Кто женился на Douglas Sheffield, Baroness Sheffield?
Шеффилд, Джон, 2-й барон Шеффилд вышла замуж за Douglas Sheffield, Baroness Sheffield .
Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester вышла замуж за Douglas Sheffield, Baroness Sheffield .
Edward Stafford вышла замуж за Douglas Sheffield, Baroness Sheffield года .
Douglas Sheffield, Baroness Sheffield
Douglas, Lady Sheffield (née Howard; 1542/1543 – 1608), was an English noblewoman, the lover of Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester and mother by him of explorer-cartographer Sir Robert Dudley, an illegitimate son.
Seventeen years after Leicester's death she claimed in litigation that she had secretly been his wife, although she had herself remarried while Leicester was still alive.
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Шеффилд, Джон, 2-й барон Шеффилд
John Sheffield, 2nd Baron Sheffield , of Butterwick (c. 1538 – 10 December 1568) was an English nobleman.
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Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester
Ро́берт Да́дли, 1-й граф Ле́стер (англ. Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester; 24 июня 1532 — 4 сентября 1588) — английский государственный деятель эпохи правления королевы Елизаветы I Тюдор, фаворит королевы.
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Edward Stafford
Sir Edward Stafford (1552 – 5 February 1605) was an English Member of Parliament, courtier, and diplomat to France during the time of Queen Elizabeth I.
He was involved in abortive negotiations for a proposed marriage between Elizabeth and Francis, Duke of Anjou.
After he was appointed ambassador to Paris in 1583, he took money from Henry I, Duke of Guise in return for access to diplomatic correspondence. He also received money from a Spanish agent, Bernardino de Mendoza, and there is strong evidence that has convinced most historians that Stafford in return for the money passed on secrets to Spain. Further, it was his duty to report to London intelligence he possessed on the formation of the Spanish Armada, but he did not do so. The English counterspy Francis Walsingham was deeply suspicious but was unable to prove anything and could not act as long as Stafford was protected by Lord Burghley. No action was taken against him by Elizabeth, although he was not given any posts of consequence after his recall in 1590. McDermott concludes, "The evidence of Stafford's treachery, though substantial, remains circumstantial, and the precise degree of his culpability is difficult to establish". Leimon and Parker are convinced of his guilt and add, " Equally damning is the misinformation about the nonexistence and false destinations of the Armada Stafford forwarded to England".
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