Everything about Edmund Dudley totally explained
Edmund Dudley (c.
1462 –
August 17,
1510), minister of
Henry VII of England, was a grandson of
John Sutton, 1st Baron Dudley.
After studying at
Oxford and at
Gray's Inn, Dudley came under the notice of Henry VII, and is said to have been made a privy councillor at the early age of twenty-three. In 1492 he helped to negotiate the
Peace of Etaples with France and soon became prominent in assisting the king to check the lawlessness of the barons. He and his colleague
Sir Richard Empson were promintent councillors of the
Council Learned in the Law, a special tribunal of Henry VII's reign, where they collected debts owed to the king, etc.
Dudley was
speaker of the House of Commons in 1504.
In addition to collecting money for Henry, Dudley amassed a great amount of wealth for himself, and possessed large estates in
Sussex,
Dorset and
Lincolnshire. When Henry VII died in April
1509, Dudley was imprisoned and charged with the crime of constructive
treason. Dudley's nominal crime was that during the last illness of Henry VII he'd ordered his friends to assemble in arms in case the king died, but the real reason for his charge was doubtless his unpopularity stemming from his position in the Council Learned. He was attainted and after having made a futile attempt to escape from prison, he was executed on the 17th or 18th of August 1510.
During his imprisonment Dudley sought to gain the favour of
King Henry VIII by writing a treatise in support of absolute monarchy called
The Tree of Commonwealth. However, this may never have reached Henry VIII as it wasn't published until 1859, when it was printed privately in Manchester.
Edmund Dudley married (1)
Anne Windsor, sister of
Andrews Windsor, 1st Baron Windsor with whom he'd one daughter:
His second wife was (2)
Elizabeth Grey, daughter of
Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Lisle with whom he'd five children:
John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland
Sir Andrew Dudley
Jerome Dudley
Simon Dudley
Elizabeth DudleyFurther Information
Get more info on 'Edmund Dudley'.
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