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  1. Branwell Brontë was the fourth of six children and the only son of Patrick Brontë (1777–1861) and his wife, Maria Branwell Brontë (1783–1821). [3] [4] He was born in a house (now known as the Brontë Birthplace ) in Market Street, Thornton , near Bradford , West Riding of Yorkshire , [3] and moved with his family to Haworth when his father was appointed to the perpetual curacy in 1821.

  2. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 15037417. Sponsored by Timothy Purnell. Source citation. Mother of the Bronte Sisters. Maria Branwell was born into a prosperous merchant family. She was the eighth of eleven children of Thomas Branwell and Anne Carne. After four deaths in the family she got a job assistng her aunt as a housekeeper of a school in ...

  3. Charlotte Brontë nació en el pueblo de Thornton, Yorkshire, Reino Unido, hija de Patrick Brontë, un clérigo de origen irlandés también escritor, inteligente, austero, maniático, de fuerte carácter, conservador y profundamente enamorado de su mujer, María Branwell y sus hijos. Charlotte tuvo cinco hermanos: Emily, Anne, Maria, Elizabeth ...

  4. 16 de fev. de 2023 · Humble beginnings. Born in 1818, Emily was the daughter of Irish clergyman Patrick Brontë and his English wife, Maria Branwell. The fifth of six children, she spent her childhood in Haworth, a ...

  5. 31 de jul. de 2019 · The chances of Cornish gentlewoman Maria Branwell even meeting the poor Irish curate Patrick Brontë in Regency England, let alone falling passionately in love, were remote. Yet Maria and Patrick did meet, making a life together as devoted lovers and doting parents in the heartland of the industrial revolution.

    • Hardcover
    • Sharon Wright
  6. Anne Brontë, the author of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and Agnes Grey was born on 17 January 1820, in the village of Thornton, West Riding, Yorkshire. She was the sixth child born to the Reverend Patrick Brontë and his wife, the former Maria Branwell. Shortly after Anne’s birth, the whole family moved to the parsonage at Haworth, near ...

  7. Maria’s frailty was emphasised by other contemporary biographers of the family in a similar fashion; she was a ‘frail flower transplanted to a bleak abode’. (2) Here, Maria appears as less a woman in her own right, than as a proto-Freudian absence, a lingering presence in her effects on her children and their literary production.