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  1. POLE, WILLIAM de la, fourth Earl and first Duke of Suffolk (1396–1450), second son of Michael de la Pole, second earl [q. v.], was born on 16 Oct. 1396 at Cotton in Suffolk (Napier, pp. 47, 64–5). He served in the French campaign of 1415, but was invalided home after the siege of Harfleur (ib. p. 48).

  2. 10 de dic. de 2016 · Rightly or wrongly, William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk was blamed for the loss of English territory in France, fiscal mismanagement, civil unrest and the general overall troubles of the reign of King Henry VI of England. He was arraigned on many charges and put in the Tower. Parliament was at the ready….

  3. or Stoke been different, a De la Pole might have become king of England. At the time of his last trials in the exchequer, in I353-54, William had behind him more than thirty years of business dealings with the royal govern- ment. But his activities had assumed a truly national importance only at the start of the war with France, in I336-7.

  4. William de la Pole, 1st duke of Suffolk. 0 references. Freebase ID /m/01j8t6. 1 reference. stated in. Freebase Data Dumps. publication date. 28 October 2013. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ID. 22461. 0 references. RA Collections ID. 18271. 0 references. Royal Academy new identifier. william-de-la-pole.

  5. This book is a study of William de la Pole, the first English royal banker. E. B. Fryde discusses Pole's role as a merchant and financier, his political influence and the social preeminence he gained for himself and his family. The book addresses the growing significance of England's merchant class in financial and governmental affairs and examines the origins of one of the country's great ...

  6. Sir William de la Pole, 4th Earl, 1st Marquess & 1st Duke of Suffolk, Admiral of Normandy & England, Great Chamberlain of England left a will on 17 January 1449. [5] He died on 2 May 1450 At sea near, Ipswich, Suffolk, England, at age 53; Murdered in an open board, his head being struck off on the gunwhale, his body thrown into the sea.

  7. An imaginary portrat of William de la Pole by Thomas Tindall Wildridge, 1888. William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk, KG (16 October 1396 – 2 May 1450), was an English commander in the Hundred Years' War and Lord High Admiral of England from 1447 until 1450. He was nicknamed Jack Napes, from which the word "jackanapes" derives.He also appears prominently in William Shakespeare's Henry VI ...