Anne Askew
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Standard Name: Askew, Anne
Birth Name: Anne Askew
Married Name: Anne Kyme
AA
's fame as a Prostestant martyr was in origin dependent on her own testimony. Her accounts of her legal trials in 1545 and 1546, with torture—part debate, part autobiography, part reporting—are unique texts. Her two extant poems also deserve to be better known.
Connections
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Literary responses | Margery Kempe | The year 2018 was a high point in MK
studies, with the first academic conference devoted to her, and the establishment of the Margery Kempe Society
. Diane Watt
summarized the growth of her reputation... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Oxenbridge Lady Tyrwhit | Tyrwhit's collection of prayers is thought to date from the mid 1550s, and tradition suggests that it was written for the future Queen Elizabeth I
during her imprisonment by her sister Queen Mary
, but... |
Friends, Associates | Katherine Parr | |
Friends, Associates | Katherine Parr | She interested herself in women's bible-studying groups, in which her associates included Catherine Brandon, Duchess of Suffolk
, Elizabeth, Lady Tyrwhit
, and Anne Askew
. |
Friends, Associates | Elizabeth Oxenbridge Lady Tyrwhit | Although Lady Tyrwhit
was a cousin by marriage of Katherine Parr
, their shared allegiance to the reformed religion was probably the key to their relationship. The Protestant historian John Foxe
wrote that Elizabeth Tyrwhit... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Lucy Hutton | The couple had two sons, one of whom (named William after his father) was still alive in 1811. The elder William Hutton was a remarkable man, who like his wife expressed in writing his original... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Margaret Fell | He was descended from the family of the Protestant writer and martyr Anne Askew
. |
Education | Mary Collier | MC
writes, No Learning ever was bestow'd on me; / My Life was always spent in Drudgery. Collier, Mary et al. “The Woman’s Labour”. The Thresher’s Labour and The Woman’s Labour, edited by Edward Palmer Thompson et al., Merlin, 1989. 6 |
Education | Grace Lady Mildmay | Lady Sharington employed a governess named Hamblyn for her daughters, who was a niece of her husband. Mrs Hamblyn took great pains with the character and moral training of her charges, and taught Grace some... |
Cultural formation | Jessie Boucherett | Presumably white, JB
was born into a propertied Protestant family. The family estate at Willingham, Lincolnshire, had been passed down from Mathew Boucherett
, a Frenchman who emigrated to England in 1644. Helen Blackburn |
Timeline
No timeline events available.
Texts
No bibliographical results available.