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  1. Elizabeth Wayte. Arthur Plantagenet, 1st Viscount Lisle, KG (died 3 March 1542) was an illegitimate son of the English king Edward IV, half-brother-in-law of Henry VII, and an uncle of Henry VIII, at whose court he was a prominent figure and by whom he was appointed Lord Deputy of Calais (1533–40). [1] The survival of a large collection of ...

  2. ARTHUR PLANTAGENET, Viscount Lisle (1480?-1542), born about 1480, was a natural son 1 of Edward IV. by one Elizabeth Lucie. As an esquire of Henry VIII's bodyguard he received a quarterly salary of 6l. 13s. 4d. 2 from June 1509. 3 He married, in 1511, Elizabeth, widow of Edmund Dudley, and daughter of Edward Grey, viscount Lisle, and obtained a grant, on 13 Nov. of that year, of lands in ...

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  4. On 25 April 1523, Arthur was created Viscount Lisle. Following Elizabeth Grey's death in 1529 he married Honor Grenville (1493-1566) the daughter of Sir Thomas Grenville (d. 1513) of Stowe, Kilkhampton, Cornwall, by his wife Isabella Gilbert. She was the widow of Sir John Bassett (d. 1528) of Umberleigh, Devon.

  5. Arthur Plantagenet, Viscount Lisle (born probably between 1462 and 1464) was the illegitimate son of Edward IV and Elizabeth Lucy, a member of the Wayte family of Hampshire. Thus he was half-brother to Elizabeth of York, Henry VII's queen, and uncle to Henry VIII at whose court he flourished. Although this monumental

  6. Jan 29, 2021 · Meanwhile Thomas Talbot, Viscount Lisle and William, Lord Berkeley took the opportunity to get on with a spot of feuding. Both men believed that they were entitled to the Berkeley estate as well as title and castle. Margaret, Countess of Shrewsbury born Beauchamp was the granddaughter of Thomas, Lord Berkeley who died in 1417 (this is a long ...

  7. On 12 March 1541, Sir John Dudley was became Viscount Lisle, following the death of his stepfather, Lord Lisle. In 1543, he was appointed Lord Admiral, becoming one of the great officers of the state. Dudley was an ex officio member of the Privy Council, but did not attend his first meeting until 23 April 1543, when he was sworn.

  8. Jul 16, 1981 · G.R. Elton. 3470 words. The Lisle Letters. edited by Muriel St Clare Byrne. Chicago, 744 pp., £125, June 1981, 0 226 08801 4. In the reign of Henry VIII, when a man was arrested for treason (an arrest which, among the eminent, tended to be equal to a conviction, with the usual consequences), his papers were confiscated and disappeared into the ...

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