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  1. Elizabeth Bridget Armistead or Armitstead (11 July 1750 – 8 July 1842) was a courtesan and, later, the wife of statesman and politician Charles James Fox. Her relationship with and marriage to Fox was one of the most famous and controversial of their age.

    • Elizabeth Bridget Cane, 11 July 1750, Greenwich, England
    • English
  2. 9 de fev. de 2017 · Ahead of her talk at Seduction Late on 14 February, Catherine Curzon traces the life of another extraordinary woman drawn to London’s sex trade. The origins of Elizabeth Bridget Armistead, née Cane, are a matter of conjecture.

    • Elizabeth Armistead1
    • Elizabeth Armistead2
    • Elizabeth Armistead3
    • Elizabeth Armistead4
  3. Elizabeth Mary Deignan MBE (née Armitstead; born 18 December 1988) is an English professional world champion track and road racing cyclist, who rides for UCI Women's WorldTeam Lidl–Trek. She was the 2015 World road race champion.

    • Elizabeth Mary Deignan
    • Lizzie
    • 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in)
    • 57 kg (126 lb; 9.0 st)
  4. 10 de jul. de 2017 · Elizabeth Armistead. Courtesy of Wikipedia. By the time Elizabeth was twenty-one, she was known as Elizabeth Armistead (or Armstead) and was working at a bawdy house. It was during this time that she met the famous British Whig statesman, Charles James Fox.

  5. When Elizabeth Armistead was born in 1633, in Giggleswick, Yorkshire, England, her father, William Armistead, was 11630 and her mother, Anne Ellis, was 23. She had at least 3 sons and 2 daughters with Thomas Churchill. She died on 25 May 1685, in Williamsburg, York, Virginia, British Colonial America, at the age of 52. More.

    • Female
    • Thomas Churchill
  6. When Elizabeth Armistead was born on 16 February 1667, in Gloucester, Virginia, British Colonial America, her father, John Armistead, was 31 and her mother, Judith, was 22. She married Ralph Wormeley II on 16 February 1687, in Gloucester, Virginia, British Colonial America.

  7. Elizabeth Armistead - Friends of Lydiard Park. Elizabeth Armistead’s client list reads like a who’s who of 18th century society. The scurrilous Town and Country Magazine reported in 1776 that she could ‘claim the conquest of two ducal coronets, a marquis, four earls and a viscount,’ most probably all at the same time.