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- The final and most famous inhabitant of York Place was Archbishop (later Cardinal) Thomas Wolsey who inherited the mansion in 1514.
tudortimes.co.uk/guest-articles/the-lost-palace-of-whitehall/the-green-castle-of-york-place
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But York Place belonged to the Church – Wolsey wanted a place of his own. In 1514 he acquired Hampton Court (9), which he transformed into the most glittering renaissance palace in Britain, outstripping Henry VII's great construction at Richmond, and the King's favourite palace at Greenwich.
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Leaving York Place at 8am he would be preceded by two great...
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Arms of Sir Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset (1455 -...
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The final and most famous inhabitant of York Place was Archbishop (later Cardinal) Thomas Wolsey who inherited the mansion in 1514. Wolsey immediately set about enlarging and modernising the house and made it into the one of the most impressive residences in London.
Wolsey used his great wealth to indulge his passion for building - at his London home, York Place in Whitehall, and at Hampton Court, 20 miles south west of London.
Oct 23, 2024 · A few years after Wolsey becoming archbishop he took steps to enlarge York Place on both sides. On 10th November, 1519, he obtained a grant (fn. n35) in frank almoigne of what was afterwards called Scotland Yard.
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Wolsey was made lord chancellor to facilitate his supervision of the legal system and its operation as it directly affected the king’s interests. He oversaw Parliamentary legislation and raising of taxation. He used the Court of Chancery and the royal council sitting in its judicial guise, as the Star Chamber, to impose royal authority in a more th...
Thomas Wolsey fell from power in October 1529, in the aftermath of his inability to obtain an annulment of the king’s marriage to Catherine of Aragon. Virtually from the outset of the campaign in 1527, Henry was convinced of the rightness of his cause. The outcome of the legatine trial of the marriage at Blackfriars in July 1529 was Catherine’s dir...
As he was travelling south from York to face trial, Wolsey fell seriously ill, probably from dysentery exacerbated by stress. He died at Leicester Abbey on 29 November 1530. He had planned for himself an enormous tomb, but of the work done for it only the sarcophagus survived. It now houses the body of Admiral Lord Nelsonin the crypt of St Paul’s C...
- Elinor Evans
This was followed by an order to vacate his opulent residence, York Place, which would subsequently become the king's own palace, renamed Whitehall. Wolsey's decline in royal favor was further exacerbated by his political adversaries, notably the Duke of Norfolk and the Boleyn family, who saw in his vulnerability an opportunity to consolidate ...
Aug 27, 2021 · Wolsey built at York Palace (forerunner of Whitehall), Bridewell Palace and at his country houses. He organised building works for the king. He was versed in Renaissance ornament, such as the terracotta roundels containing the busts of Roman emperors at Hampton Court.