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Mary Dudley

Lady Mary Sidney (née Dudley; c. 1530–1535[1] – 9 August 1586) was a lady-in-waiting at the court of Elizabeth I, wife of Sir Henry Sidney and the mother of Sir Philip Sidney and Mary Sidney Herbert, Countess of Pembroke. She was daughter of John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland, and sister of Elizabeth's favourite, Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester.

Lady Mary Dudley
Mary Sidney by Hans Eworth, c. 1550–1555
Bornc. 1530–1535
Died9 August 1586
London, England
BuriedPenshurst Place, Kent
Noble familyDudley
IssueSir Philip Sidney
Mary Margaret Sidney
Elizabeth Sidney
Mary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke
Robert Sidney, 1st Earl of Leicester
Ambrosia Sidney
Sir Thomas Sidney
FatherJohn Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland
MotherJane Guildford
OccupationLady-in-Waiting

Although she was marginally implicated in her father's attempt to place Lady Jane Grey on the English throne and affected by his attainder, Mary Dudley was one of Queen Elizabeth's most intimate confidantes during the early years of her reign. Her duties included nursing the Queen through smallpox in 1563 and acting as her mouthpiece towards diplomats. She was the mother of seven children and accompanied her husband, Sir Henry Sidney, to Ireland and the Welsh Marches. From the 1570s the couple complained repeatedly about their, as they saw it, poor treatment at the Queen's hands. Still one of Elizabeth's favourite ladies, Mary Dudley retired from court life in 1579, suffering from ill health during her last years.

Family and early years of marriage edit

Mary Dudley was the eldest daughter among the thirteen children of John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland and his wife Jane Guildford.[1] Mary Dudley was well-educated. Fluent in Italian, French, and Latin,[2] she was interested in alchemy, romances, and writing poetry.[1] Her copy of Edward Hall's Chronicles bears her annotations in French.[2] She also became a friend, correspondent and frequent visitor of the scientist and magus John Dee.[3]

On 29 March 1551 Mary Dudley married Henry Sidney at Esher, Surrey. Possibly a love match, the ceremony was repeated in public on 17 May 1551 at her parents' house Ely Place, London.[1] Four months later Henry Sidney became Chief Gentleman of Edward VI's Privy Chamber;[4] he was knighted by the young King on the day his father-in-law, who headed the government, was raised to the dukedom of Northumberland.[5]

In May 1553 Mary's second youngest brother, Guildford Dudley, was married to Edward's favourite cousin, Lady Jane Grey.[6] According to Lady Jane it was Mary Dudley who, on 9 July 1553, called upon her to bring her to Syon House, the place where she was informed she was Queen of England according to King Edward's will.[7] After Mary I's triumph within a fortnight and the arrest and execution of the Duke of Northumberland, the Sidneys were in a precarious situation. Like the rest of the Dudley family, Mary Dudley was attainted and suffered the consequences in her legal status.[1] Henry Sidney's three sisters, however, were favourite ladies of Queen Mary, which may have saved his career.[1] In early 1554 he went with an embassy to Spain to plead with England's prospective king consort, Philip, for the pardon of his brothers-in-law John, Ambrose, Robert, and Henry.[8] John Dudley, the eldest brother, died days after his release in October 1554 at Penshurst Place in Kent, the Sidneys' manor house granted to them by Edward VI in 1552.[9] Philip Sidney, Mary Dudley's first child, was born there in November 1554 and named after his godfather, the King.[10] His godmother, the widowed Duchess of Northumberland, died in January 1555. She left her daughter 200 marks as well as a cherished clock "that was the lord her father's, praying her to keep it as a jewel."[11]

In 1556 Mary Dudley went with her husband to Ireland, where they resided mostly at Athlone Castle.[12] Their first daughter, Mary Margaret, was born some time after their arrival. Queen Mary acted as godmother, but the child died at "one year and three quarters old".[13] Meanwhile, the infant Philip stayed behind at Penshurst[14] until his mother returned from Ireland in September 1558.[1] She had been restored in blood earlier in the year when the Dudley's attainder was lifted by Mary I's last parliament.[15]

Serving Elizabeth I edit

On Elizabeth I's accession in November 1558 Mary Dudley became a Gentlewoman of the Privy Chamber "without wages", an unsalaried position which left her dependent on her husband.[1] Like her brother Lord Robert, the royal favourite, she belonged to the Queen's closest companions.[16] In the 1559 negotiations over Archduke Charles, the Habsburg candidate for Elizabeth's hand, she acted as go-between for the Queen and her own brother in their dealings with the Spanish ambassador Álvaro de la Quadra and his Imperial colleague, Caspar von Brüner.[1] Through Mary Dudley, Elizabeth discreetly indicated her serious intention to marry the Archduke and that he should immediately come to England. De la Quadra informed Philip II that

Mary Dudley said that if this were not true, I might be sure she would not say such a thing as it might cost her her life and she was acting now with the Queen's consent, but she (the Queen) would not speak to the Emperor's ambassador about it.[17]

Philip's envoy received assurances from Lord Robert and Sir Thomas Parry as well.[18] Yet Elizabeth cooled down again and gave Mary Dudley further instructions to deal with the Spaniards, until she herself told de la Quadra "that someone had [spoken to him] with good intentions, but without any commission from her".[19] Angry at her brother and the Queen, Mary Dudley felt betrayed.[1] The Spanish ambassador, in his turn, was piqued that she used an interpreter, when "we can understand each other in Italian without him."[17]

In October 1562, Elizabeth became critically ill with smallpox; Mary Dudley nursed her until she contracted the illness herself, which according to her husband greatly disfigured her beauty. The Queen, who suffered only a little pocking, distanced herself from her once friend.[20] That Mary took to wearing a mask afterwards is, however, a myth.[1] She continued her court service, unless absent when accompanying her husband to Wales and Ireland.[1] In late 1565 the couple travelled to Ireland, where Sir Henry was to take up his post as Lord Lieutenant. On the passage one of the ships sunk with all Mary Dudley's jewels and fine clothes on board.[1] In 1567 Henry Sidney returned for a few weeks to the English court. His wife stayed behind at Drogheda, which came under rebel attack. Mary Dudley resolutely requested the Mayor of Dublin to relieve the town with troops, which he did.[21] Later in the year Sir Henry sent her back to England because of her ill health, which was apparently caused by the Queen's criticism of his lieutenantship:[1] An unfriendly letter from Elizabeth "so perplexed my dear wife, as she fell most grievously sick upon the same and in that sickness remained once in trance above fifty-two hours".[22]

The four Dudley siblings who survived into Elizabeth's reign, Mary, Ambrose, Robert, and their much younger sister Katherine, kept a close bond among themselves,[23] while Henry Sidney and Robert Dudley were friends since their common schooldays with Edward VI.[24] Mary Dudley's third child Elizabeth was born at her brother Robert's house at Kew in late 1560. Until 1569 she had four more children, among them the future Countess of Pembroke and poet Mary Herbert, and Robert, who became the first Sidney Earl of Leicester.[1] The death of her nine-year-old daughter Ambrosia in 1575 elicited a letter of condolences from Queen Elizabeth.[25] In 1573 an apothecary had supplied "oil of camenall and capers", syrups, and a box of marmalade for "Mistress Ambrocia."[26]

Henry Sidney being once again in Ireland,[1] in January 1570 Robert Dudley entertained his brother Ambrose as well as "Sister Mary" and "Sister Kate" at Kenilworth.[27] The same castle was the scene of the great festival of 1575, at which the whole Sidney family were guests and Mary Dudley excelled in stag hunting.[1] In 1577 Robert Dudley negotiated the match of his 15-year-old niece Mary with his friend, the 40-year-old Earl of Pembroke.[28] Her mother organized the wedding festivities at Wilton House.[1]

By the 1570s, Sir Henry Sidney and his wife had become somewhat disillusioned and embittered about lacking financial rewards on the Queen's part for their long service.[1] In 1572 Mary Dudley even had to decline a barony for her husband in a letter to William Cecil, himself Baron Burghley since the previous year:[29] The expenses such a title implied were simply too great, Sir Henry's mind being "dismayed [by the] hard choice" between choosing financial ruin and royal displeasure "in refusing it".[30] Two years later, in 1574, she quarrelled with the Lord Chamberlain (her brother-in-law, the Earl of Sussex) over accommodation at court.[1] She refused to exchange her accustomed rooms with a cold chamber that had previously been "but the place for my servants".[31] All in all though, she explained, "old Lord Harry and his old Moll" would accept "like good friends the small portion allotted our long service in court; which as little as it is, seems something too much."[1]

Elizabeth was still attached to her old friend when Mary Dudley left the court in July 1579—because of bad health,[1] or out of solidarity with her brother Robert, Earl of Leicester, who was in disgrace for having married.[32] She joined her husband at Ludlow in 1582, where he was serving his third turn as President of the Council of Wales. A year later her health was in such a state that Henry Sidney believed he would soon have the opportunity to take a second wife.[1] Mary Dudley died on 9 August 1586, three months after her husband, in whose elaborate funeral she had participated. She was buried by his side at Penshurst.[1]

Issue edit

Ancestry edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Adams 2008c
  2. ^ a b Stewart 2000 p. 40
  3. ^ French 2002 pp. 126–127; Woolley 2002 p. 99
  4. ^ Alford 2002 p. 156
  5. ^ Beer 1973 p. 119; Loades 1996 p. 285
  6. ^ Loades 1996 pp. 226, 239
  7. ^ Ives 2009 p. 187
  8. ^ Adams 2008c; Adams 2002 p. 133
  9. ^ Stewart 2000 p. 17
  10. ^ Stewart 2000 p. 9
  11. ^ Collins 1746 pp. 34–35
  12. ^ Adams 2008c; Stewart 2000 p. 19
  13. ^ Stewart 2000 pp. 19–20
  14. ^ Stewart 2000 p. 19
  15. ^ Adams 2002 p. 134
  16. ^ Adams 2008a
  17. ^ a b Stewart 2000 p. 27
  18. ^ Stewart 2000 pp. 27–28
  19. ^ Stewart 2000 pp. 28–29
  20. ^ Guy 2016 ch. 2
  21. ^ Stewart 2000 p. 62
  22. ^ Stewart 2000 pp. 62–63
  23. ^ Gristwood 2007 p. 15
  24. ^ Adams 2008b
  25. ^ Adams 2008c; Stewart 2000 p. 144
  26. ^ HMC Lord De L'Isle & Dudley, vol. 1 (London, 1925), p. 264.
  27. ^ Gristwood 2007 pp. 190, 191
  28. ^ Stewart 2000 pp. 200–201
  29. ^ Stewart 2000 pp. 143, 60
  30. ^ Stewart 2000 p. 143
  31. ^ Stewart 2000 p. 143; Adams 2008c
  32. ^ Kendall 1980 p. 182

References edit

  • Adams, Simon (2002): Leicester and the Court: Essays in Elizabethan Politics Manchester University Press ISBN 0-7190-5325-0
  • Adams, Simon (2008a): "Dudley, Ambrose, earl of Warwick (c.1530–1590)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online edn. Jan 2008 (subscription required) Retrieved 2010-04-06
  • Adams, Simon (2008b): "Dudley, Robert, earl of Leicester (1532/3–1588)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online edn. May 2008 (subscription required) Retrieved 2010-04-03
  • Adams, Simon (2008c): "Sidney, Mary, Lady Sidney (1530x35–1586)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online edn. Jan 2008 (subscription required) Retrieved 2010-04-06
  • Alford, Stephen (2002): Kingship and Politics in the Reign of Edward VI Cambridge University Press ISBN 978-0-521-03971-0
  • Beer, B.L. (1973): Northumberland: The Political Career of John Dudley, Earl of Warwick and Duke of Northumberland The Kent State University Press ISBN 0-87338-140-8
  • Collins, Arthur (ed.) (1746): Letters and Memorials of State Vol. I T. Osborne
  • French, Peter (2002): John Dee: The World of an Elizabethan Magus Routledge ISBN 978-0-7448-0079-1
  • Gristwood, Sarah (2007): Elizabeth and Leicester: Power, Passion, Politics Viking ISBN 978-0-670-01828-4
  • Guy, John (2016): Elizabeth: The Later Years Penguin ISBN 978-1-1016-0901-9
  • Ives, Eric (2009): Lady Jane Grey: A Tudor Mystery Wiley-Blackwell ISBN 978-1-4051-9413-6
  • Kendall, Alan (1980): Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester Cassell ISBN 0-304-30442-5
  • Loades, David (1996): John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland 1504–1553 Clarendon Press ISBN 0-19-820193-1
  • Stewart, Alan (2000): Philip Sidney: A Double Life Chatto & Windus ISBN 0-7011-6859-5
  • Woolley, Benjamin (2002): The Queen's Conjuror: The Life and Magic of Dr Dee Harper Collins ISBN 0-00-655202-1

mary, dudley, british, quaker, minister, quaker, african, american, radio, personality, mary, lady, mary, sidney, née, dudley, 1530, 1535, august, 1586, lady, waiting, court, elizabeth, wife, henry, sidney, mother, philip, sidney, mary, sidney, herbert, counte. For the British Quaker minister see Mary Dudley Quaker For the African American radio personality see Mary Dee Lady Mary Sidney nee Dudley c 1530 1535 1 9 August 1586 was a lady in waiting at the court of Elizabeth I wife of Sir Henry Sidney and the mother of Sir Philip Sidney and Mary Sidney Herbert Countess of Pembroke She was daughter of John Dudley Duke of Northumberland and sister of Elizabeth s favourite Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester Lady Mary DudleyMary Sidney by Hans Eworth c 1550 1555Bornc 1530 1535Died9 August 1586London EnglandBuriedPenshurst Place KentNoble familyDudleyIssueSir Philip SidneyMary Margaret SidneyElizabeth SidneyMary Herbert Countess of PembrokeRobert Sidney 1st Earl of LeicesterAmbrosia SidneySir Thomas SidneyFatherJohn Dudley 1st Duke of NorthumberlandMotherJane GuildfordOccupationLady in WaitingAlthough she was marginally implicated in her father s attempt to place Lady Jane Grey on the English throne and affected by his attainder Mary Dudley was one of Queen Elizabeth s most intimate confidantes during the early years of her reign Her duties included nursing the Queen through smallpox in 1563 and acting as her mouthpiece towards diplomats She was the mother of seven children and accompanied her husband Sir Henry Sidney to Ireland and the Welsh Marches From the 1570s the couple complained repeatedly about their as they saw it poor treatment at the Queen s hands Still one of Elizabeth s favourite ladies Mary Dudley retired from court life in 1579 suffering from ill health during her last years Contents 1 Family and early years of marriage 2 Serving Elizabeth I 3 Issue 4 Ancestry 5 Notes 6 ReferencesFamily and early years of marriage editMary Dudley was the eldest daughter among the thirteen children of John Dudley 1st Duke of Northumberland and his wife Jane Guildford 1 Mary Dudley was well educated Fluent in Italian French and Latin 2 she was interested in alchemy romances and writing poetry 1 Her copy of Edward Hall s Chronicles bears her annotations in French 2 She also became a friend correspondent and frequent visitor of the scientist and magus John Dee 3 On 29 March 1551 Mary Dudley married Henry Sidney at Esher Surrey Possibly a love match the ceremony was repeated in public on 17 May 1551 at her parents house Ely Place London 1 Four months later Henry Sidney became Chief Gentleman of Edward VI s Privy Chamber 4 he was knighted by the young King on the day his father in law who headed the government was raised to the dukedom of Northumberland 5 In May 1553 Mary s second youngest brother Guildford Dudley was married to Edward s favourite cousin Lady Jane Grey 6 According to Lady Jane it was Mary Dudley who on 9 July 1553 called upon her to bring her to Syon House the place where she was informed she was Queen of England according to King Edward s will 7 After Mary I s triumph within a fortnight and the arrest and execution of the Duke of Northumberland the Sidneys were in a precarious situation Like the rest of the Dudley family Mary Dudley was attainted and suffered the consequences in her legal status 1 Henry Sidney s three sisters however were favourite ladies of Queen Mary which may have saved his career 1 In early 1554 he went with an embassy to Spain to plead with England s prospective king consort Philip for the pardon of his brothers in law John Ambrose Robert and Henry 8 John Dudley the eldest brother died days after his release in October 1554 at Penshurst Place in Kent the Sidneys manor house granted to them by Edward VI in 1552 9 Philip Sidney Mary Dudley s first child was born there in November 1554 and named after his godfather the King 10 His godmother the widowed Duchess of Northumberland died in January 1555 She left her daughter 200 marks as well as a cherished clock that was the lord her father s praying her to keep it as a jewel 11 In 1556 Mary Dudley went with her husband to Ireland where they resided mostly at Athlone Castle 12 Their first daughter Mary Margaret was born some time after their arrival Queen Mary acted as godmother but the child died at one year and three quarters old 13 Meanwhile the infant Philip stayed behind at Penshurst 14 until his mother returned from Ireland in September 1558 1 She had been restored in blood earlier in the year when the Dudley s attainder was lifted by Mary I s last parliament 15 Serving Elizabeth I editOn Elizabeth I s accession in November 1558 Mary Dudley became a Gentlewoman of the Privy Chamber without wages an unsalaried position which left her dependent on her husband 1 Like her brother Lord Robert the royal favourite she belonged to the Queen s closest companions 16 In the 1559 negotiations over Archduke Charles the Habsburg candidate for Elizabeth s hand she acted as go between for the Queen and her own brother in their dealings with the Spanish ambassador Alvaro de la Quadra and his Imperial colleague Caspar von Bruner 1 Through Mary Dudley Elizabeth discreetly indicated her serious intention to marry the Archduke and that he should immediately come to England De la Quadra informed Philip II thatMary Dudley said that if this were not true I might be sure she would not say such a thing as it might cost her her life and she was acting now with the Queen s consent but she the Queen would not speak to the Emperor s ambassador about it 17 Philip s envoy received assurances from Lord Robert and Sir Thomas Parry as well 18 Yet Elizabeth cooled down again and gave Mary Dudley further instructions to deal with the Spaniards until she herself told de la Quadra that someone had spoken to him with good intentions but without any commission from her 19 Angry at her brother and the Queen Mary Dudley felt betrayed 1 The Spanish ambassador in his turn was piqued that she used an interpreter when we can understand each other in Italian without him 17 In October 1562 Elizabeth became critically ill with smallpox Mary Dudley nursed her until she contracted the illness herself which according to her husband greatly disfigured her beauty The Queen who suffered only a little pocking distanced herself from her once friend 20 That Mary took to wearing a mask afterwards is however a myth 1 She continued her court service unless absent when accompanying her husband to Wales and Ireland 1 In late 1565 the couple travelled to Ireland where Sir Henry was to take up his post as Lord Lieutenant On the passage one of the ships sunk with all Mary Dudley s jewels and fine clothes on board 1 In 1567 Henry Sidney returned for a few weeks to the English court His wife stayed behind at Drogheda which came under rebel attack Mary Dudley resolutely requested the Mayor of Dublin to relieve the town with troops which he did 21 Later in the year Sir Henry sent her back to England because of her ill health which was apparently caused by the Queen s criticism of his lieutenantship 1 An unfriendly letter from Elizabeth so perplexed my dear wife as she fell most grievously sick upon the same and in that sickness remained once in trance above fifty two hours 22 The four Dudley siblings who survived into Elizabeth s reign Mary Ambrose Robert and their much younger sister Katherine kept a close bond among themselves 23 while Henry Sidney and Robert Dudley were friends since their common schooldays with Edward VI 24 Mary Dudley s third child Elizabeth was born at her brother Robert s house at Kew in late 1560 Until 1569 she had four more children among them the future Countess of Pembroke and poet Mary Herbert and Robert who became the first Sidney Earl of Leicester 1 The death of her nine year old daughter Ambrosia in 1575 elicited a letter of condolences from Queen Elizabeth 25 In 1573 an apothecary had supplied oil of camenall and capers syrups and a box of marmalade for Mistress Ambrocia 26 Henry Sidney being once again in Ireland 1 in January 1570 Robert Dudley entertained his brother Ambrose as well as Sister Mary and Sister Kate at Kenilworth 27 The same castle was the scene of the great festival of 1575 at which the whole Sidney family were guests and Mary Dudley excelled in stag hunting 1 In 1577 Robert Dudley negotiated the match of his 15 year old niece Mary with his friend the 40 year old Earl of Pembroke 28 Her mother organized the wedding festivities at Wilton House 1 By the 1570s Sir Henry Sidney and his wife had become somewhat disillusioned and embittered about lacking financial rewards on the Queen s part for their long service 1 In 1572 Mary Dudley even had to decline a barony for her husband in a letter to William Cecil himself Baron Burghley since the previous year 29 The expenses such a title implied were simply too great Sir Henry s mind being dismayed by the hard choice between choosing financial ruin and royal displeasure in refusing it 30 Two years later in 1574 she quarrelled with the Lord Chamberlain her brother in law the Earl of Sussex over accommodation at court 1 She refused to exchange her accustomed rooms with a cold chamber that had previously been but the place for my servants 31 All in all though she explained old Lord Harry and his old Moll would accept like good friends the small portion allotted our long service in court which as little as it is seems something too much 1 Elizabeth was still attached to her old friend when Mary Dudley left the court in July 1579 because of bad health 1 or out of solidarity with her brother Robert Earl of Leicester who was in disgrace for having married 32 She joined her husband at Ludlow in 1582 where he was serving his third turn as President of the Council of Wales A year later her health was in such a state that Henry Sidney believed he would soon have the opportunity to take a second wife 1 Mary Dudley died on 9 August 1586 three months after her husband in whose elaborate funeral she had participated She was buried by his side at Penshurst 1 Issue editSir Philip Sidney 1554 1586 married Frances Walsingham in 1583 and had issue Mary Margaret Sidney died as a child Elizabeth Sidney died as a child Mary Sidney 1561 1621 married Henry Herbert 2nd Earl of Pembroke in 1577 and had issue Robert Sidney 1st Earl of Leicester 1563 1626 married firstly Barbara Gamage and had issue Married secondly Sarah Blount Ambrosia Sidney died as a child Sir Thomas SidneyAncestry editAncestors of Mary Dudley16 John Sutton 1st Baron Dudley8 Sir John Dudley of Atherington17 Elizabeth de Berkeley of Beverstone4 Edmund Dudley18 Sir John Bramshott of Bramshott9 Elizabeth Bramshott19 Catherine Pelham2 John Dudley 1st Duke of Northumberland20 Edward Grey 6th Baron Ferrers of Groby10 Edward Grey 1st Viscount Lisle21 Elizabeth Ferrers 6th Baroness Ferrers of Groby5 Elizabeth Grey 6th Baroness Lisle22 John Talbot 1st Viscount Lisle11 Elizabeth Talbot 3rd Baroness Lisle23 Joan Cheddar1 Mary Dudley24 Sir John Guildford12 Sir Richard Guildford25 Alice Waller6 Sir Edward Guildford26 John Pimpe of Pimpe s Court13 Anne Pimpe3 Jane Guildford28 Richard West 7th Baron De La Warr14 Thomas West 8th Baron De La Warr29 Catherine Hungerford7 Eleanor West30 Hugh Mortimer of Mortimer s Hall15 Elizabeth Mortimer31 Eleanor CornwallNotes edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Adams 2008c a b Stewart 2000 p 40 French 2002 pp 126 127 Woolley 2002 p 99 Alford 2002 p 156 Beer 1973 p 119 Loades 1996 p 285 Loades 1996 pp 226 239 Ives 2009 p 187 Adams 2008c Adams 2002 p 133 Stewart 2000 p 17 Stewart 2000 p 9 Collins 1746 pp 34 35 Adams 2008c Stewart 2000 p 19 Stewart 2000 pp 19 20 Stewart 2000 p 19 Adams 2002 p 134 Adams 2008a a b Stewart 2000 p 27 Stewart 2000 pp 27 28 Stewart 2000 pp 28 29 Guy 2016 ch 2 Stewart 2000 p 62 Stewart 2000 pp 62 63 Gristwood 2007 p 15 Adams 2008b Adams 2008c Stewart 2000 p 144 HMC Lord De L Isle amp Dudley vol 1 London 1925 p 264 Gristwood 2007 pp 190 191 Stewart 2000 pp 200 201 Stewart 2000 pp 143 60 Stewart 2000 p 143 Stewart 2000 p 143 Adams 2008c Kendall 1980 p 182References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mary Dudley Lady Sidney Adams Simon 2002 Leicester and the Court Essays in Elizabethan Politics Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 5325 0 Adams Simon 2008a Dudley Ambrose earl of Warwick c 1530 1590 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online edn Jan 2008 subscription required Retrieved 2010 04 06 Adams Simon 2008b Dudley Robert earl of Leicester 1532 3 1588 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online edn May 2008 subscription required Retrieved 2010 04 03 Adams Simon 2008c Sidney Mary Lady Sidney 1530x35 1586 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online edn Jan 2008 subscription required Retrieved 2010 04 06 Alford Stephen 2002 Kingship and Politics in the Reign of Edward VI Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 03971 0 Beer B L 1973 Northumberland The Political Career of John Dudley Earl of Warwick and Duke of Northumberland The Kent State University Press ISBN 0 87338 140 8 Collins Arthur ed 1746 Letters and Memorials of State Vol I T Osborne French Peter 2002 John Dee The World of an Elizabethan Magus Routledge ISBN 978 0 7448 0079 1 Gristwood Sarah 2007 Elizabeth and Leicester Power Passion Politics Viking ISBN 978 0 670 01828 4 Guy John 2016 Elizabeth The Later Years Penguin ISBN 978 1 1016 0901 9 Ives Eric 2009 Lady Jane Grey A Tudor Mystery Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 9413 6 Kendall Alan 1980 Robert Dudley Earl of Leicester Cassell ISBN 0 304 30442 5 Loades David 1996 John Dudley Duke of Northumberland 1504 1553 Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 820193 1 Stewart Alan 2000 Philip Sidney A Double Life Chatto amp Windus ISBN 0 7011 6859 5 Woolley Benjamin 2002 The Queen s Conjuror The Life and Magic of Dr Dee Harper Collins ISBN 0 00 655202 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary Dudley amp oldid 1175024366, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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