The Tudor Society

#OTD in Tudor history – 2 August

On this day in Tudor history, Edward Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, was granted a licence to found a college at his manor of Thornbury; an English Protestant was burned in Rome; and Spanish forces laded on the Cornish coast...

  • 1514 – Edward Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, was granted a licence to found a college at Thornbury. See video below.
  • 1521 – Cardinal Wolsey arrived in Calais to act as peacemaker and preside over a conference aiming to put an end to the fighting between France and the Empire.
  • 1553 – Elizabeth greeted her half-sister, the newly proclaimed Queen Mary I, in London.
  • 1555 – Burning of James Abbes, Protestant martyr, in Bury for heresy.
  • 1556 – Death of George Day, Bishop of Chichester. He was buried in Chichester Cathedral.
  • 1581 – Burning of Richard Atkins, Protestant martyr, before St Peter's in Rome. Click here to read more or see video below.

  • 1589 – Death of Henry III of France after being stabbed in the abdomen by Jacques Clément, a fanatical Dominican friar, the day before. He was buried at the Basilica of Saint-Denis.
  • 1595 – The Battle of Cornwall. Spanish forces landed at Mount's Bay and the English militia fled, allowing the Spanish troops to move on and burn Penzance, Mousehole, Paul and Newlyn. Click here to read more or see video below.
  • 1596 – Burial of Thomas Whithorne, composer and autobiographer, at St Mary Abchurch, London. Whithorne was Chapel Master to Archbishop Matthew Parker.
  • 1601 – Death of George Eyste, author, town lecturer, preacher and Vicar. He died in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, and was buried in his church, the Church of St Mary.
  • 1605 – Death of Vice Admiral Sir Richard Leveson in the Strand, London. He was buried in St Peter's Church, Wolverhampton.

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#OTD in Tudor history – 2 August