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  1. Family. Marriage and issue. Northern Rebellion. Exile. Death. Ancestry. References. Anne Percy, Countess of Northumberland (née Somerset; 1536 – 17 October 1596) was an English noblewoman and one of the instigators of the Northern Rebellion against Queen Elizabeth I of England.

  2. 24 de mai. de 2024 · Anne Percy and her letters. During the brief and ill-fated Northern Rebellion of 1569, Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon, gave a frank assessment of the leadership of Thomas Percy, Earl of Northumberland, stating that his wife, Anne Percy, Countess of Northumberland, was the driving force behind the earl's rising.

  3. Lady Anne Percy (1536-1591), Countess of Northumberland, was a leading figure in the Northern Rebellion of 1569, riding with the rebel forces, leading small parties of men independently, and intercepting post between Queen Elizabeth and the Regent of Scotland.

  4. Keywords: Anne Percy (1536–1591); correspondence networks; Countess of Northumberland; early-modern exile; early-modern letterwriting; early-modern patronage; Elizabethan noblewomen; English Catholic exiles; epistolary agency; epistolary techniques; Northern Rebellion 1569; Percy family; women writers; women’s letters

  5. Anne Stuart Percy, Lady Warkworth (c.1745 – 20 January 1813), also known as "Lady Percy" (Countess Percy), was the first wife of Hugh Percy, later Duke of Northumberland (1742–1817). She is known for her association with the novelist Laurence Sterne , with whom she may have had an intimate relationship.

  6. Anne Percy. 1485–1552. Marriage: 15 February 1511. Catherine Lady FitzAlan. 1510–1553. Elizabeth. 1510–. Katherine. 1510–. Margaret. 1510–. Henry Fitzalan 12th Earl of Arundel. 1512–1580. John FitzAlan. 1515–. Sources (3) Anne Percy Fitzalan (1485-1552), Find a Grave. Listed as a child of her parents.

  7. Religious and Family Identity in Exile: Anne Percy, Countess of Northumberland in the Low Countries; By Katy Gibbons, University of Portsmouth Edited by Jesse Spohnholz, Washington State University, Gary K. Waite, University of New Brunswick; Book: Exile and Religious Identity, 1500–1800; Online publication: 05 December 2014