Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Julia Prinsep Jackson (Stephen de casada) nació en Calcuta en 1846, hija de un médico. A los dos años su madre volvió a Inglaterra con ella, y allí se crió entre los escritores y filósofos que frecuentaban la casa tanto de su tío, el historiador y político Henry Thoby Prinsep, como de su tía, la fotógrafa Margaret Cameron, para la ...

  2. Julia Prinsep Stephen was a celebrated Englishwoman, noted for her beauty as a Pre-Raphaelite model and philanthropist. She was the wife of the biographer Leslie Stephen and mother of Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell, members of the Bloomsbury Group.

  3. James had left £100 sterling each to his two eldest daughters, Julia Margaret Cameron and Sarah Prinsep, his two executors Thoby Prinsep and Charles Cameron, and his nephew Frederick Becher Rocke, for them to buy a mourning ring or token in remembrance of him. The remainder of his wealth was left entirely to Adeline.

  4. Julia Prinsep Stephen (née Jackson, formerly Mrs Duckworth) by Julia Margaret Cameron albumen print, 1867 11 1/2 in. x 9 7/8 in. (292 mm x 238 mm) Given by Royal Historical Society, 1952 Photographs Collection NPG x18016

  5. Virginia Woolf’s mother was Julia Prinsep Stephen. Julia was born in Calcutta, India. Dr. John and Maria Pattle Jackson were her parents. They had three daughters and Julia was the youngest. Julia Margaret Cameron, a famous Victorian photographer was her aunt. In 1848, she along with her mother and sister moved back to England to live in Hendon.

  6. 22 de mar. de 2024 · 她的父亲莱斯利·斯蒂芬 (Leslie Stephen) 是一名历史学家、作家、评论家、传记作家和登山家,获得剑桥大学和牛津大学的荣誉文学博士学位,是三一学院的荣誉院士。她的母亲茱莉亚·斯蒂芬 (Julia Prinsep Stephen) 出生于印度,曾经做过拉斐尔前派画家模特。

  7. Julia Prinsep Stephen’s influence on Woolf is both more nebulous and more all-encompassing than that of Cameron and Ritchie. Woolf frequently felt her presence, ‘there she is; beautiful, emphatic, with her familiar phrase and her laugh; closer than any of the living are’ ( Rem: 40). She draws attention to her through the deictic ‘There ...