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  1. Historical Person Search Search Search Results Results Susan, Countess of Kent Bertie (1554 - 1596) Try FREE for 14 days Try FREE for 14 days. Info Share.

  2. Because the Earl and Countess of Kent had been childless, however, the heir to the earldom was the earl's thirty-three-year-old younger brother, styled until then Henry Lord Grey of Ruthin. Susan Bertie Grey, now nineteen and Dowager Countess of Kent, and presumably unable to continue living in the new Earl of Kent's inherited residence, may at this time have been invited to live at Court.

  3. 24 de fev. de 2023 · The exhibition offers visitors a chance to compare paintings attributed to the artists side by side for the first time. Comparing the Woburn portrait of Anne Russell with the portrait of Susan Bertie, Countess of Kent from the collection of The Beaney, Canterbury, provides useful insights into this artist's signature technique.

  4. Susan Bertie, Countess Of Kent Susan Bertie (born 1554) was the daughter of Catherine Brandon, Duchess of Suffolk, née Willoughby, by her second husband, Richard Bertie. Susan was the noblewoman memorialized by Lanyer at the beginning of the Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum (1611) as the "daughter of the Duchess of Suffolk."

  5. www.tudorplace.com.ar › Bios › SusanBertie(CSusan BERTIE (C. Kent)

    Wingfield died in 1596, leaving Susan a widow once again. As Countess of Kent she was a patron of the arts. Emilia Bassano, the first Englishwoman to assert herself as a professional poet through her single volume of poems, Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum (1611), calls Susan Bertie "the Mistris of my youth, / The noble guide of my ungovern'd dayes".

  6. Aemilia Lanyer (alternatively, Emilia Lanier) was baptized as Emilia Bassano in Bishopsgate, London on January 27, 1569. Her parents, Baptista Bassano and Margaret Johnson, were Italian (and possibly Jewish) by heritage and court musicians by family trade. [1] After her father died when she was 7 years old, Susan Bertie, Countess Dowager of ...

  7. They remained on display from c1860 until 1906 when they were given to Canterbury Museums & Galleries. Three of the conserved sculptures can now be viewed in the People & Places gallery at The Beaney. The Barons on display are: Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury (d1228) by John Thomas, Robert Fitzwalter (d1235) by Frederick Thrupp and ...