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1545 Document from the
Reign of Henry VIII
Grant from
Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, to Bartholemew Kemp for
discharge for his relief of 100 shillings for the
manor 30th May, 36th year of the Reign of Henry VIII -
1545
| Thomas
Howard, 3d Duke of Norfolk, (1473-1554),
English nobleman and court intriguer
during the reign of Henry VIII. The
eldest son of Thomas Howard, 2d duke of
Norfolk, he commanded the English
vanguard at Flodden Field and was made
Earl when his father regained the family
dukedom. On the death of his father, he
succeeded to the dukedom and became the
most powerful peer in England. Norfolk
led the party opposed to the policies of
the lord chancellor, Cardinal Thomas
Wolsey. He favored Henry VIII's divorce
from Catherine of Aragón and his
marriage to Anne Boleyn, who was
Norfolk's niece and future mother of
Elizabeth I. As Henry's pliant tool,
however, he also presided at Anne's trial
and execution in 1536. That same year he
repressed the rebellion of the Pilgrimage
of Grace, a protest against the
confiscation of monastic properties, from
which he profited handsomely.
In 1540
Norfolk arrested Henry's secretary,
Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, who had
lost
favor with the king. With the execution
of his
niece, Catherine Howard, Henry's fifth
wife, in 1542, Norfolk lost his influence
at court. When his son, the poet Henry
Howard, earl of Surrey, was arrested for
treason, Norfolk was charged with
complicity; and was condemned and
attainted
with his son. His son was executed in
1547, but
the subsequent death of the king
prevented Norfolk's execution. He
remained a prisoner until the accession
of Mary I in 1533, when his lands
and titles were restored.
" Norfolk,
Thomas Howard, 3d Duke of,"
Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1993
Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1993
Funk & Wagnall's Corporation
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