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408:
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307:. On the meeting of parliament in October the same year he was elected one of the triers of petitions, as he also was in the parliaments of 1497 and 1504. In 1496 he, as the lieutenant of Calais, with Sir Richard Nanfan his deputy there, was commissioned to receive for the king payment of the twenty-five thousand francs due half-yearly from the French king under the
334:, and they took him prisoner, but soon after let him go and were defeated (17 June). This ended the Cornish revolt. In September, Perkin having landed in Cornwall, there was a new disturbance in the west, to meet which Daubeney was sent with a troop of light horse, announcing that the king himself would shortly follow. The siege of
354:
to
Greenwich, he was taken suddenly ill. He was ferried down the river to his house in London. On Saturday the 20th he received the sacrament. He died about ten o'clock in the evening of the 21st, aged 56, and his obit, according to old ecclesiastical custom, was kept on the 22nd. On the afternoon of
279:
in
Brittany to arrange the terms of a treaty against France, and later in the year he was appointed commander of a body of troops sent to her assistance. In June 1492, Brittany having now lost her independence, he was again sent over to France, but this time as ambassador, with Foxe, then
133:. He was then designated esquire, and he went in command of four men-at-arms and fifty archers. Soon after he became one of the esquires for the king's body, and two years later he had a grant for life of the custody of the king's park at Petherton, near
350:. In 1501 he had charge of many of the arrangements for Catherine's reception in London, and in November he was a witness to Prince Arthur's assignment of her dower. On Thursday 18 May 1508, after riding with the king from
667:
804:
792:
607:
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in
Hampshire and Dorset, steward of the lands of the earldom of Salisbury in Somerset, and various minor appointments given him about the same time.
975:
847:
17:
292:. The French then at once agreed to treat, and Daubeney was commissioned to arrange a treaty with the Sieur des Querdes, which was concluded at
212:
for a term of seven years, as reward for his services to the king; and on 12 March he was created Baron
Daubeney with succession in tail male.
196:
His fortunes were revived when Henry became King Henry VII in 1485. His attainder was reversed in Henry's first parliament, and he became a
208:
of London, goldsmith, as the practical 'worker of monies,' was associated with him in survivorship. On 7 March 1486 he was appointed
74:
355:
the 26th his body was conveyed to
Westminster by the river, and almost all the nobility of the kingdom witnessed his funeral rites.
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1452/3. His mother, Alice
Stourton, was the youngest of the three daughters and co-heiresses (by his 3rd wife Katherine Payne) of
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916:
387:
1040:
1025:
1020:
157:
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The mastership of the king's harthounds had been granted to him on 12 October before. He had also the offices of constable of
1035:
889:
138:
106:
632:
Luckett, Dominic (1995), "Crown
Patronage and Political Morality in Early Tudor England: The Case of Giles, Lord Daubeney",
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502:
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1010:
995:
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Giles
Daubeney was the eldest son and heir of Sir William Daubeney (1424-1460/1) of South Ingelby in Lincolnshire, and
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1005:
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as his place of sepulture, and his body rests now under a monument in St Paul's chapel (Westminster Abbey) with
985:
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247:, as commissioners for Henry VII, arranged with the Spanish ambassadors the first treaty for the marriage of
879:
228:
32:
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in
Cornwall. She survived him some years, and obtained from Henry VIII the wardship of his son and heir
197:
113:
in
Somerset, where his father seems to have been resident. He had a brother James and sister Eleanor.
1030:
980:
323:
161:
82:
322:, and had given the command to Daubeney. He had hardly marched when he was recalled to put down the
125:, from whom he obtained a licence before going to make a trust-deed of his lands in the counties of
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829:
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86:
50:
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231:. He appears about this time to have gone on an embassy to France, and then was with the king at
433:
285:
146:
854:
498:
288:. No settlement, however, was arrived at, and the king four months later invaded France and
53:(1 June 1451 – 21 May 1508) was an English soldier, diplomat, courtier and politician.
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On 15 December 1486 he was named at the head of a major embassy to treat for a league with
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In 1500 Daubeney accompanied Henry VII to Calais, and was present at his meeting with the
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937:
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47:
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effigies of himself and his wife by his side. A Latin epitaph was written for him by
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906:
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109:, in 1419, 1420, December 1421, 1423, 1426, 1429 and 1435. He was probably born at
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before the end of King Edward's reign. He was also present at the coronation of
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394:, and had descendants. Their second daughter, Anne, married Alexander Buller.
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about the projected invasion of Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond, planned with
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unmolested, and was criticised by the king. He set on the rebels at
660: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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In 1497 the king had prepared an army to invade Scotland to punish
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126:
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680:. Vol. 14. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 90–92.
573:. Vol. IV (2nd ed.). London: St. Catherine Press.
223:. On 25 November 1487 he was present at the coronation of
465:
388:
Henry, 2nd Lord Daubeney, later 1st Earl of Bridgewater
567:
Cokayne, George Edward (1916). Gibbs, Vicary (ed.).
36:
Arms of Sir Giles Daubeney, 1st Baron Daubeney, KG:
513:
511:
509:
338:was raised on his approach, and Perkin soon left.
227:. On 20 December 1487 he was appointed one of the
390:. Their first daughter, Cecily Daubeney, married
957:
506:
239:, 1488. On 7 July 1488 of the same year he and
718:Letters, &c. of Richard III and Henry VII
726:, iv. 230, 236, 238, 240, 245, 247, 259, 260
611:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
584:(online ed.). Oxford University Press.
275:from the French. In 1490 he was sent to the
229:chamberlains of the receipt of the exchequer
370:, and may have been inscribed on his tomb.
38:Gules, four fusils conjoined in fess argent
452:Learn how and when to remove this message
665:
415:This article includes a list of general
172:in Richard's parliament. The custody of
31:
976:Members of the Privy Council of England
631:
608:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
581:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
566:
471:
152:He was consulted before anyone else by
14:
958:
378:His wife Elizabeth, was a daughter of
284:, to negotiate a treaty of peace with
258:
158:Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham
578:Luckett, Dominic. "Daubeney family".
755:Will (Bennett, 16) in Somerset House
743:Materials for the Reign of Henry VII
401:
178:Richard FitzHugh, 6th Baron FitzHugh
121:In 1475 he went over to France with
577:
164:he with others fled to Richmond in
27:Member of the Parliament of England
24:
421:it lacks sufficient corresponding
191:
180:and Daubeney's lands in Somerset,
44:Giles Daubeney, 1st Baron Daubeney
25:
1052:
200:. On 2 November he was appointed
677:Dictionary of National Biography
655:
604:
406:
392:John Bourchier, 1st Earl of Bath
299:In 1495, after the execution of
219:. About this time he was made a
18:Giles Daubeny, 1st Baron Daubeny
605:Gunn, S. J. "Daubeney, Giles".
752:Anstis's History of the Garter
550:, steward of the lands of the
536:
492:
477:
217:Maximilian, King of the Romans
13:
1:
1041:16th-century English nobility
1026:16th-century English soldiers
1021:15th-century English soldiers
560:
358:He had in his will appointed
341:
1036:Burials at Westminster Abbey
880:Chamberlain of the Exchequer
625:UK public library membership
598:UK public library membership
489:, new edition, Vol.IV, p.102
85:(died 1438), builder of the
7:
749:Halliwell's Letters, i. 179
690:Extinct and Dormant Peerage
137:. Member of Parliament for
10:
1057:
168:, and he was consequently
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1016:Politicians from Somerset
1011:High sheriffs of Somerset
996:High sheriffs of Cornwall
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666:Gairdner, James (1888). "
634:English Historical Review
523:www.westminster-abbey.org
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830:High Sheriff of Somerset
800:Undersheriff of Cornwall
775:High Sheriff of Somerset
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282:bishop of Bath and Wells
1006:High sheriffs of Dorset
436:more precise citations.
1001:High sheriffs of Devon
890:The Earl of Shrewsbury
712:Memorials of Henry VII
646:10.1093/ehr/CX.437.578
590:10.1093/ref:odnb/52785
267:, raised the siege of
263:In 1489 he crossed to
162:Buckingham's rebellion
101:, who was seven times
40:
986:Knights of the Garter
873:Sir Richard Guildford
864:Sir William Courtenay
855:High Sheriff of Devon
848:Sir Robert Willoughby
784:William Collingbourne
617:10.1093/ref:odnb/7185
499:History of Parliament
204:, an office in which
35:
570:The Complete Peerage
486:The Complete Peerage
221:knight of the Garter
210:Lieutenant of Calais
160:. On the failure of
900:Sir William Stanley
318:for his support of
301:Sir William Stanley
259:Military operations
253:Catherine of Aragon
79:Sheriff of Cornwall
925:Peerage of England
762:Political offices
552:duchy of Lancaster
202:Master of the Mint
188:were confiscated.
141:in 1477–8, he was
41:
954:
953:
945:Succeeded by
914:Succeeded by
887:Succeeded by
862:Succeeded by
837:Succeeded by
812:Succeeded by
782:Succeeded by
736:Venetian Calendar
623:(Subscription or
596:(Subscription or
544:Winchester Castle
474:, pp. 102–5.
462:
461:
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380:Sir John Arundell
360:Westminster Abbey
290:besieged Boulogne
225:Elizabeth of York
206:Bartholomew Reade
95:Brympton d'Evercy
91:Preston Plucknett
16:(Redirected from
1048:
1031:English MPs 1478
981:Knights Bachelor
917:The Lord Herbert
907:Lord Chamberlain
897:Preceded by
870:Preceded by
845:Preceded by
822:Preceded by
815:William Carnesew
790:Preceded by
767:Preceded by
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730:Spanish Calendar
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309:Peace of Étaples
305:Lord Chamberlain
245:bishop of Exeter
198:privy councillor
149:on 6 July 1483.
87:Abbey Farm House
67:Barrington Court
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672:Stephen, Leslie
668:Daubeney, Giles
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296:on 3 November.
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192:Under Henry VII
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526:. Retrieved
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472:Cokayne 1916
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286:Charles VIII
277:Duchess Anne
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241:Richard Foxe
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182:Lincolnshire
151:
120:
77:1448/9, and
75:Bedfordshire
60:
43:
42:
37:
29:
971:1508 deaths
966:1451 births
741:Campbell's
724:Collectanea
716:Gairdner's
710:Gairdner's
653:Attribution
434:introducing
271:, and took
147:Richard III
960:Categories
942:1486–1508
911:1494–1508
884:1487–1508
859:1481–1482
834:1480–1481
809:1476–1477
779:1474–1475
698:, iii. 109
682:Endnotes:
627:required.)
600:required.)
561:References
528:14 January
442:March 2014
417:references
342:Later life
328:Blackheath
135:Bridgwater
738:, vol. i.
732:, vol. i.
722:Leland's
706:Chronicle
483:Cokayne,
364:alabaster
269:Diksmuide
233:Greenwich
170:attainted
123:Edward IV
696:Somerset
688:Burke's
384:Lanherne
316:James IV
186:Cornwall
166:Brittany
143:knighted
139:Somerset
127:Somerset
107:Somerset
99:Somerset
704:Hall's
674:(ed.).
664::
430:improve
294:Étaples
57:Origins
670:". In
621:
594:
419:, but
374:Family
352:Eltham
336:Exeter
273:Ostend
265:Calais
131:Dorset
117:Career
501:biog.
398:Notes
251:with
803:for
530:2021
184:and
129:and
105:for
73:for
65:and
642:doi
638:110
613:doi
586:doi
382:of
235:on
97:in
962::
636:,
521:.
508:^
311:.
255:.
243:,
103:MP
89:,
71:MP
51:PC
48:KG
46:,
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619:.
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592:.
588::
532:.
455:)
449:(
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440:(
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20:)
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