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William de la Pole (1478–1539)

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Name
  
William la

Died
  
1539

Role
  
John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk\'s son

Parents
  
John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk

Grandparents
  
William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk, Alice de la Pole

Great-grandparents
  
Thomas Chaucer, Katherine de Stafford, Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk

Similar People
  
John de la Pole - 1st Earl of Li, William de la Pole - 1st Duke of S, Margaret Beaufort - Countess, Henry VII of England, Alice de la Pole

Sir William de la Pole (1478 - sometime between October and November 1539), was an English nobleman, and Knight of Wingfield Castle in Wingfield, Suffolk. He was the son of John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk (1442 - 1492) and Elizabeth Plantagenet (Elizabeth of York, Duchess of Suffolk) (1444 - 1504).

Around 1497, he married Katherine Stourton, daughter of William Stourton, 2nd Baron Stourton and Margaret Chidiocke, but they had no issue. Katherine, twice widowed and aged about 42, was more than 20 years older than William, so the motive for the marriage was probably financial ( her second husband, Henry, Lord Grey of Codnor, had left her much of his property).

He was brother to John de la Pole, 1st Earl of Lincoln, Edmund de la Pole, 3rd Duke of Suffolk and Richard de la Pole. As nephews of Edward IV the de la Pole family had a much stronger hereditary claim to the throne than Henry VII, who was descended through his mother from an illegitimate son of John of Gaunt. Even if William, unlike his brothers, had no personal ambition to seize the throne, his ancestry would have made it impossible for Henry to trust him. The discovery of some sort of plot involving the de la Pole brothers in 1501 sealed William's fate.

He was held prisoner in the Tower of London for 37 years till his death, longer than anyone else in the Tower's history, for allegedly plotting against King Henry VII with his brothers Edmund and Richard, who fled the country in 1501, after their conspiracy was detected. The fact that William did not flee with them might have been seen as evidence that he was blameless, but the King was clearly taking no chances.

References

William de la Pole (1478–1539) Wikipedia