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  1. Frances Sheridan ( née Chamberlaine; 1724 – 26 September 1766) was an Anglo-Irish novelist and playwright. Life. Frances Chamberlaine was born in Dublin, Ireland. Her father, Dr. Phillip Chamberlaine, was an Anglican minister.

  2. Sheridan, Frances (1724–1766) Irish novelist and dramatist. Born Frances Chamberlaine in Dublin, Ireland, in 1724; died in Blois, France, on September 26, 1766; youngest of five children of Philip Chamberlaine (an Irish cleric) and Anastasia Whyte; married Thomas Sheridan (a well-known actor-manager), in 1747; children: three sons, including ...

  3. Frances Sheridan's The History. ofNourjahad and the Sultan of Smock-Alley. SONJA LAWRENSON* Although History no of longer Nourjahad achieving (1767) has wide recently public attracted acclaim,1 renewed Frances interest Sheridan's from a The small but significant cohort of scholars.

  4. orlando.cambridge.org › people › e4d73e82-91f2-44d8Frances Sheridan | Orlando

    Frances Sheridan. 01 January 1724 - 26 August 1766. Standard Name: Sheridan, Frances. Birth Name: Frances Chamberlaine. Married Name: Frances Sheridan. Pseudonym: The Editor of Sidney Bidulph. Pseudonym: The Author of the Discovery. Pseudonym: The Late Editor of the Former Part.

  5. Frances Sheridan. Alfred Webb. A Compendium of Irish Biography. 1878. Sheridan, Frances, wife of foregoing, was born in 1724. Her father, Dr. Philip Chamberlaine, was opposed to female education, and it was only by stealth that, principally with the help of her brothers, she obtained her knowledge of books.

  6. Sheridan, Frances (née Chamberlaine) Contributed by. March, Jessica. Sheridan, Frances (née Chamberlaine) (1724–66), writer, was born in Dublin, the youngest child among three sons and two daughters of Philip Chamberlaine , a Church of Ireland clergyman who was rector of St Nicholas Without, and Anastasia Chamberlaine (née Whyte), his ...

  7. Frances Sheridan (1724–66) won acclaim in her day as both a playwright and novelist. Her most famous work, the sentimental novel Memoirs of Miss Sidney Bidulph (1761), found favour with Samuel Johnson, while her comedy The Discovery (1763) was staged by David Garrick at Drury Lane.