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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Alice_MoreAlice More - Wikipedia

    Lady Alice, More (née Harpur; 1474–1546 or 1551), also known as Dame Alice Moore, was the second wife of Sir Thomas More, who served as Lord Chancellor of England. She is a prominent figure in Tudor history and literature. She was the daughter of Elizabeth (née Adern) and Sir Richard Harpur.

  2. 11 de out. de 2018 · Lady Alice More (née Harpur) c.1474-c.1551) 5 years ago Author: Claire Ridgway. 5 Comments. Lady Alice More was born the daughter of Sir Richard Harpur and his wife, Elizabeth Ardern. Little is known of Alices early life, including her year of birth, but historian Retha Warnicke has dated it to in or after 1474.

  3. English gentlewoman who was the second wife of Thomas More. Name variations: Alice Middleton; Lady Alice More. Born around 1472; died in 1545; married a man named Middleton (died 1509); became second wife of Thomas More (1478–1535, English scholar and statesman who was slain for his opposition to detaching England from the spiritual authority ...

  4. Sinopse. Não recomendado para menos de 12 anos. A Dra. Alice Howland (Julianne Moore) é uma renomada professora de linguistica. Aos poucos, ela começa a esquecer certas palavras e se perder pelas...

  5. Download book EPUB. Wicked Women of Tudor England. Retha M. Warnicke. Part of the book series: Queenship and Power ( (QAP)) 336 Accesses. Abstract. Beginning with William Roper’s reminiscences about Thomas More, scholarly attention to his second wife, Alice Middleton, has been more substantial than that to the first one, Jane Colt.

  6. BBC Future. 18 dezembro 2021. Cinco revelações de 'Alice no País das Maravilhas' sobre o cérebro. O escritor inglês Lewis Carroll foi extremamente modesto sobre sua obra-prima. "A heroína ...

  7. Listen to Episode 2: Lady Alice More from History of the Women of England. Born around 1474, during the reign of Henry VII, and married first to a Merchant of the Staple, a traditional and lucrative wool trader, in her second marriage to Sir (later Saint) Thomas More put Lady Alice at the centre of Renaissance learning.That wasn't her skill set, but she managed the "school" that Sir Thomas's ...