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Topic: Henry Hugh Tudor


  
  Henry Hugh Tudor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Major-General Sir Henry Hugh Tudor, KCB, CMG, (1871-1965) was a British soldier who fought as a junior officer in the Second Boer War (1899-1902), and as a senior officer in the First World War (1914-18), but is now remembered chiefly for his part in the Anglo-Irish War (1920-21).
Tudor was a gunner: born in Devonshire, England in 1871, he enrolled in the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich in 1888, and was commissioned in the Royal Horse Artillery in 1890.
By all accounts, Tudor was a professional and forward-looking artilleryman: historian Paddy Griffith has described him as an "expert tactician." He was the first British general to use smoke shells to create screens, and one of the first advocates of predicted artillery fire.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Henry_Hugh_Tudor   (1104 words)

  
 COURTENAY - LoveToKnow Article on COURTENAY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
He was a favorite with Henry II., his attestations of charters showing him as a constant companion at home and abroad of the king, whom he followed to Wexford in the Irish expedition of 1172.
Henry gave him Berkshire lands at Sutton, still known as Sutton Courtenay, by a charter to which the date of 1161 can be assigned.
A fourth prelate of this family was Henry Reginald Courtenay, who was bishop of Bristol 1794-1797 and bishop of Exeter from 797 to his death in 1803.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /C/CO/COURTENAY.htm   (2805 words)

  
 HENRY III
Henry was the eldest son of King John and Isabella of Angoulême. He was nine years old when his father died naming Henry his heir.
Henry III was considered to reach his majority by early 1227 and went to his first military campaign against France [5] in May 1230 to reconquer Poitou and Brittany occupied by the French.
Henry and his eldest son, Prince Edward (later King Edward I), were defeated and captured at the Battle of Lewes (14 May 1264).
www.archontology.org /nations/england/king_england/henry3.php   (1172 words)

  
 The Tudors in the Wars of the Roses, Part Two
Henry Tudor's mother, Margaret Beaufort, was not given care of her son.
Henry VI was released from the Tower of London and restored to the throne.
Henry Tudor and his mother Margaret Beaufort were reunited and stayed together for over a week at the Beaufort residence at Woking in November 1470.
www.tudorhistory.org /topics/rosetudor2.html   (1788 words)

  
 Latimer
Henry, a Tudor king, was married to Catherine of Aragon.
Henry wanted to be free of this marriage, partly because Catherine had not succeeded in giving him a male heir to sit on the throne, and partly because Henry had his lustful eyes upon Anne of Boleyn, a girl of the palace who would not sleep with Henry unless he married her.
Hugh Latimer was "one of the most distinguished prelates of the Church of England, undoubtedly one of the ablest, if not the ablest ecclesiastic among the English reformers of the 16th century...
www.prca.org /books/portraits/latimer.htm   (1788 words)

  
 SIR HUGH DE PESHALL
Sir hugh took part in the battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, where he was one of the four who were knighted on the field.
Sir Hugh Peshall resided at Horsley, Staffordshire, and he makes the fourth generation of our ancestors who were associated with the house of Lancaster in its efforts to get and to hold the throne of England.
Hugh Peshall was one of those selected for this purpose and it was agreed that the Earl and his special guards should lead the hosts of Lancaster in the battle the following day.
www.geocities.com /Heartland/Acres/5417/SirHugh.html   (1507 words)

  
 Tudor Hackney Welcome Page
Henry Hardwick, a Yorkshireman, had still kept ties with his native county in 1599, leaving bequests of land in Essa and Long Addingham, Yorkshire.
With the later Tudor yeomen families including a number of moneyers, it is likely that there had been some increase in prosperity in the area, despite some years of poor harvests in the 1590s.
Christian Payne, a widow in November 1599, who believed her son Henry Dove (presumably a child of a first marriage) would not be cared for by her surviving relatives.
www.learningcurve.gov.uk /tudorhackney/localhistory/lochlp2.asp   (1474 words)

  
 TUDOR ENGLAND ( 1485 – 1603 )
When Henry VII died in 1509 at fifty-two, an age greater than that reached by any of his four immediate predeces­sors, he left his son and heir an immense fortune, even though he had not denied himself the pleasures of building.
Henry was by now in love with one of his Queen’s ladies, the pert, excitable and sensual Anne Boleyn, great-granddaughter of Sir Geoffrey Boleyn, hatter, mercer and Lord Mayor of London who had bought Blickling Hall in Norfolk and had created of himself a country gentleman.
Hugh Latimer, who had resigned the bishopric of Worcester in Henry’s reign — after preaching forceful sermons urging on the Reformation which had brought him a prisoner to the Tower — returned to the pulpit to express views more advanced than ever.
www.geocities.com /tamercali/tudor.htm   (2738 words)

  
 Ulster history - Tudor conquest   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Henry VIII wrote a book attacking Luther, and was given the title "Defender of the Faith" by Pope Leo X. However, in 1534, Henry had declared himself head of the Church of England instead of the Pope, and in 1560, the Scottish parliament ended the authority of the Pope in Scotland.
In 1541, the Irish parliament declared Henry to be King of Ireland, but several decades were to pass before Ulster finally came under the control of the Tudor monarchy.
Hugh O'Neill was educated for eight years in England, and became Earl of Tyrone in 1585.
www.cruithni.org.uk /overview/over_7.html   (568 words)

  
 Hugh Latimer: Example of Christian Courage
Hugh Latimer was the son of an English farmer, educated at Cambridge University, and ordained as a Roman Catholic priest in 1510.
And, though Henry VIII is still identified with the debauchery and treachery that brought him to divorce or behead nearly six wives-- Catherine Parr, his sixth wife, outlived him-- he was instrumental in divorcing the influence of the Church of Rome over what would become Protestant England.
Henry VIII was succeeded to the throne in 1547 by his sickly young son, Edward VI, whose short reign ended with his death by tuberculosis and the ascension to the throne of the Roman Catholic, Mary Tudor, later vilified as Bloody Mary.
www.whatsaiththescripture.com /Fellowship/Edit_Courage.of.Latimer.html   (1012 words)

  
 Tudor Chronology
Henry VII and Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I ally to assist the Bretons in the Treaty of Dordrecht.
Coronation of Henry VIII and Katherine of Aragon
Archbishop Cranmer declares the marriage of Henry VIII and Katherine of Aragon to be invalid
tudors.crispen.org /chronology   (4386 words)

  
 Anne Boleyn
Henry wanted a male heir to prevent a civil war, like the Wars of the Roses which his father, Henry VII had won to become king.
Although Henry VIII himself was a religious conservative, England slowly began to create the branch of Christianity known as Anglicanism, which often considers itself to have taken a middle road between Luther's and Calvin's Protestantism and Roman Catholicism.
Henry's claims that he had been seduced by witchcraft and that he was free to take another wife, was a primary reason discussed as to why Henry would ultimately have his wife tried with adultery and treason.
departments.kings.edu /womens_history/anneboleyn.html   (4500 words)

  
 Hugh Capet --  Encyclopædia Britannica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
He was elected king without opposition after his father's death but was dominated first by Hugh the Great and then, from 956 to 965, by his uncle, Bruno, archbishop of Cologne, whose support was invaluable but who used his influence also in the interests of Otto I, his brother, the German king, and of...
The third of the Capetian line of French monarchs was Henry I. He was the grandson of Hugh Capet and the son of Robert II.
Founded by Hugh Capet in 987, the Capetian dynasty was the ruling house of France during the feudal period of the Middle Ages.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9041416   (791 words)

  
 The House of Tudor
Sir Hugh Smithson, of Stanwick, and was ancestress of the present DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND, and of the EARL or BEVERLEY, who are both entitled to quarter the Royal Arms.
Henry Hastings, 5th EARL or HUNTINGDON, and is now represented by her descendant, HENRY-WEYSFORD-CHARLES-PLANTAGENET-RAWDON-HASTINGS, MARQUESS HASTINGS, who is entitled, as one of the co-representatives of ELIZABETH of York, to quarter the ROYAL ARMS.
HENRY’S second Queen was brought to the block, (his marriage having been previously annulled) 19 May, 1536, and he m.
www.maximiliangenealogy.co.uk /burke2/TheHouseofTudor.html   (1156 words)

  
 Tudors & Stuarts : 14 to 18 years
The Tudors: The five sovereigns of the Tudor dynasty are among the most well-known figures in Royal history.
Virtual Tour of the Mary Rose: This BBC website enables you to explore the Tudor flagship, the Mary Rose, which was the flagship of Henry VIII until it sank in 1545.
Tudor Hackney: This website enables you to explore the world of 1601 through a virtual reality reconstruction of the Rectory House, which once stood on the west side of Hackney's Mare Street.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /REVhistoryTUD3.htm   (2741 words)

  
 Mary Tudor --  Encyclopædia Britannica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
The first decade of Elizabeth's reign was relatively quiet, but after 1568 three interrelated matters set the stage for the crisis of the century: the queen's refusal to marry, the various plots to replace her with Mary of Scotland, and the religious and economic clash with Spain.
Henry VII, who came to the throne in 1485, was the first Tudor monarch.
Also called Mary Tudor, she was the daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9051221   (924 words)

  
 HUGH V SMITH FAMILY HISTORY
Hugh V. Smith was appointed guardian of Nancy Rawles in Marion County, Ohio.
Hugh V. Smith was a prominent resident of Salt Rock township, being an early pioneer of the area.
Henry was born in 1889, and came to America with Frank and his family in 1906.
www.heritagepursuit.com /smith1.htm   (20113 words)

  
 English Farming: Chapter IV
During the Tudor period, a change was passing over the wool trade, which may have influenced the labour troubles of the period as well as the policy of land-holders.
Sir Hugh Plat was an ingenious inventor, and, as Sir Richard Weston calls him, "the most curious man of his time." He devotes the second part of his Jewell House of Art and Nature (1594) to the scienfitic manuring of arable and pasture land.
Tudor architects used pleasure gardens to carry on and support the lines of their main buildings, and even repeated the patterns of their mural decorations in the geometrical "Knots" of their flower borders; but they banished kitchen gardens out of sight.
www.soilandhealth.org /01aglibrary/010136ernle/010136ch4.htm   (7809 words)

  
 Centre for First World War Studies
Major-General Sir (Henry) Hugh Tudor (1871-1965) spent much of the war with 9th (Scottish) Division, first as its CRA (1916-18) and finally as its GOC (from March 1918).
Tudor was an outstanding lightweight boxer in his youth and he retained the boxer’s pugnacity and fearlessness.
Tudor, as is well known, was a close personal friend of Winston Churchill and remained so until Churchill’s death in January 1965.
www.firstworldwar.bham.ac.uk /nicknames/tudor.htm   (281 words)

  
 Hugh Latimer
After gaining royal favour by speaking out in support of the efforts of King Henry VIII to obtain an annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon, Latimer received the benefice of West Kingston, Wiltshire, in1531.
As a result of a temporary return in England to a favouring of Roman Catholicism, Latimer was forced to resign his See in 1539, and upon the sudden fall of Thomas Cromwell in July 1540, he lost his main support at Court.
Apparently he incurred suspicion of heresy at intervals and spent some time in the Tower of London, where he was incarcerated during the last few months before the accession of the boy king Edward VI in January 1547.
www.scionofzion.com /latimer.htm   (819 words)

  
 Tudor Hackney Welcome Page
In the 17th century, the two largest land holdings had been built up by the Norris family and Henry Monger, whose property was later to form part of the estate of Sir John Cass.
Hugh Norris had bought land on the east side of Grove Street in 1654 from Edward Misselden.
Hugh Norris’ descendant Henry Norris demolished it in 1728 - the Georgian replacement was demolished in the 1860s when the western ends of Penshurst and Southborough Roads were constructed.
www.learningcurve.gov.uk /tudorhackney/localhistory/lochhy4.asp   (1459 words)

  
 *Ø*  Wilson's Almanac free daily ezine | Book of Days | April 18 | Sechseläuten Clarence Darrow Lucrezia Borgia ...
“Henry Kendall was born in 1839 near Milton on the NSW coast.
One of Rose’s sons, Hugh, was captured by Paraguayan rebels, escaped and died soon after of tuberculosis in New Australia.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, glorified the Bostonian as the lone rider) rode from Charleston to Lexington to warn American militiamen of the advancing British forces, and of the impending arrests of
www.wilsonsalmanac.com /book/apr18.html   (4359 words)

  
 Hugh Latimer and the Rapture
He was Bishop of Worcester (pronounced WOOS-ter) in the time of King Henry, but resigned in protest against the King's refusal to allow the Protestant reforms that Latimer desired.
Latimer, the exact year of whose birth is uncertain (1485–91), took his bachelor’s degree at Cambridge in 1510, and his bachelorship of divinity in 1524.
Hugh Latimer was Bishop of Worcester during the reign of Henry VIII.
www.pretribulation.com /latimer.htm   (3098 words)

  
 HISTORY OF CINCINNATI AND HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
HENRY HAMMOND TATEM, secretary and treasurer of the Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific Railway Company, and secretary and auditor of the board of trustees of the Cincinnati Southern railway, was born in Cincinnati February 6, 1841, and is a son of Henry Lea and Sarah Ann (Hall) Tatem.
Charles Tatem and his son, Henry L., commanded the highest respect of their fellow-citizens, and were both at various times elected to positions in the municipal government.
HENRY C., secretary and treasurer of the Little Miami railway, was born in Cincinnati January 30, 1830, and is a son of Benjamin and Elizabeth (Keyser) Urner.
www.heritagepursuit.com /Hamilton/HamiltonBio771.htm   (20906 words)

  
 Henry VIII
History will never forget the eighth Henry of England and the six women who became his wives.
Henry began his reign with great personal promise, but the promise ended in travesty.
Lesson 2: Loyal Heart: Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon.
www.suite101.com /lesson.cfm/17123/452/3   (511 words)

  
 Henry Dunbar
Henry Dunbar was a very handsome young man in those days--very handsome, very aristocratic-looking, rather haughty in his manners to strangers, but affable and free-spoken to those who happened to take his fancy.
Henry's regiment was quartered at Knightsbridge, and the young man was very often at this office, in and out, in and out, sometimes twice and three times a week; and I expect that every time he came, he came to get money, or to ask for it.
Hugh said, very solemnly, 'nine men out of ten, who do what you have done, think what you say you thought: that they shall be able to escape the consequences of their deeds.
www.gutenberg.org /dirs/etext05/8dunb10h.htm   (20636 words)

  
 Believing Thomas -October 2003
Cranmer, Hugh Latimer, and Nicholas Ridley were all martyred at Oxford by Queen Mary Tudor (daughter of King Henry VIII), later known as Bloody Mary.
Upon the death of Henry VIII in 1547, there were three principal heirs to the throne, Mary (daughter of Henry and Catherine of Aragon), Elizabeth (daughter of Henry and Anne Boleyn) and Edward (son of Henry and Jane Seymour).
Cranmer, with the support of both Henry VIII and Edward VI, served as Archbishop of Canterbury from 1533 until 1553, when the ardently Roman Catholic Queen Mary's wrath descended upon him.
www.sfcsa.org /church/bt_2003_10.htm   (630 words)

  
 Tudor 7
Henry Vane, 2nd Earl of Darlington, 4th Baron Barnard of Barnard’s Castle, * 1726, + 1792, Md. 1757, Margaret Lowther, + 1800, d.
Henry Vane, Gen. the 2nd Duke of Cleveland, 6th Baron Barnard of Barnard’s Castle, K.G., * 1788, + 1864, Md. 1809, Lady Sophia Poulett, * 1785, + 1859, d.
of (Hugh) Alastair Hamilton Fraser, of Stanton Drew, Somerset.
www.william1.co.uk /t7.htm   (4226 words)

  
 Recipes
The Tudor Times kitchen is that rather large, sort of pleasant room at the back of the house located immediately to the right of the tradesman’s entrance.
An old Tudor was someone who was about 45 to 48 years old, the life expectancy being rather short in those days.
(Or, Henry VII shouting, "Bury Simnel!") This flour was used in a cake decorated with balls of dough for the feast of Matronalia, a Roman version of Mother’s Day.
www.tudortimes.com /recipes.htm   (12140 words)

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