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| | Royal Ancestors of the Erving, Goddard and Asfordby Families |
 | | She married Thomas Plantagenet (ARC 16-29), son ofEdward I King of England (ARC 1-28) andMargaret of France (ARC 155-30), circa 1318 Harwich, Essex, England. |  | | Thomas de Berkeley (ARC 26-29) and Joan de Ferrers (ARC 59-30). |  | | Thomas West 3rd Baron de la Warre (ARC 18-35) was born in 1457 of, Offington, Sussex, England. |
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http://www.c4.net/magary/royalahn.htm
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| | Web Walsingham at Local.co.uk |
 | | Walsingham 2004 The weekend of March 5th - 7th, 2004, saw Fr Neil Kelley leading what is now the traditional annual St Faith's pilgrimage to the Shrine of our Lady of Walsingham. |  | | Year 10 Coursework Visit Walsingham Year 7 Year 8 Year 9 GCSE A Level Moral Issues Buddhism Christianity Hinduism Islam Judaism Sikhism To help you with your Coursework assignment, we arranged a visit to the Shrine of our Lady of Walsingham. |  | | Walsingham Parish Church church door (E) Church Street (W) beds food shops map winter RC Shrine Anglican home 1061 hist |
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http://www.local.co.uk/Walsingham/Web
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| | BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION |
 | | (Thomas was appointed to HMS Superb on 27/06/1722. |  | | Thomas Alldridge's letter shows that John was a Doctor in the employ of Messers Thompson and George, Surgeons in Church Street Kensington. |  | | I give and bequeath unto my daughter Susanna the wife of John Allbord all the rest and residue of my personal estate of what nature or kind soever she paying unto Ann my daughter the wife of John Bloom the sum of ten pounds within six months next after my decease. |
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http://www.wording.freeserve.co.uk/Biographics.htm
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| | "THE RECKONING" REVISITED |
 | | Given that the witnesses are described as 'gentlemen', however, it would seem probable that their identification would have been accepted, especially if Thomas Walsingham had been there to back them up, and if Danby was seen to take their word for it. |  | | It would have required Walsingham not only to have agreed to the murder, but for Cecil to have raised the question with him in the first place, which seems highly improbable. |  | | It was now perhaps suggested by Cecil, privately, that Marlowe might like to bring their mutual friend and former colleague, Thomas Walsingham, along next time, and at that meeting - joined by Lord Burghley - they must have discussed the possibility of a faked death. |
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http://www2.prestel.co.uk/rey/recknyng.htm
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| | Legacy 14: The Devill's Legacie (Act II) |
 | | Georg was being torn apart by two demons, who fought over his body even as they rent it to shreds, while Werner was burning alive, just as he had in real life when the smithy went up in flames. |  | | It could be argued that mortality is some form of justice, but it is still uncertain as to which of these men went to Heaven, and which went to Hell. |  | | Marlowe was pleading so eloquently for government aid, that Walsingham suspected the speech might be written in iambic pentameter and blank verse. |
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http://www.eyrie.org/omega/Legacy14.htm
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| | Knitting Circle Christopher Marlowe |
 | | However, before this could take place Thomas Walsingham's business manager invited him to dine with him on 30th. |  | | Thomas Healy, (1994), "Christopher Marlowe", Plymouth: Northcote House, 86 pages, ISBN 0746307071, SBU Library Main Bookstock 822.3 MAR. |  | | Although blank verse had been used before he gave it strength and variety. |
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http://myweb.lsbu.ac.uk/~stafflag/marlowe.html
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| | Broadmining: Walsingham&t= |
 | | Not satisfied with the results: Help us improve |  | | Organizations & Publications Orthodox Church News / Pressroom Orthodox Church of Our Lady of Walsingham |  | | (Orthodox Church in Mesquite, TX) Our Lady of Walsingham Main Web Page Antiochian Orthodox... |
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http://lowide.com/Walsingham&t=
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| | Great Snoring Census 1851 |
 | | Thomas GRANGE Son U 17 Ag Lab L Walsingham |  | | Thomas RAWLIN Son U 20 Ag Lab Gt Snoring |  | | Thomas THOMPSON Son U 15 Ag Lab Gt Snoring |
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http://the-snorings.co.uk/census/1851GS.html
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| | Index of Kent wills: Surnames starting with W |
 | | Edward W., deceased, the other executors, Thomas Wotten, Henry Guildford, Thos. |  | | m; eldest son of Thomas Whetenhall, Esq., of East Peckham al. |  | | son of Thomas Wellar John Wrotham 1637 |
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http://www.eminent.demon.co.uk/willsw.htm
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| | Latest News from the Marlowe Society |
 | | A.D.Wraight has grouped all the poems according to their subject matter and believes she has identified the true meaning and identities of the "Dark Lady" and "Mr. |  | | These books include religious texts and foreign language dictionaries, including a book on the current popular phrases and sayings in French. |  | | Below I have summarised some of the main points made by A.D.Wraight in her book. |
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http://www.marlowe-society.org/exile.htm
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| | Thomas Shelton and Hamet Benegeli |
 | | It is also unusual for the 'servant' to describe himself as affectionate, unless he is a member of the same class as the dedicatee. |  | | In Don Quixote there is no information about Shelton, apart from his dedicatory letter to Lord Walden. |  | | Scudamore; Audrey Shelton married Sir Thomas Walsingham; and Humphrey Shelton, a Catholic expatriate, lived for thirty years in Rouen. |
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http://www.sirbacon.org/links/carrq.html
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| | Medieval Sourcebook: Thomas Walsingham: The Good Parliament of 1376 |
 | | The barons promised loyal counsel and aid, but not unless as many earls who were loyal to the realm, strong in spirit and powerful in their possessions, were added to their undertakings and councils. |  | | Together with the bishops and barons, the commons petitioned for these earls and received them. |  | | If you do reduplicate the document, indicate the source. |
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http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1376goodparliament.html
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| | On Marlowe |
 | | Walsingham in Kent, or to any other place where he shall understand Christofer Marlow to be remaining.... |  | | Thomas Walsingham was a year his junior and, according to Blount, a lifelong friend of Marlowe’s. |  | | Audrey Shelton was the first cousins of Sir Thomas, and would have known him all her life. |
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http://www2.localaccess.com/marlowe/h&l.htm
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| | Early London District Marriages. |
 | | James Hutchison and Esther Backhouse at Walsingham, by Elias Foster J.P. Witnesses- J. Backhouse, A. Hutchison. |  | | Thomas Roisland and Elizabeth Willson, spinster, both of Zorra by Darius Cross of the Free Communion Baptist Church in Oxford. |  | | Thomas Finch and Hannah Collver, both of Townsend by Jabez Collver Sr. |
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http://my.tbaytel.net/bmartin/london_m.htm
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| | Francis Walsingham: Elizabethan Spymaster |
 | | Walsingham turned Gifford and persuaded him to work for the Government. |  | | Late in 1585 a trainee priest named Gilbert Gifford was intercepted coming from France through the port of Rye. |  | | On 17th July Walsingham received what he had been waiting for--a letter, in reply to one from Babington, written by Mary and giving her approval to the plot to murder the Queen. |
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http://www.thehistorynet.com/bh/blwalsingham/index1.html
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| | Edmund WALSINGHAM of Scadbury (Sir) |
 | | In 1539 the King rewarded his services by granting him Gomshall Towerhill in fee simple as well as nine houses in London; Gomshall Towerhill he was to sell in 1549 for £600. |  | | Walsingham was responsible for their custody and was their channel of communication with the outside world. |  | | To one reputed example of his lingering humanity, his braving of the King's displeasure by his refusal to stretch Anne Askew further on the rack, he could lay no claim, for it was his successor Sir Anthony Knyvett who was the lieutenant concerned. |
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http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/Bios/EdmundWalsinghamofScadbury.htm
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| | English 205 On-Line English Literature I Lecture 8 |
 | | Under further duress, Kyd wrote a statement in which he reported that Marlowe had "monstrous opinions," and used to "jest at the divine scriptures, gibe at prayers..." He also claimed that Marlowe, among other things, accused Christ of having "an extraordinary love" for St. John. |  | | Two years after sharing the study, Thomas Kyd was arrested and questioned about his religious views; he had in his possession a pamphlet, apparently, which was considered heretical and atheistic. |  | | On May 30, Marlowe and several of his friends went to Deptford, a village down the Thames from London. |
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http://www.lahc.cc.ca.us/english/eng205/lect8.htm
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| | BEAUFORT - LoveToKnow Article on BEAUFORT |
 | | In 1396, some years after the birth of these children, John of Gaunt and Catherine were married, and in 1397 the Beauforts were declared legitimate by King Richard II. |  | | The Beaufort family was continued by HENRY BEAUFORT (1401-1419), the eldest son of John Beaufort, earl of Somerset, who was succeeded as earl of Somerset by his brother JOHN BEAUFORT (1403-1444). |  | | He was buried at Bury St Edmunds, where his remains were found in good condition 350 years later. |
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http://73.1911encyclopedia.org/B/BE/BEAUFORT.htm
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| | Marlowe and Nicholas Faunt |
 | | The hand is nearly the same as the Italic hand of the Arrian Heresy notes said Marlowe's by Kyd and kept for evidence against him. |  | | Letters to Walsingham follow Bruno to Paris and use a King's School cipher. |  | | Faunt's father taught singing at the Cathedral and would have taught Marlowe and his younger brother Thomas, as Urry has noted. |
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http://www2.localaccess.com/marlowe/faunt.htm
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| | All about the murder of Christopher Marlowe, by Russell Aiuto - The Crime library |
 | | For this purpose, Walsingham had Marlowe lured to a meeting with three of his loyal servants, and there, in Deptford, silenced him once and for all. |  | | This, I believe, is that Marlowe had to be silenced in order to save the skin of his patron, Thomas Walsingham. |  | | However reluctantly he felt about disposing of the poet that had been under the protection of his patronage, the political baggage that Marlowe carried was not to be endured. |
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http://crimelibrary.com/notorious_murders/famous/christopher_marlowe/8.html
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| | Marlowe Society Book Reviews: Winter 1995 |
 | | It is a world in which no one's allegiance can be taken for granted. |  | | Walsingham follows Marlowe on his mission to the seminary at Rheims, where they engage in some rough sex in an inn and have a romantic tryst in an open field. |  | | Its most outrageous moment is when Walsingham, who is to sit as a magistrate of Kent, asks Marlowe to accompany him to Canterbury. |
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http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~pwhite/marlowe/msar95_2.htm
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| | thePeerage.com - Person Page 362 |
 | | Judith Pelham was the daughter of Sir Thomas Pelham, 1st Bt. |  | | Child of Mary Walsingham and Sir Thomas Pelham, 1st Bt. |  | | Mary Walsingham was the daughter of Sir Thomas Walsingham. |
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http://www.thepeerage.com/p362.htm
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| | The St |
 | | To all children of Holy Mother Church who shall read or hear these presents [Lit. |  | | 'these present letters'] we, Thomas, by the Grace of God Abbot of the Monastery of St Alban, and the Convent [ The text is ambiguous--the royal we may be in use, in which case 'of the convent thereof'. |  | | Translator has maintained the ambiguity in his version] thereof [Lit. |
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http://www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/hgarrett/documents/stalbans.html
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| | Record Unit 7129 - August Busck Papers, 1902-1933 |
 | | Oversize portrait photograph of Lord Walsingham (Thomas deGrey), 1908, by Elliot T. Fry, inscribed to August Busck. |  | | A friend and colleague of both Lord Walsingham and Edward Meyrick, Busck was himself a microlepidopterist of real distinction. |  | | Correspondence with colleagues and collectors; that with Edward Meyrick and Lord Walsingham (Thomas deGrey), may be of special interest. |
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http://www.si.edu/archives/archives/findingaids/FARU7129.htm
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| | Thomas WALSINGHAM of Scadbury |
 | | Thomas Walsingham was buried on 19 Aug 1630 in Chislehurst church. |  | | Thomas Walsingham became a Kent justice of the peace in 1596. |  | | By his father's will Walsingham was left an annuity of £24 from Croydon vicarage, to be followed after seven years by another of £50 from Burwell, Cambridgeshire and elsewhere. |
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http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/Bios/ThomasWalsingham.htm
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| | Thomas Walsingham - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Another history of England by Walsingham dealing with the period between 1272 and 1393 is in manuscript in the British Museum. |  | | The original work of Walsingham is the period between 1308 and 1381, the earlier part being merely a compilation. |  | | Walsingham's most important work is his Historia Anglicana, a valuable piece of work covering the period between 1272 and 1422. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Walsingham
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| | SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM - LoveToKnow Article on SIR FRANCIS WALSINGHAM |
 | | Ridolfi, the conspirator, was committed to his custody in October 1569, and seems to have deluded Walsingham as to his intentions; but there is inadequate evidence for the statement (Dict. |  | | He had little of the courtier about him; his sombre temperament and directness of speech irritated the queen, and it says something for both of them tliat he retained her confidence and his office until the end of his life. |
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http://13.1911encyclopedia.org/W/WA/WALSINGHAM_SIR_FRANCIS.htm
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| | Walsingham biography .ms |
 | | Walsingham (full name Little Walsingham) is a small market town in Norfolk, England, famed for its religious shrines in honour of the Virgin Mary. |  | | Mid-way between Norwich and Kings Lynn, Walsingham became a major centre of pilgrimage in the 11th century, following a vision of the Virgin Mary to Saxon noblewoman, Richeldis de Faverches. |  | | Since 1900 Anglican, Roman Catholic and Orthodox Marian shrines have been restored in Walsingham, and pilgrimages are held through the summer months. |
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http://walsingham.biography.ms
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| | Thomas Walsingham |
 | | Thomas Walsingham was a Benedictine monk at St Albans Abbey. |  | | A conservative historian, Walsingham was extremely critical of the teachings of |  | | He also wrote a history of the world from the creation to 1392. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/NORwalsingham.htm
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| | Francis Walsingham - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | However, the factual basis of his character in the film is scant. |  | | This page was last modified 02:37, 29 October 2005. |  | | In other affairs Walsingham remained in a Surrey county seat in which he retained until his death. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Walsingham
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| | The Death of Christopher Marlowe |
 | | Thomas Walsingham had assisted his illustrious cousin as his right-hand man and was himself a master-spy. |  | | Thomas Walsingham therefore can be seen to be connected with all four of these men. |  | | The day of Marlowe's arrest was Sunday, 20th May. The charge was Atheism, which was a heresy and a most serious crime, the ultimate penalty for which was burning at the stake. |
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http://home.clara.net/anvil/death.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Thomas Walsingham |
 | | Little is known of his life beyond his historical work and the fact that in 1394 he was made superior of the dependent priory of Wymondham, where he remained until 1409, when he returned to St. Albans. |  | | As to the quality of Walsingham's work, he was a collector of facts rather than an historian in the modern sense, painstaking and trustworthy, and to him we are indebted for the knowledge of many historical incidents not mentioned by other writers. |  | | He is supposed to have been a native of Walsingham, Norfolk, England; he was educated at St. Albans Abbey, and having become a monk there was made precentor and placed in charge of the scriptorium. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15542b.htm
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| | OUP: The St Albans Chronicle, Volume I 1376-1394: Taylor |
 | | Thomas Walsingham, a monk of St Albans, has been described as the last of the great medieval chroniclers. |  | | Walsingham's text has never been published as a continuous whole. |  | | In everything that he wrote, Walsingham was as much a commentator as a recorder, and his absorbing chronicle reveals the manner in which one interested contemporary viewed current events. |
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http://www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-820471-X
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| | Great Stanmore: Manor and other estates British History Online |
 | | (Footnote 46) At least some of them were lost before the Conquest, in spite of Thomas Walsingham's story that William I deprived the monks of nearly all their property between Barnet and London. |  | | Matthew Smith, hoping to entail the manor on his eldest grandson Thomas, empowered the trustees to sell some property to redeem the mortgage. |  | | According to Thomas Walsingham a manor-house was built by John, abbot of St. Albans 1235-60. |
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http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=26907
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| | OUP: A Monastic Renaissance at St Albans: Clark |
 | | Walsingham's interest in the Classics was shared by many of his St Albans colleagues, and they in turn were members of a wider circle of literary scholars, which included the London schoolmaster, John Seward. |  | | It has always been assumed that the monasteries fell into decline long before the dissolution and that cultural and intellectual activities were largely abandoned as the monks surrendered themselves to high living and low morals. |  | | The work of these scholars, monastic and secular, points towards a revival of Classical and literary scholarship in England long before Italian humanism and other traces of the continental Renaissance first found their way into the country. |
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http://www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-927595-5
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| | Medieval Sources online |
 | | Thomas Walsingham on the tyranny of King Richard |  | | All the principal contemporary chronicles are represented in this collection, from the violently partisan Thomas Walsingham, chronicler of St Alban's Abbey who saw Richard as a tyrant and murderer, to the indignant Dieulacres chronicler, who claimed that the 'innocent king' was tricked into surrender by his perjured barons. |  | | Contemporaries were sharply divided about the rights and wrongs of both Richard and Henry, and this division is reflected in the texts which form the major part of these sources. |
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http://www.medievalsources.co.uk/revolution.htm
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| | The Spelling of Marlowe's Name |
 | | These people are all related: Thomas is John Marley's brother-in-law, and John Moore his son-in-law. |  | | In 1597, Thomas Beard mounted a vicious attack on Marlowe (this, despite its inaccuracies, is clear from his description of the death) telling us some more about him. |  | | The only clear reference to Marlowe as a playwright around that time came from Thomas Kyd, fairly shortly after his own imprisonment (from 12th May 1593) and the killing, when he wrote: |
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http://www2.prestel.co.uk/rey/names.htm
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| | Secrets and Spies |
 | | Mary instructed Ballard to negotiate for the assistance of the Pope and the Spanish King through Mendoza. |  | | Ballard and Babington plotted against Elizabeth I in 1586, exchanging encrypted letters with Mary, which led to her execution. |  | | Arrested by Walsingham and tortured, he revealed plans for an invasion led by the Duke of Guise and reinforced by Catholic exiles and troops from the Netherlands. |
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http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/spies/biography
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Alan of Walsingham |
 | | His election, however, was set aside by the Pope in favor of Thomas L'Isle, a Dominican friar, who was at Avignon with the Pope at the time. |  | | A similar honor was destined for Alan in 1361, but the choice of the convent was again overruled, and Simon Langham, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury and Cardinal, was consecrated Bishop of Ely in his stead. |  | | When he thus became bishop-elect the works connected with the fabric of the cathedral had been conducted to a successful termination, leaving for his successor only the decorations and fittings. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01245e.htm
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| | Robin Hood and Richard II of England |
 | | Why does Thomas Walsingham the Monk of Saint Alban's Abbey make life so miserable for the King and his court? |  | | Now, if the King of England becomes enchanted with Hereward the Wake, possibly even believing himself to be a reincarnation of the legendary hero, you would naturally expect a strong rebuke from a man like Thomas Walsingham, whose patron saint is Saint Alban, England's first Christian martyr. |  | | By opposing Richard II and his circle, Walsingham believed he was saving England from a revival of wiccan practices as old as and older than Western civilization itself-- a motivation that also may be applied to the Monk in the Robin Hood ballad. |
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http://www.clydeburger.org/1300sand/richard.htm
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| | On Her Majesty's Secret Service |
 | | He died in 1590, and his espionage activities were taken over by William Cecil, Lord Burghley (and his son, Robert Cecil) as well as Sir Thomas Heneage, Elizabeth's vice-chamberlain. |  | | There he answered charges of atheism, probably following accusations made under torture by playwright Thomas Kidd. |  | | Less than two weeks before his death, he was arrested at the home of Thomas Walsingham, where he was working on his poem Hero and Leander, and ordered to report to the Star Chamber, Elizabethan England's powerful secret court. |
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http://www.thehistorynet.com/bh/blsecretservice/index1.html
(985 words)
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| | Ancestors of Hill and Smith |
 | | Elizabeth WALSINGHAM was born in 1533 in Horton, Northamptonshire, England. |  | | Children were: Barbara WALSINGHAM, Christian WALSINGHAM, Eleanor WALSINGHAM, Mary WALSINGHAM, Francis WALSINGHAM, Elizabeth WALSINGHAM. |  | | Children were: Edmund WALSINGHAM, Margaret WALSINGHAM, Cicely WALSINGHAM, Elizabeth WALSINGHAM, John WALSINGHAM, William WALSINGHAM Esquire. |
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http://users.htcomp.net/benny/d276.htm
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| | Britannia Biographies: Sir Francis Walsingham |
 | | Walsingham died in 1590, a poor man who had spent his private fortune in the service of the State and received almost no reward for doing so; but, in spite of his poverty, he was a benefactor to both Universities and an eager patron both of literature and exploration. |  | | He was entered at King's College, Cambridge, though he seems never to have taken a degree and he was a member of Gray's Inn in the last year of King Edward VI. |  | | He had spies in every Court and in half the mercantile communities of Europe; and on occasions he did not spare the rack in order to extract evidence. |
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http://www.britannia.com/bios/gents/fwalsingham.html
(438 words)
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| | Variety.com - Reviews - Kit Marlowe |
 | | It's followed quickly by the arrival of Marlowe, in the person of Christian Camargo, clad only in his charisma. |  | | Grimm's Marlowe, Cambridge-schooled but the son of a shoemaker, yearns for the kind of outsized achievement and gravity-defying career he'd celebrate in his plays: "a future writ in blazing flame," as he says. |  | | After a somewhat confused resolution to this episode (we do get to see a rare swordfight among monks, however), Marlowe pops back to London in time to discover his "Tamburlaine" is the toast of the town. |
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http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117788720?categoryid=33&cs=1
(881 words)
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| | History 1A seminar worksheet - Urban Development and Environmental Change III |
 | | Thomas Walsingham, Historia Aneicana 1272-1422:' Also in 1361 there was a great pestilence, which |  | | Several people of high birth and a great number of children |  | | Extract: Henry Knighton, the Anonimalle chronicle and Thomas Walsingham in Rosemary Horrox, The Black Death (1994), no.25 a-c |
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http://www.arts.gla.ac.uk/history/Medieval/Level1/seminars/urban3.htm
(512 words)
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| | WALTERSHAUSEN, BARON VON - LoveToKnow Article on WALTERSHAUSEN, BARON VON |
 | | It was the same jealous regard for the complete independence of The Times that led him to insist, as he did with remarkable success, upon the strict anonymity of the able men whom he selected with the eye of a general to act as his coadjutors. |  | | Their influence was essentially due to the fact that they had a great newspaper behind them, and behind the great newspaper was the remarkable man who made it, and never ceased from giving it inspiration and direction. |  | | From about 1810 he delegated to others editorial supervision (first to Sir John Stoddart, then to Thomas Barnes, and in 1841 to J. Delane), though never the supreme direction of policy. |
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http://16.1911encyclopedia.org/W/WA/WALTERSHAUSEN_BARON_VON.htm
(1523 words)
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