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  1. 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.

  2. 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 ...

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  4. 6 de out. de 2019 · Elizabeth Cromwell, who helped found the Black Loyalist Heritage Centre in Birchtown, N.S., has died. She was 75. The Order of Canada recipient served on the Black Loyalist Heritage Society's ...

  5. Elizabeth Claypole [nb 1] ( née Cromwell; 2 July 1629 – 6 August 1658) was the second daughter of Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland, and his wife, Elizabeth Cromwell, and reportedly interceded with her father for royalist prisoners. After Cromwell created a peerage for her husband, John ...

  6. Wife of Oliver Cromwell. This page was last edited on 7 January 2024, at 21:27. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  7. Elizabeth Cromwell (1650–1731) Cromwell Museum Sir Thomas Palmer, Bt, MP (1714–1723) Guildhall Museum, Rochester William Lowndes (1652–1724), Secretary to the Treasury Bank of England Museum