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  1. Elizabeth married William Dauncey, son of Sir John Dauncey, Privy Councillor and Knight of the Body to Henry VIII, on 29 September 1525. [8] Elizabeth and William had seven children: John (b.1525), Thomas, Bartholomew, William, Germain, Alice, and Elizabeth. They lived at Canons Park, Middlesex, and in London, then (after 1543) at Cassiobury ...

  2. Elizabeth Dauncey. c.1526-7. RCIN 912228. Elizabeth (b. 1506) was More’s second daughter, and had recently married William Dauncey. In the group portrait she stood to the far left, next to Margaret Giggs, her hands clasped in front of her. The inscription ‘The Lady Barkley’ is an eighteenth-century misidentification. Previous Next.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cecily_HeronCecily Heron - Wikipedia

    Early life and education. Cecily More was the third child of Thomas More and his first wife, Jane Colte (1488-1511). Margaret (later Roper; 1505–1544) was the eldest; followed by Elizabeth (later Dauncey; 1506–1564), Cecily, and then John (1509-1547).

  4. Elizabeth Dauncey (née More) (1506-1564), Second daughter of Sir Thomas More; wife of William Dauncey. Sitter in 9 portraits. Identify; Cecily Heron (née More) (born 1507), Youngest daughter of Sir Thomas More. Sitter in 8 portraits. Identify

  5. Reference Collection. NPG D39146. Sitter. Elizabeth Dauncey (née More) (1506-1564), Second daughter of Sir Thomas More; wife of William Dauncey. Sitter in 9 portraits. Artist. Hans Holbein the Younger (1497 or 1498-1543), Painter, printmaker and designer; son of Hans Holbein the Elder.

  6. The three women in low-cut dresses in the centre are his daughters Cecily Heron (seated, with a closed book), Elizabeth Dauncey (standing) and Margaret Roper (seated, with an open book). The four figures with pleated ruffs are his grandson, also called Thomas More, with his wife Maria Scrope and their sons, John and Christopher Cresacre More.

  7. Elizabeth Dauncey , one of Thomas More's children, was part of a circle of exceptionally educated and accomplished women who exemplified "learned ladies" for the next two centuries.