The Tudor Society

#OTD in Tudor history – 4 January

What happened on this day in Tudor history?

Let me share with you some events from 4th January during the reigns of the Tudor kings and queens...

  • 1493 – Christopher Columbus left the New World on return from his first voyage.
  • 1519 – Martin Luther met with Karl von Miltitz, the Papal Nuncio, at Altenburg in Saxony.
  • 1568 – Burial of Roger Ascham, author, scholar and royal tutor, in St Stephen's Chapel at St Sepulchre-without-Newgate, London. Ascham, who had served as a tutor to Queen Elizabeth I in her youth, had died on 30th December 1568.
  • 1575 – Death of Sir William Pickering, courtier and diplomat, in London. He was buried in the chancel of St Helen's, Bishopsgate. Pickering had escaped execution for his part in Wyatt's Rebellion in 1554 by fleeing to France and then providing the English government with information on other conspirators. He was pardoned in December 1554. See below.
  • 1578 - Death of William Roper, author of “The lyfe of Sir Thomas Moore, knighte”. Although he had expressed his wish to be buried with his wife, Margaret, in the More Chapel of Chelsea parish church, he was buried in the Roper chapel of St Dunstan's, Canterbury, and his wife's body was exhumed and re-interred next to him. Margaret had been buried with her father's head, which she had rescued from Tower Bridge after his execution in 1535. See below.

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#OTD in Tudor history – 4 January