Chambers, Mary Catharine Elizabeth. The Life of Mary Ward (1585-1645). Editor Coleridge, Henry James, Burns and Oates, 1882, 2 vols.
2: 452-3, 465-6
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
death | Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland | She was buried by Capuchins in Henrietta Maria
's chapel. |
Dedications | Elizabeth Cary Viscountess Falkland | The full title was The Reply of the Most Illustrious Cardinall of Perron, to the Answeare of the Most Excellent King of Great Britaine: Perron had published in 1620 his riposte to a letter... |
Dedications | Susan Du Verger | A version by Susan Du Verger
, translator and literary critic, from the French fiction of Jean-Pierre, or John Peter, Camus
was published as Admirable Events, Together with Morall Relations, dedicated to Queen Henrietta Maria |
Education | Alice Sutcliffe | Her parents apparently sent the adolescent Alice for social education in the household of Katherine Villiers, duchess of Buckingham
, who was only seventeen when she married in June 1620. The duchess (whom, with her... |
Employer | Ephelia | She was by all accounts an outstanding courtier, admired not only for her beauty but also for her style and wit (Freda Hast
in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography quotes the word for... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Lady Jane Cavendish | The earl spent something over £4,000 on this visit, which was reported as such an excess of feasting, as had never before been known in England. The aged Ben Jonson
wrote for it The King's... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Lady Eleanor Douglas | |
Occupation | Lucy Cary | Anne Cary was also a court lady to Queen Henrietta Maria
. As Dame Clementina
she was sent to found a daughter convent in Paris in 1652, and used her influence to secure Henrietta Maria... |
Occupation | Margaret Cavendish | To her family's anxiety, the excruciatingly shy Margaret Lucas (later Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle)
insisted out of patriotic idealism on becoming Maid of Honour to Queen Mary (Henrietta Maria
), who was then... |
Occupation | Elizabeth Richardson | As Lady Asburnham, the future ER
frequented the Court. In 1627 she was spending some time with Queen Henrietta Maria
, who had arrived in England two years before this. She was said to have... |
Publishing | Ephelia | The initial letter H (Hail Mighty Prince!) in the 1679 reprint is rendered by a woodcut ornament or factotum with portraits of two crowned figures, one of each sex, with the royal rose... |
Publishing | Emma Robinson | |
Residence | Ephelia | Mary, Duchess of Richmond, left England for France in October 1667, two years after her employer, Henrietta Maria
, and remained there until after the queen's death in August 1669, though she frequently visited London... |
Residence | Mary Ward | She had already sought the patronage of Henrietta Maria
, and on the whole she was remarkably little harrassed by government agents for Catholicism. Chambers, Mary Catharine Elizabeth. The Life of Mary Ward (1585-1645). Editor Coleridge, Henry James, Burns and Oates, 1882, 2 vols. 2: 452-3, 465-6 |
Residence | Margaret Cavendish | Following royalist defeats, Queen Mary (Henrietta Maria
) sailed from Falmouth, heading for exile in Paris. Among the courtiers attending her was Margaret Lucas (later Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle)
. Jones, Kathleen. A Glorious Fame: The Life of Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, 1623-1673. Bloomsbury, 1988. 30 Strickland, Agnes, and Elizabeth Strickland. Lives of the Queens of England, from the Norman Conquest. G. Barrie, 1902, 16 vols. 9: 224-5 |
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