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  1. 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 ...

  2. 5 de dic. de 2014 · Elizabeth Cromwell 1598-1665. Cromwell Museum. Eldest child of Sir James Bourchier and his wife Frances. Very little is known of Elizabeth's childhood, but her father was a prosperous businessman ...

  3. Cromwell, Elizabeth (1598–1665)Lady Protectress. Name variations: Elizabeth Bourchier; though her name was Elizabeth she was called Joan by the cavaliers. Source for information on Cromwell, Elizabeth (1598–1665): Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia dictionary.

  4. Elizabeth Cromwell Remembered. 23-09-23 - 24-09-23, 10:30 AM - 4:00 PM. Admission: ££8 adults, under 12s FREE. Location: Northborough Primary School Church Street Peterborough PE6 9BN. A salute to Elizabeth Cromwell.

  5. Sir Henry’s second son was Robert Cromwell, who married Elizabeth Steward around 1590. The couple had ten children, three boys and seven girls. Only one of the boys survived infancy – Oliver Cromwell, who was born in Huntingdon on 25 th April 1599. We know relatively little about Oliver’s early life.

  6. This is the home page's excerpt. Jane Austen's World. This Jane Austen blog brings Jane Austen, her novels, and the Regency Period alive through food, dress, social customs, and other 19th C. historical details related to this topic.

  7. 10 de ene. de 2001 · Both republican and royalist representations of Elizabeth Cromwell are enmeshed in larger disputes over the contradictions that each side perceived within the entity of a Protectorate — the body politic that emerged during the Interregnum period as neither a monarchy nor a republic but rather an uneasy synthesis of the two, not unlike “Protectorate Joan,” as Elizabeth was often called.