina Barnardiston before 1520. In 1533, his occupation is listed as lord chancellor of england .

  3. 1533 – Audley becomes Lord Chancellor, or Henry VIII’s head honcho. 1538 – Created Baron Audley of Walden. He’d build Audley End on the Walden Abbey site. 1540 – Audley is created a Knight of the Garter as he continues to be in Henry’s good books. 1544 – Death of Thomas Audley in London (30 April) aged c.56.

  4. The Beginnings. In about 1538, at the time of the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the Abbey of Walden at Audley End was given by Henry VIII to Sir Thomas Audley, Lord Chancellor, whose daughter Margaret married the 4th Duke of Norfolk.

  5. 19 de out. de 2023 · Let's dive into the life of Sir Thomas Audley, the formidable yet often overshadowed figure of the Tudor era. From his humble origins to his ascent as Lord C...

    • 22 min
    • 820
    • History and Coffee (also Books, Pens & Music)
  6. Added: Dec 13, 2005. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 12674157. Source citation. 1st Baron Audley, his political career began in 1523 when appointed MP for Essex. Subsequently he enjoyed the patronage of Cardinal Wolsey and became Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Commons Speaker, presiding over the Parliament that instigated the Dissoluton Of ...

  7. Margaret Audley, Duchess of Norfolk (1540–1564) Margaret Audley was the daughter and heiress of Lord Audley. In early 1558 she was betrothed to her fifth cousin, Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk. A papal dispensation was required for them to marry, since his first wife, Lady Mary FitzAlan, had been Margaret’s first cousin.