Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. In August 1620, just a few months after his twenty-first birthday, Oliver Cromwell married Elizabeth Bourchier at St Giles’s church in Cripplegate, London. Elizabeth had been born in 1598, the eldest of twelve children (nine sons and three daughters) of Sir James Bourchier and his wife Frances, who was a daughter of Thomas Crane of Newton ...

  2. 5 de dez. de 2014 · Elizabeth Cromwell 1598-1665. Cromwell Museum. Eldest child of Sir James Bourchier and his wife Frances. Very little is known of Elizabeth's childhood, but her father was a prosperous businessman ...

  3. 5 de mar. de 2012 · That she was an excellent housewife was certainly no recommendation to a throne, and as that is a qualification only commendable when its exercise is required, she did not probably intrude it when the necessity ceased of her attending to domestic affairs: as she was not royally or nobly born, her talents of this description were useful and available at a period when her fortunes were less ...

  4. Elizabeth Cromwell Remembered. 23-09-23 - 24-09-23, 10:30 AM - 4:00 PM. Admission: ££8 adults, under 12s FREE. Location: Northborough Primary School Church Street Peterborough PE6 9BN. A salute to Elizabeth Cromwell.

  5. Elizabeth Cromwell was born Elizabeth Steward. She was the daughter of William Stewart, who had inherited from his uncle, the Prior of Ely, leases of abbey lands in the early days of the Reformation. The leases passed to Elizabeth's childless brother Thomas and, in 1636, to her son Oliver. In she married Robert Cromwell, grandson of Thomas ...

  6. 21 de jul. de 2022 · Abstract. Elizabeth and Dorothy Cromwell occupied unprecedented—and unpreceded—positions in the Anglo-Scottish hierarchy: they were leading women in a state that had temporarily thrown off its monarchy. Married to the heads of the experimental protectorate that presided over Britain for a decade, their roles were neither governmental nor ...

  7. 2 de fev. de 2022 · Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658) was an accomplished cavalry commander, then head of Parliament's New Model Army, and finally Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland. The latter title was awarded to Cromwell for life after the bloody conclusion of the English Civil Wars (1642-1651) and the execution of King Charles I of England (r. 1625-1649).