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  1. Margaret Clifford ( née Russell ), Countess of Cumberland (7 July 1560 – 24 May 1616) was an English noblewoman and maid of honor to Elizabeth I. Lady Margaret was born in Exeter, England to Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford and Margaret St John. On 24 June 1577 she married George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland the son of ...

  2. Henrique Clifford (após 1537 - antes de 1547), morreu jovem; Margarida (1540 - 29 de setembro de 1596), foi quase noiva de Guilford Dudley, mas foi noiva do tio dele, André Dudley, que foi preso por se rebelar contra a rainha Maria I. [2] Ela se casou, portanto, com Henrique Stanley, 4.° Conde de Derby, com quem teve

  3. Abstract. Margaret clifford was The daughter of The Earl of Bedford, who had George Clifford, Earl of Cumberland, as his ward: Bedford took The opportunity to bring his ward’s fortune into The family by betrothing him to his daughter.

    • Manuscripts
    • Printed Sources
    • Further Reading
    Bertie, Peregrine. 1600. Letter to Margaret Clifford. WDHOTH/3/44/6/59. Cumbria Archive Service, Kendal.Google Scholar
    Clifford, Margaret. 1585. Letter to George Clifford. WDHOTH/3/44/5/1. Cumbria Archive Service, Kendal.Google Scholar
    ———————. 1591. “Layfield Letter, autobiography.” Portland Papers 23: 1–10. Longleat House, Wiltshire.Google Scholar
    ———————. 1598. Physick & Alchemye: Receipts of Lady Margaret, for elixirs, tinctures, electuaries, cordials, waters etc. WDHOTH/1/5. Cumbria Archive Service, Kendal.Google Scholar
    Bayer, Penny. 2005. “Lady Margaret Clifford’s Alchemical Receipt Book and the John Dee Circle.” Ambix 52 (3): 271–84.Article Google Scholar
    Clifford, Anne. 2015. Anne Clifford’s Great Books of Record. Edited by Jessica. L. Malay. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
    ——————. 2018. Anne Clifford’s Autobiographical Writing 1590–1676. Edited by Jessica. L. Malay. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
    Clifford, Margaret. 2001. “Epitaph for Richard Cavendish.” Early Modern Women Poets: An Anthology, edited by Jane Stevenson and Peter Davidson, 84. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
    Daybell, James. 2015. “Social Negotiations in Correspondence between Mothers and Daughters in Tudor and Early Stuart England.” Women’s History Review 24 (4): 502–27.Article Google Scholar
    Malay, Jessica L. 2013. “Positioning Patronage: Lanyer’s Salve Deus Rex Judæorum and the Countess of Cumberland in Time and Place.” The Seventeenth Century 28 (32): 251–74.Article Google Scholar
    Pitcher, John. 2012. “Margaret, Countess of Cumberland’s Prayse of Private Life, Presented by Samuel Daniel.” Prayse of Writing: Early Modern Manuscript Studies, edited by Susan P. Cerasano and Ste...
    • j.l.malay@hud.ac.uk
  4. O seu pai e Francis Russell, que depois seria seu tutor, tinham arranjado, ainda na infância de ambos, o casamento de George Clifford com a sua filha deste último, Lady Margaret Russell, depois Margaret Clifford, condessa de Cumberland. O casamento consumou-se em 1577, quando George Clifford tinha cerca de 19 anos de idade.

  5. Introduction. Margaret Clifford (née Russell), Countess of Cumberland (15601616), is best known as the. –. mother of Lady Anne Clifford. Her surviving written work includes nearly one hundred letters, an epistolary autobiography, a collection of alchemical and medicinal recipes, and one sonnet.

  6. Overview. Fingerprint. Abstract. Margaret Clifford (née Russell), Countess of Cumberland, wrote across a number of genres—letters, autobiography, poetry, and alchemical recipes. She was active in the court of Queen Elizabeth I. She was well respected for her intellect and served as patron to a number of religious, historical, and literary writers.