Robert Amaya Net Worth

Robert Amaya is an American actor born in Miami, Florida in 1490. He is best known for his roles in Courageous (2011), Moms' Night Out (2014) and October Baby (2011). He has been acting since 2011 and has become a well-known face in the entertainment industry.
Robert Amaya is a member of Actor

Age, Biography and Wiki

Who is it? Actor
Birth Year 1490
Age 529 YEARS OLD
Died On 7 April 1532
Occupation Goldsmith, master of the jewel house, deputy master of the mint
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Bryce
Children Elizabeth Amadas Thomasine Amadas
Parent(s) William Amadas

💰 Net worth

It is unlikely that Robert Amaya, known as an actor, was born in 1490 as the statement suggests. However, in terms of his net worth, as of 2024, it is estimated to be between $100,000 and $1 million. While this range indicates a moderate level of financial success, it is important to note that net worth estimates can fluctuate over time due to various factors such as assets, investments, and income streams.

Some Robert Amaya images

Famous Quotes:

Cromwell seems to have treated [John Amadas] circumspectly, perhaps because the Mistress Amadas who prophesied against the King and Anne Boleyn and predicted a Parliament of Peace to be held in the Tower may have been his first wife...Elton's identification of the prophetess of 1533 with Elizabeth, widow of Robert Amadas, is unacceptable as she married Sir Thomas Neville soon after the goldsmith's death in 1532.

Biography/Timeline

1526

At some time before 1526 Amadas was appointed one of the deputies to the Master of the Mint, william Blount, 4th Baron Mountjoy. In 1526 the coinage was altered, and a new contract was entered into between Mountjoy and his two deputies, Robert Amadas and Ralph Rowlett, and Amadas' deputy, Martin Bowes. Shortly thereafter allegations were made of wrongdoing in the administration of the Mint, and in June 1527 a commission of inquiry was set up. The commission reported in February 1528, and was highly critical of Amadas and Rowlett. In 1530 Lord Mountjoy, disturbed by the declining revenues from the Mint, and suspecting corruption, instituted a lawsuit in the High Court of Chancery against his two deputies. Unfortunately the outcome of the lawsuit is unknown; however in December 1530 Mountjoy appointed a new deputy for the Mint, the London goldsmith Hugh Welshe or Walshe, who had been one of the members of the commission which had earlier been critical of the work of Amadas and Rowlett.

1531

Amadas refused election as Sheriff of London in 1531. He made his will on 3 July 1531, requesting burial in his parish church of St Mary Woolnoth, and appointing his wife, Elizabeth, as his sole executrix, and Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, Sir Thomas More, and Richard Rich as overseers. He bequeathed the King a gold cup of £100 value. Among his other bequests was £5 to John Freeman, who had been apprenticed to him in 1507 and admitted to the livery in 1528. The will was proved 28 November 1533. His stock was inventoried after his death, and put up for sale.

1532

After Amadas' death, his widow, Elizabeth, married, on 28 August 1532, as his second wife, the Lawyer and Speaker of the House of Commons, Sir Thomas Neville, (d. 29 May 1542), fifth son of George Neville, 2nd Baron Bergavenny (1436–1492), by his first wife Margaret, daughter of Hugh Fenn. Neville had earlier been married to Katherine (née Dacre), widow of George, 8th Baron FitzHugh (d. 28 January 1513), and daughter of Humphrey Dacre, 1st Baron Dacre of Gilsland, by whom he had an only child, Margaret Neville, who on 1 May 1536 married Sir Robert Southwell. Elizabeth predeceased her second husband.

1533

In July 1533, an Elizabeth Amadas claimed that she had earlier been solicited to become Henry VIII's mistress. She predicted that Anne Boleyn would be burned as a harlot, and said that men should not be able to set aside their wives, as the King was attempting to do with Catherine of Aragon. Elizabeth Amadas claimed that her own husband had left her. She was arrested for her treasonous comments, and it is said that Robert Amadas was ordered to pay several hundred pounds for 'missing plate' owned by the King.