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Edmund Dudley

Edmund Dudley

Male Abt 1462 - 1510  (48 years)    Has more than 100 ancestors and more than 100 descendants in this family tree.

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  • Name Edmund Dudley  [1
    Birth Abt 1462  Oxford University, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Death 28 Aug 1510  Tower of London, Tower Hill, London, Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Siblings 3 Siblings 
    Person ID I32762  Geneagraphie
    Last Modified 4 May 2001 

    Father John Dudley,   b. Abt 1427   d. Bef 26 Jun 1501, Altherington, Sussex, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 74 years) 
    Mother Elizabeth Bramshot,   b. Abt 1432   d. Bef 1 Oct 1500 (Age 68 years) 
    Marriage Abt 1459 
    Family ID F13912  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 Anne de Windsor,   b. Abt 1466   d. Bef 1494 (Age 28 years) 
    Family ID F30683  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 29 Aug 2000 

    Family 2 Baroness Elizabeth Grey,   b. Abt 1465   d. 1525 (Age 60 years) 
    Marriage 1494  [1, 2
    Children 
    +1. Duke John Dudley,   b. 1501, Warwickshire, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 23 Aug 1553, Tower Hill, London, Middlesex, England Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 52 years)
     2. Jerome Dudley   d. Yes, date unknown
     3. Andrew Dudley   d. Yes, date unknown
    +4. Elizabeth Dudley   d. Yes, date unknown
    +5. Simon Dudley   d. Yes, date unknown
    Family ID F13728  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 29 Aug 2000 

  • Event Map Click to hide
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 28 Aug 1510 - Tower of London, Tower Hill, London, Middlesex, England Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 
    Pin Legend  : Address       : Location       : City/Town       : County/Shire       : State/Province       : Country       : Not Set

  • Notes 
    • Earl of Suffolk, Chancellor of Excheque, beheaded for treason
      Executed for plotting overthrow of the King.
      Speaker of the House of Commons, 1504.
      Privy Councillor.

      sent to Oxford in 1478 (age 16) and afterwards studied law at Gray's Inn*, where the arms of the Barons Dudley were emblazoned on one of the windows of the hall. His legal knowledge attracted the attention of Henry VI I on his accession in 1485 and he was made a privy councilor at the age of 23.
      (His grandfather, the powerful Baron Dudley, was still alive and was in the King's good graces, which no doubt
      helped the young Edmund get his career off to a strong start.)
      In 1492, Edmund was serving with the English army in France, at which time he advised King Henry VII to sign the Treaty of
      Boulogne, which he had helped to negotiate. The treaty was signed 11/6/1492. This may have been one of the most significant events in Edmund's early political life, as the treaty provided for a large annual tribute to be paid by France to Henry. The tribute continued to be paid for many years and helped to enrich the king. This set the pattern for Edmund's career.

      Edmund Dudley became undersheriff of London in 1497. At this time, he was fully in the King's confidence and had formulated a policy to check the lawlessness of the barons, whom the protracted wars of the roses had completely demoralized. In carrying out the policy, Dudley became associated with Sir Richard Empson, who also lived near him in St. Swithin's Lane in London. They required the great landowners to enter into recognizance's to keep the peace, and all taxes and feudal dues were to be collected with the utmost rigor.

      The official positions of Dudley and Empson are difficult to define: they probably acted as a sub-committee of the privy council. They certainly were not judges of the exchequer, nor of any other recognized court. It has been asserted by their
      contemporaries that they habitually indicted guiltless persons of crimes and extorted great fines and ransoms as a condition of staying further proceedings. They are said to have occasionally summoned persons to their private houses and extorted fines without any pretense of legal procedure. Pardons for outlawry were invariably purchased from them, and juries were terrorized into paying fines when giving verdicts for defendants in crown proceedings.

      In 1504, Edmund was chosen speaker in the House of Commons. In the Parliament over which he presided, many small but
      useful reforms were made in legal procedure. In 1506, he became steward of the rape of Hastings, Sussex. In the last year of Henry VII's reign, Edmund Dudley and Sir Richard Empson were nominated as special commissioners for enforcing penal
      laws. Their unpopularity greatly increased at about that time.

      On 4/21/1509, Henry VII died. The king had amassed about £4.5 million in coin and bouillon while Dudley directed his
      finances. The revenues Dudley secured by the sale of offices and extra-legal compositions was estimated at £120,000 per year.

      Henry VIII had no sooner ascended the throne than he yielded to the outcry against Dudley and Empson and committed both to the Tower. The recognizance's which had been entered into with them were cancelled on the ground that they had been "made without any cause reasonable or lawful" by "certain of the learned council of our late father, contrary to law, reason, and good conscience." On 6/16/1509, Dudley was arraigned before a special commission on a charge of constructive treason. The indictment made no mention of his financial exactions, but stated that while in the preceding March, Henry VII lay sick, Dudley summoned his friends to attend him under arms in London in the event of the King's death. This very natural precaution, taken by a man who was loathed by the baronial leaders and their numerous retainers, and was in danger of losing his powerful protector, was construed into a plan for attempting the new King's life. Conviction followed. Empson was sent to Northampton to be tried separately on a like charge in October. In the Parliament which met 1/21/1509-10, both were attained. Henry VIII deferred giving orders for their execution, but popular feeling was not satisfied. Dudley made an abortive attempt to escape from the Tower with the aid of his brother Peter, his kinsman James Beaumont, and others. On 8/18/1510, both he and Empson were beheaded on Tower Hill. Dudley was buried in the church of Blackfriars the same night.

      A copy of Dudley's will, dated on the day of his death, is extant in the Record Office. He left his great landed estates in Sussex, Dorsetshire and Lincolnshire to his wife with remainder to his children. His brother Peter is mentioned, and his son Jerome who was placed under four guardians, Bishop FitzJames, Dean Colet, Sir Andrews Windsor, and Dr. Yonge, till he reached the age of 22. Certain lands were to be applied to the maintenance of poor scholars at Oxford. Dudley also expressed a wish to be buried in Westminster Abbey.
    • (Medical):executed with his fellow-lawyer and associate Empson at order of Henry VIII, as soon as he came to the throne.

  • Sources 
    1. [S11] Frederick Lewis Weis, Magna Charta Sureties, 1215, (4th ed, Genealogical Publishing, Baltimore , , Repository: J.H. Garner), line 149B pp 155-156 (Reliability: 0).

    2. [S14] Brian Tompsett, University of Hull Royal Database (England), (copyright 1994, 1995, 1996 , , Repository: WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@tardis.ed.ac.uk).



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