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  1. Mary Anne Clarke (* 3. April 1776 als Mary Anne Thompson ; † 21. Juni 1852 in Paris ) war die Mätresse des Frederick Augustus, Duke of York and Albany und führte, nachdem sie das Vereinigte Königreich verlassen musste, in Paris einen literarischen Salon.

  2. CLARKE, MARY ANNE (1776–1852), mistress of Frederick, duke of York, was, according to Elizabeth Taylor, who knew her well, the daughter of a man named Thompson, and was born in Ball and Pin Alley, White's Alley, Chancery Lane, in 1776. Her father died when she was very young, and Mrs. Thompson married a compositor named Farquhar.

  3. View the profiles of people named Mary Anne Clarke. Join Facebook to connect with Mary Anne Clarke and others you may know. Facebook gives people the...

  4. Clarke, Mary Anne (c. 1776–1852)English mistress of Frederick, duke of York, second son of George III. Name variations: Maryanne Clark. Born Mary Anne Thompson, either in London or at Oxford, around 1776; died at her estate at Boulogne on June 21, 1852; daughter of a man named Thompson (an impoverished bricklayer); received a modest education at Ham; married a man named Clarke (a proprietor ...

  5. Mary Anne Clark Obituary. With heavy hearts, we announce the death of Mary Anne Clark of Groton, South Dakota, born in Bristol, South Dakota, who passed away on April 1, 2024 at the age of 92. Leave a sympathy message to the family on the memorial page of Mary Anne Clark to pay them a last tribute. She was predeceased by : her parents, John ...

  6. Portrait of a Lady from a drawing by Adam Buck [Mary Anne Clarke at the Base of a Statue], 1803. In The Connoisseur, vol. XLI (1915), p. 180. Regency portrait painter Adam Buck completed this painting of Mary Anne Clarke, a fashionable society hostess and later mistress of the Duke of York, several years before she was at the center of a government scandal that caused a media sensation.

  7. Mary Anne Clarke. Mistress of Prince Frederick, Duke of York. Born in Ball and Pin Alley, White's Alley, Chancery Lane as Mary Anne Thompson, she married Clarke, a stonemason who became bankrupt. She 'went bad' but managed to become a courtesan (rather than a prostitute) and thus met the Duke who in 1803 set her up in her own home where she led ...