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Mary "Moll" Davis (c. 1648 – 1708), also spelt Davies or Davys, was a courtesan and mistress of King Charles II of England. She was an actress and entertainer before and during her role as royal mistress.
- 1708, London, England
Moll is believed to have died at her home in Dean Street – then, as now, a fashionable and affluent area of London’s west end for theatre, shopping, dining, and nightlife. She was buried at St Anne’s church in Soho on 24th February 1708.
26 de abr. de 2022 · Moll Davis. ‹ Back to Paisible surname. View Complete Profile. Matching family tree profiles for Moll Davis. Mary "Moll" Davis in FamilySearch Family Tree. Mary Paisible (born Davies) in MyHeritage family trees (Dignés släktplats) Mary Howard in MyHeritage family trees (Prater Web Site) Mary Stuart (born Davis) in MyHeritage family trees (Talbot)
- "Moll Davis"
- Westminster, Middlesex, England
- circa 1648
- 1708 (55-64)
Moll Davis – Common actress to royal mistress. Mary Davis, better known as Moll, was supposedly born in the year 1648 in London. Her background and even the identities of her parents are a bit of a mystery, but it seems she was an illegitimate child of Thomas Howard, 3rd Earl of Berkshire and an unknown woman. Moll rose to fame as an actress ...
Moll Davis - Wikipedia. Moll Davis, poltredet gant Peter Lely, war-dro 1665-1670. Mary "Moll" Davis (war-dro 1648 - 1708) a oa un aktorez saoz eus ar XVIIvet kantved, hag unan eus serc'hed niverus ar roue saoz Charlez II . E 1686 e timezas d'ur soner gall, James Paisible (war-dro 1656-1721), hag a oa e lez ar roue James II .
27 de nov. de 2022 · There was competition between Nell and her friend Moll Davis, and it was Davis who managed to win the King’s affections first, receiving gifts and being called to his bed chamber often. To win the upper hand, it is said that Nell played an awful trick on Davis, putting laxatives in her supper before she went to see the King for the ...
By the end of the seventeenth century women players were much in demand, both on the stage and as subjects of painted portraits and prints. These helped to enhance the fame of early actresses such as Nell Gwyn and Moll Davis. By the early eighteenth century the theatre was thriving in Britain.