On this day in Tudor history, 14th October, Thomas Chaloner, statesman, diplomat, poet, and a man who survived a shipwreck, died (1565); and the trial of Mary, Queen of Scots began at Fotheringhay Castle (1586)...
- 1536 – Pilgrimage of Grace. By 14th October the uprising in the north had turned into a proper rebellion. On 13th October, Lord Darcy had reported to Henry VIII that the East Riding, West Riding, North Riding and “all the commons of Yorkshire” were “up” in rebellion, and on 14th October William Haryngton, Mayor of York, and Sir George Lawson, wrote to the King asking for aid because “the commons… have rebelliously assembled to take York”.
- 1559 – Death of John Williams, Baron Williams and Lord President of the Council in the Marches of Wales, at Ludlow Castle. He was buried in Thame Church.
- 1565 – Statesman and poet, Thomas Chaloner, died at his home in Clerkenwell, London. He was just forty-four. During the reign of Elizabeth I, he acted as the English ambassador to Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor, in 1558, and then ambassador to Philip II in the Low Countries, and then Spain between 1559 and 1561. Chaloner was a great friend of William Cecil, Lord Burghley. See video below.
- 1586 - The trial of Mary, Queen of Scots began at Fotheringhay Castle in Northamptonshire. Click here to read more or see video below.
- 1593 – Death of Arthur Grey, 14th Baron Grey of Wilton, soldier and Lord Deputy of Ireland, at his home of Whaddon in Buckinghamshire. He was buried there. Grey had a reputation for radical Protestantism.
- 1596 – Death of John Coldwell, Bishop of Salisbury, at Salisbury. He was buried in the cathedral, in the grave of Bishop Wyvil due to his state of poverty.
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