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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 ...
5 de mar. de 2012 · The enemies of her too successful husband load her with contempt, accusing her of errors such as were sufficiently common in the court of the monarch whom Cromwell's death restored, but the motive for such accusations is so apparent, that they deserve no kind of attention. That she was an excellent housewife was certainly no recommendation to a ...
Elizabeth Cromwell, dåpsnavn Elizabeth Bourchier (født 1598, død 1665 ), var hustru av Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector av England, Skottland og Irland. Hun ble tidvis referert til som Lady Protectress eller Protectress Joan. Allerede i sin samtid ble hun skarpt baktalt av sin manns politiske motstandere.
2 de fev. de 2023 · Elizabeth Seymour was chief lady-in-waiting to Jane, who died in 1537, twelve days after giving birth to Edward VI. By 1538 Elizabeth had married Gregory Cromwell, 1st Baron Cromwell, son of Henry's chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, 1st Earl of Essex.[1] They had five children.
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 ...
10 de jan. de 2001 · Staged as a dialogue “between the ghost of this grand traytor and tyrant Oliver Cromwell, and sir reverence my Lady Joan his wife” (1), Andrews situates Elizabeth as a prophetic intermediary between Cromwell’s ghost — who, Samson-like, has now “become house-keeper in Hell” (16) — and Richard and Henry, Elizabeth’s sons. Cromwell ...
20 de nov. de 2018 · The essay shows how two royalist recipe books — The Queens Closet Opened (1655) and The Court & Kitchin of Elizabeth (1664) — fashioned Henrietta Maria (1609–69) and Elizabeth Cromwell (1598–1665) as very different housewives to the English nation.