• Warham may refer to: Places Warham, Herefordshire, England Warham, Norfolk, England People Joe Warham - English rugby league footballer, coach and administrator...
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    William Warham (c. 1450 – 22 August 1532) was the Archbishop of Canterbury from 1503 to his death in 1532. Warham was the son of Robert Warham of Malshanger...
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  • Darren Warham is an English retired football (soccer) player who spent his professional career in the USL A-League. Warham attended Lynn University where...
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  • Sir Warham St Leger PC (Ire) (c. 1525 – 1597) was an English soldier, administrator, and politician, who sat in the Irish House of Commons in the Parliament...
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  • Thornewill and Warham Ltd was a metal hardware and industrial metalwork manufacturer, later an engineering company, based in Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire...
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  • The Warham Guild was an Anglican organization of craftsmen and artisans, founded to "augment the studies of the Alcuin Club and the directives of The Parson's...
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    Warham Camp is an Iron Age circular hill fort with a total diameter of 212 metres (232 yards) near Warham, south of Wells-next-the-Sea in Norfolk. It...
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  • William Warham (c. 1480 – 1557) was a late-medieval English ecclesiastical administrator who was Archdeacon of Canterbury from c. 1505 to 1532 during the...
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  • Warham is a place in the English county of Herefordshire. It is situated about 3 km west of the city of Hereford, close to the north bank of the River...
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  • John Warham MNZM (11 October 1919 – 12 May 2010) was an Australian and New Zealand photographer and ornithologist notable for his research on seabirds...
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  • Thumbnail for Warham, Norfolk
    Warham is a village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk. It is situated about 5 km (3.1 mi) inland from the north Norfolk coast, 5 km (3...
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    of Thomas Cobb, a farmer of Aldington, who worked for Archbishop William Warham. Barton claimed to have had very vivid visions and to have received divine...
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    Anne just managed to escape by boat. When Archbishop of Canterbury William Warham died in 1532, the Boleyn family chaplain, Thomas Cranmer, was appointed...
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    Richard Foxe (c. 1448–1528, Bishop of Winchester 1501–1528) and William Warham (c. 1450–1532, Archbishop of Canterbury 1503–1532). They were cautious and...
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  • Joe Warham (1920 – 4 September 2013, Leeds, Yorkshire) was a rugby league footballer, coach and administrator, having been associated with Leeds Rugby...
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    The Warham Williams House is a historic house in Roxbury, Connecticut. Originally built in 1752 in Northford, Connecticut for the Reverend Warham Williams...
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    committed Protestant is much debated. When Archbishop of Canterbury William Warham died, Anne's influence and the need to find a trustworthy supporter of the...
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    America. 64 (S1): S3. Bibcode:1978ASAJ...64....3S. doi:10.1121/1.2004193. Warham, John (1 May 1977). "The incidence, function and ecological significance...
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    time of Henry VIII’s accession, Warham had begun remodelling and extending the medieval house. In 1514, Archbishop Warham, frustrated by the City Fathers...
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    shorten ten lives, much more mine. When Archbishop of Canterbury William Warham died, the Boleyn family's chaplain, Thomas Cranmer, was appointed to the...
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  • Thumbnail for Sir Charles Turner, 1st Baronet, of Warham
    Sir Charles Turner, 1st Baronet (1666 – 24 November 1738) of Warham, Norfolk was an English lawyer and Whig politician who sat in the English and British...
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    new Archbishop of Canterbury, following the death of archbishop William Warham. Cranmer was ordered to return to England. The appointment had been secured...
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    from the Wolsey/John Fisher approach of persuasion, the 1529–1531 William Warham approach of reform and counter-propaganda, to More's brief approach of capital...
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    John Kemp Thomas Bourchier John Morton Thomas Langton Henry Deane William Warham Thomas Cranmer Reginald Pole Post-Reformation Matthew Parker Edmund Grindal...
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  • remaining canons with the King's consent. After this was presented, William Warham, the Archbishop of Canterbury, immediately adjourned the Convocation to...
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    his friends in England, such as William Warham, the Archbishop of Canterbury. (Writing in a letter to Warham regarding the gift portrait, Erasmus quipped...
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    & Sons ISBN 0-949324-82-5 Warham, J. (1990) The Petrels – Their Ecology and Breeding Systems London: Academic Press. Warham, J. (1976). "The incidence...
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    Leeds Castle. The St Leger family continued to own the castle until Sir Warham St Leger sold it to Sir Richard Smythe in 1618. Smythe's daughters sold...
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    sits in the Star Chamber and receives the Archbishop of Canterbury William Warham, the Bishop of Winchester Richard Foxe, clergymen from Westminster Abbey...
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    the Reformation. Otford Palace: a medieval palace, rebuilt by Archbishop Warham c. 1515 and forfeited to the Crown by Thomas Cranmer in 1537. Archbishop's...
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