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  1. Lady Jane Cavendish (1621–1669) fue una notable poeta inglesa. Nació en 1621, hija de William Cavendish y su primera esposa Elizabeth Basset Howard. 1 Además de sus aportes literarios, Jane ayudó a dirigir los negocios de su padre mientras él se encontraba exiliado de la Guerra Civil Inglesa. 2 Jane fue la responsable de una gran variedad ...

  2. Died. 1669 (aged 47–48) Nationality (legal) English. Other names. Jane Cheyne. Known for. Poetry. Lady Jane Cavendish (1621–1669) was a noted poet and playwright, the daughter of William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle and later the wife of Charles Cheyne, Viscount Newhaven. [1]

  3. 23 de ago. de 2017 · Books. The Collected Works of Jane Cavendish. The first scholarly edition of the complete works of Jane Cavendish, this volume presents as complete a collection as possible of works and...

  4. A brief overview delineates the significance of their history: Jane Cavendish (born in1621) and Elizabeth Brackley (born in 1626) were brought up in a wealthy household where education and artistic endeavours were emphasized. Their father, a grandson of the formidable Bess of Hardwick, was both a playwright and a friend and patron to writers such as Ben Jonson and William Davenant. Surviving ...

  5. Abstract. This chapter explores Jane Cavendishs social and devotional occasional verse, composed in the early 1640s, when Cavendish was left in charge of Welbeck Abbey after the exile to the continent of her father, William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle.

  6. orlando.cambridge.org › people › 6ec19643-49c3-47f2Lady Jane Cavendish | Orlando

    01 January 1621 - 08 October 1669. Standard Name: Cavendish, Lady Jane. Birth Name: Jane Cavendish. Self-constructed Name: Cavendysshe. Self-constructed Name: JC. Styled: Lady Jane Cavendish. Married Name: Jane Cheyne.

  7. Lady Jane Cavendish was born in 1621. Of her early years there is little to record, save that she lived at Welbeck. The year 1643 saw the death of her mother, while the Earl himself was bending his efforts towards the preservation of his sovereign's power in the field.