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  1. Pepys did not present it in quite those terms, but it is clearly how it was.” Another obvious victim of Pepys’s sexual involvements beyond his household was his wife. In 1665, he had married fifteen-year-old Elizabeth St. Michel, the daughter of a French immigrant. Loveman describes the marriage as a “love match, albeit a tempestuous one.”

  2. 13 de abr. de 2024 · Engraved J. Thomson 1825 and Hollyer. Pepys had intended to commission his wife’s portrait from Huysmans, but he proved difficult of access (31 May 1665). Miniature by Samuel Cooper. Untraced. Painted in July-August 1668. Marble bust by John Bushnell, see NPG 4824. This extended catalogue entry is from the National Portrait Gallery collection ...

  3. 26 de sept. de 1991 · The Diary of Elizabeth Pepys Paperback – September 26, 1991 . by Dale Spender (Author) 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 3 ratings. See all formats and editions ...

    • Paperback
    • Dale Spender
  4. 5 de ago. de 2019 · The disease took a fatal turn, and on the 10th of November, 1669, Elizabeth Pepys died at the early age of twenty-nine years, to the great grief of her husband. She died at their house in Crutched Friars, and was buried at St. Olave’s Church, Hart Street, where Pepys erected a monument to her memory.

  5. 11 de may. de 2003 · Monday, August 6, 1666 – Elizabeth Pepys and Betty Pearse have words, and the bad feelings linger for several months, to Pepys’ displeasure. I’m not sure what it really was about: “By and by comes Mr. Pierce and his wife, the first time she also hath been here since her lying-in, both having been brought to bed of boys, and both of them dead.

  6. Elisabeth Pepys starb, vermutlich an Typhus, nach der Rückkehr von einer Frankreichreise, die sie gegen Ende des Jahres 1669 mit ihrem Mann unternommen hatte. Sie wurde – wie 34 Jahre später auch Samuel Pepys – im Kirchenschiff von St Olave Hart Street in der Londoner City beigesetzt, wo sich bis heute eine Büste von ihr befindet.

  7. In the summer of 1663, a ship's carpenter, William Bagwell, and his wife began to cultivate Pepys as a patron, while Pepys cultivated Mrs Bagwell as a mistress. Mrs Bagwell's first name is not mentioned by Pepys, but she was almost certainly called Elizabeth.