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Topic: Henry Mannox


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In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Catherine Howard - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
- February 13, 1542) was the fifth queen consort of Henry VIII of England 1540-1542, sometimes known as "the rose without a thorn." She was born between 1520 and 1525, maybe 1521, probably in London, the daughter of Lord Edmund Howard and granddaughter of the 2nd Duke of Norfolk.
She married Henry VIII on July 28, 1540, at Oatlands Palace in Surrey, having caught his eye even before his divorce from Anne of Cleves was arranged.
Painters continued to include Jane Seymour in pictures of King Henry VIII years after she was dead, because Henry continued to look back on her with favour as the one wife who gave him a son; most of them copied the portrait by Hans Holbein the Younger because it was the only full-sized picture available.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Catherine_Howard   (1742 words)

  
 Catherine Howard - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Catherine Howard (born between 1520 and 1525; died February 13, 1542) was the fifth queen consort of Henry VIII of England (1540-1542), and sometimes known by his reference to her as "the rose without a thorn." Her birthdate and place of birth is unknown, (occasionally cited as 1521, probably in London).
Catherine married Henry VIII on July 28, 1540, at Oatlands Palace in Surrey, almost immediately after his divorce from Anne of Cleves was arranged.
Francis I of France wrote a letter to Henry upon news of Catherine's death, regretting the "lewd and naughty behaviour of the Queen" and advising him that "The lightness of women cannot bend the honour of men".
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Catherine_Howard   (2582 words)

  
 Katherine Howard
While Henry did not acknowledge the fact that Katherine was his second wife's cousin, the Howards, always hungry for more power, saw the marriage as an important political device, and Katherine's uncle, the duke of Norfolk, often visited Katherine and advised her on her behavior with Henry, recalling the fate of his niece Anne.
Henry Mannox, the musician who Katherine had loved when she was 15, came to court as a musician.
Henry Mannox seemed to keep silent, but soon he was frequently in Katherine's apartments as an entertainer.
royalwomen.tripod.com /id46.html   (2006 words)

  
 Katherine Howard - Encyclopedia FunTrivia
She did have romances with Henry Mannox, her music teacher, and her distant cousin, Frances Derham with whom she was thought to have had intercourse.
Henry VIII had to pass a special Act enabling him to have insane persons executed in order to satisfy his need for revenge against her.
Katherine herself, of course, and Lady Rochford, Henry Mannox, Frances Derham and Thomas Culpepper were all beheaded.
www.funtrivia.com /en/subtopics/Katherine-Howard-92583.html   (593 words)

  
 1540 oddd.org   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Henry VIII (28 June 1491 – 28 January 1547) was King of England and Lord of Ireland (later King of Ireland) from 22 April 1509 until his death.
Henry VII was still eager to maintain the marital alliance between England and Spain through a marriage between Henry, Prince of Wales, and Catherine.
Henry was almost certainly the inspiration for the title of the popular song "I'm Henery the Eighth, I Am" (1911), recorded by Harry Champion and later by Herman's Hermits; the actual song, however, is about a man named Henry whose wife has been married to seven different individuals, all named Henry.
oddd.org /en/1540   (10232 words)

  
 Henry III, Duke of Saxony Encyclopedia Articles @ VeryGoodCredit.com (Very Good Credit)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Henry III Jules de Bourbon, prince de Condé
Henry Jermyn, Earl Of, 1st Baron Jermyn of Saint Edmundsbury Saint Albans
Henry Maitland, 1st Baron Wilson of Libya and of Stowlangtoft Wilson
209.68.55.237 /encyclopedia/Special:Allpages/Henry_III,_Duke_of_Saxony   (260 words)

  
 Katherine's Story
Henry was feeling old and vulnerable, and upset about having to give up the vigorous activities of his youth.
Henry was delighted with his new wife, and grew more attached to her every day.
Henry was, however, inclined to go easy on Katherine at first, especially if it was found that she had been pre-contracted (engaged) to another man before she married Henry.
www.royalpaperdolls.com /KHStory.htm   (2613 words)

  
 Executions and Beheading at the Tower of London   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Henry was besotted with her, calling her his 'Rose without a Thorn' and showered her with gifts and public affection.
After her marriage to Henry VIII who was an old, repulsive, obese man, she had an affair with the young and handsome Thomas Culpepper.
Edward V a devout Protestant and Henry VIII's only son, died of tuberculosis and he left the throne to 'the Lady Jane and her heirs male.' Lady Jane Grey was the puppet of her ambitious parents the powerful Dudley family.
www.castles.me.uk /executions-beheading-tower-of-london.htm   (1918 words)

  
 Unexplained Mysteries Discussion Forums > Tower of London
Henry III whitewashed the tower, widened the grounds and renamed the area the Tower of London while naming the tower itself the White Tower.
The Duke of Northumberland knew he would lose everything when Henry VIII’s son, who was very sickly, died so he went to Jane’s father and arranged for his son, Guildford Dudley, to marry her and for Jane to be announced heir to the thrown.
Catherine Howard was Henry VIII fifth wife and the cousin of Anne Borleyn.
www.unexplained-mysteries.com /forum/lofiversion/index.php/t39794.html   (2751 words)

  
 Rose without a Thorn
Henry was enamoured with Katherine, and showered her with gifts and substantial grants of land.
She appeared to be greedy and frivolous and Henry was disappointed when she failed to conceive.
One girl in the dormitory at Lambeth Palace where Katherine was raised had refused to sleep nearby because of her affair with Francis Dereham.
www.suite101.com /article.cfm/british_social_history/97379   (500 words)

  
 Henry VIII   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Henry began his reign with great personal promise, but the promise ended in travesty.
From the light relief of Henry and Anne of Cleves, we go to more Tudor tragedy – when an ‘old before his time’ King becomes besotted with a teenage girl with a shady past she thought she could forget.
In a fit of jealousy, Mannox, Katherine’s first ‘almost’ lover, let Agnes know what Katherine was getting up with Dereham, one of her gentle man in waiting, his replacement in Katherine’s affections.
209.52.189.2 /lesson.cfm/17123/451   (745 words)

  
 Catherine Howard: Biography, Portraits, Primary Sources
But Mannox, still with the household, was infuriated; his attraction to Catherine continued while she spurned his company for Dereham's.
But for the conservative faction at Henry's court, those dedicated to the restoration of the Catholic faith as practiced before the Reformation, she was their last, best hope.
Henry VIII simply couldn't afford the ceremony; perhaps, too, he wished to wait until the marriage proved successful in the most important way and Catherine bore him a son.
www.englishhistory.net /tudor/monarchs/howard.html   (3999 words)

  
 King Henry VIII wives, short stories about them~*~*~Mlila~*~*~
Anne Boleyn; Anne was one of Catherine of Aragorn ladies in waiting, Henry had an affair with her during the divorce with Catherine, she was very beautiful but in a lot of opinions of the time, she wasn’t monarchy material, a lot of people thought she was middle class.
She was suppose to be bethrove but Henry went against it and ask to marry her in 1527, and when the divorce was final, she moved in her own apts.
Catherine was not very attracted to Henry who was obese and approaching his 50s, compared to her, she was a teen.
www.unsolvedmysteries.com /usm441411.html   (1024 words)

  
 King Henry VIII   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Henry VIII became obsessed with the text in Leviticus 'If a man shall take his brother's wife it is an unclean thing...
Henry was obsessed with the bright and witty Anne.
Henry VIII was so pleased with Ann of Cleves agreeing to a divorce that he granted her money and estates and treated her with the deference that would be afforded to his Royal 'Sister'
www.elizabethan-era.org.uk /king-henry-viii.htm   (2333 words)

  
 The Tudor Rose Bar
Next to turn up was Henry VII (in those ugly long robes, thought Tim, shaking his head) and his lovely wife, Elizabeth of York (looking quite spectacular actually, thought Tim, who had a bit of a crush on her.) "I'll have some beefeater's gin," muttered Henry VII, looking shiftily around the near-empty pub.
Before Henry VII could begin his rant about how those Yorkists could do evil things that you couldn't even imagine, Lady Margaret Beaufort entered, dressed all in fl and with a look of smug superiority on her old face.
Next in barged Henry VIII, dressed in red and gold, when I say barged in that may not, technically be accurate because Tim had to use a very large shoehorn to wedge the portly monarch out of the door-way which rather spoiled the entrance.
www.tudorhistory.org /humor/pub.html   (1803 words)

  
 About Catherine HOWARD (Queen of England)
His eldest son Henry Howard (eldest brother to Catherine) on the death of Catherine Howard disappeared into the Norfolk countryside near the Suffolk border with family and spent the rest of his life living the simple life.
She was lively, pretty and kind, and Henry saw her as perfect and unspoiled, a "rose without a thorn".
Henry was horrified and heartbroken, but he had not given up on matrimony.
www.tudorplace.com.ar /aboutCatherineHoward.htm   (5270 words)

  
 Katheryn Howard: Henry's Thorny Rose (Part 2)
Although the Duchess thought the affair with Mannox settled he continued to see Katheryn privately for a time so here was the continuation of covert romantic liaisons that would follow Katheryn throughout her short life.
The thrill of hurried meetings and hushed whispers would probably have appealed to a young girl caught up in the whirl of her first real love and perhaps this was the style in which Katheryn reasoned affairs of the heart were conducted.
However this affair was short-lived as Mannox, usurped of his evening entertainments, went directly to the Duchess and informed her that Katheryn was once again engaging in immoral pursuits.
www.suite101.com /article.cfm/tudor/95211/2   (357 words)

  
 Catherine Howard
Catherine was sent to the court of Henry VIII as a lady-in waiting and just as the Duke of Norfolk had planned and manipulated the young Catherine caught the eye of the ageing King Henry
1539: Catherine Howard was sent by her uncle, the Duke of Norfolk, to the court of Henry VIII as lady-in-waiting for his proposed new German wife, Queen Anne of Cleves
What influence did Catherine Howard - Fifth wife King Henry VIII & Stepmother to Queen Elizabeth I have on the life of Queen Elizabeth I? Catherine Howard was the cousin of Anne Boleyn and therefore a close relation of Elizabeth.
www.elizabethan-era.org.uk /catherine-howard.htm   (1265 words)

  
 The Rose Without a Thorn - Jean Plaidy Plaidy, Jean < P < Authors, A-Z < 20th Century < By Period < Fiction < Books <   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The depictions of Katherine's uncle, the duke of Norfolk; Anne of Cleves, Lady Rochford, Dorothy Barwike, Mannox and Dereham, and the dowager duchess are all commendable.
Unlike the fully-believable way in which Katherine's liaisons with Henry Mannox and Francis Dereham are portrayed, her love for Culpepper is not particularly realistic.
A lot of research now supports the idea that Katherine may have been born in 1525, making her several years younger than she is in this book, but, more importantly, the relationship between Katherine and Culpepper was much more sexually-orientated and a good-deal less romantic than Plaidy presents it as.
www.shoooop.co.uk /0609810170   (757 words)

  
 BOOK 1.
Thirleby, the king’s chaplain, made bishop of Westminster: the presentation being in the king, by reason of the removal of the said Thirleby to that bishopric, Henry VIII.
Harrington was presented to the church of Kilston, by the death of Henry Simmons, at the presentation of John Harrington, esq.
It specified, “A lease, granted by the queen to this Edward Stafford, one of her gentlemen pensioners, of all parsonages impropriate, free chapels, guilds, chantries, hospitals, &c.
www.godrules.net /library/strype/96strype_e2.htm   (9870 words)

  
 [No title]
Blind 31 9 9 Mannox William W 46 M W Tailor 160 188 VA.
16 22 22 Chapman Henry 29 M B Oysters.
27 89 94 Robertson Henry 35 M B Farm Laborer.
www.us-census.org /pub/usgenweb/census/va/gloucester/1870/pg0348a.txt   (5311 words)

  
 36
(Henry has imprisoned Gertie and his confidence in Tom Cromwell has been shaken.
This episode is produced from diaries of Henry VIII) by Anne Bonjard
Met Katherine May after her Play Lesson with Henry Mannox.
www.btinternet.com /~newcastleulbc/Archives/36.htm   (2304 words)

  
 Henry's Wives
500 years after her wedding to Henry the Eighth, Catherina of Aragon has done her time in Purgatory and, with God's blessing of course, she wants to renew her marriage vows and rewrite history as the first and only wife of England's most married king.
With the help of her scribe and lady in waiting, Margaret, Catherina summons the king but something goes wrong and she gets his other five wives instead.
Sample dialogue will also be posted on this page soon, so please check back.
www.aoisestratford.com /playpages/henry.htm   (195 words)

  
 Tower of London Prisoners   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Executed by beheading Anne Boleyn was the second wife of King Henry VIII falsely convicted of adultery, incest and treason
Executed by beheading the Countess of Salisbury was a frail 68 year old accused of treason by King Henry VIII for supporting his first Catholic wife Katherine of Aragon
Implicated with Catherine Howard - Anne Howard, Thomas Culpepper, Henry Mannox and
www.castles.me.uk /tower-of-london-prisoners.htm   (869 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited Books | Quizzes (books)
In F Scott Fitzgerald's classic novel, The Great Gatsby, which character calls up after Gatsby's funeral to enquire after a pair of tennis shoes which he left at Gatsby's mansion?
In which story by JD Salinger does Ginny Mannox, "about five feet nine in her 9-B tennis shoes," feature?
David Foster Wallace begins his collection of essays, A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again, with a reminiscence on the subject of his tennis-playing teen years in which US state?
books.guardian.co.uk /quiz/questions/0,5957,1250158,00.html   (347 words)

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