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  1. Sir Thomas Chamberlain. Issue. Theophila Berkeley. George Berkeley, 8th Baron Berkeley. Father. George Carey, 2nd Baron Hunsdon. Mother. Elizabeth Spencer. Lady Elizabeth Berkeley ( née Carey; later Chamberlain; 24 May 1576 – 23 April 1635), was an English courtier and patron of the arts.

  2. 19 de set. de 2015 · Elizabeth, Lady Berkeley (née Carey; 24 May 1576 – 23 April 1635), was an English courtier and arts patroness, the only child of George Carey, 2nd Baron Hunsdon, and Elizabeth Spencer. She was the dedicatee of Thomas Nashe's 1593 Christ's Teares Over Jerusalem; Nashe also dedicated his Terrors of the Night to her in the following ...

    • Sir Thomas Berkeley, Sir Thomas Chamberlayne
    • Hunsdon, Hertfordshire, England
    • May 24, 1576
    • April 23, 1635 (58)London, Middlesex, England
  3. Name variations: Lady Elizabeth Carey; Lady Elizabeth Berkeley. Born May 24, 1576; died April 23, 1635; dau. of George Carey, 2nd baron Hunsdon, and Elizabeth Carey (before 1558–c. 1617); m. Sir Thomas Berkeley, Feb 19, 1595; children: George Berkeley (1601–1658) and Theophila Berkeley (b. 1611).

  4. When Elizabeth Carey was born on 24 May 1576, in Hunsdon, Hertfordshire, England, her father, Sir George Carey 2nd Baron of Hunsdon, was 29 and her mother, Elizabeth Spencer, was 23. She married Sir Thomas Berkeley on 19 February 1595, in Blackfriars, London, England.

  5. Elizabeth Carey was a member of the aristocracy in British Isles. Biography. Elizabeth was born in 1576. She was the daughter of George Carey. She passed away in 1635. [1] This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources? Sources.

    • April 23, 1635
  6. Elizabeth, Lady Berkeley (née Carey; later Chamberlain; 24 May 1576 - 23 April 1635), was an English courtier and patron of the arts. Elizabeth Carey was the only child of George Carey, 2nd Baron Hunsdon, and Elizabeth Spencer. Queen Elizabeth I was one of her godmothers.

  7. BY KATHERINE DUNCAN-JONES. An allusion by Thomas Nashe in The Terrors of the Night (1594) has led scholars to. believe that Lady Elizabeth Carey, nee Spencer, made some translations from. Petrarch, now lost. However, a manuscript among the Berkeley Castle muniments. shows that her daughter and namesake translated two Petrarch sonnets in about 1594.