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  1. Elizabeth Butler, Marchioness of Ormonde (née Lady Elizabeth Harriet Grosvenor; 11 October 1856 – 25 March 1928), was a British aristocrat who was the eldest daughter of Hugh Grosvenor, 1st Duke of Westminster and Lady Constance Gertrude Sutherland-Leveson-Gower (daughter of George Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, 2nd Duke of Sutherland).

  2. Elizabeth Butler, née Preston, Baroness Dingwall, and countess, marchioness, then duchess of Ormonde (1615–84), is the author of the largest body of extant correspondence of any woman from seventeenth-century Ireland, and was arguably the most powerful and well-connected Irish woman of her time.

    • Naomi McAreavey
    • 2021
  3. However, it more closely resembles Elizabeth Harriet Grosvenor, née Leveson-Gower (1857 – 1928), who in 1876 married James Butler, 3rd Marquess of Ormonde. A photographic miniature of Elizabeth, Marchioness of Ormonde, at the same age, confirming this identity, is at Antony, Cornwall (National Trust: no. ANT38).

  4. 9 de jun. de 2021 · This accompanies Naomi McAreavey’s Irish Historical Studies article Female alliances in Cromwellian Ireland: the social and political network of Elizabeth Butler, marchioness of Ormonde. The marquess and marchioness of Ormonde were the ultimate power couple of seventeenth-century Ireland.

  5. Elizabeth Butler, Marchioness of Ormonde , was a British aristocrat who was the eldest daughter of Hugh Grosvenor, 1st Duke of Westminster and Lady Constance Gertrude Sutherland-Leveson-Gower . In 1876 she married James Butler, 3rd Marquess of Ormonde and became the Marchioness of Ormonde until her husband's death in 1919.

  6. 6 de ene. de 2023 · This letter reveals the marchioness of Ormonde’s involvement in a Royalist intelligence network based in Caen, Normandy, where she lived in exile with her children and other Irish Royalists. Click Here. 2 May 1652, The marchioness of Ormonde – writing from Caen – to the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell.

  7. A B S T R A C T. Elizabeth Butler, marchioness of Ormonde, came to prominence during the middle years of the seventeenth centuryas a result of hercare of Protestant refugees in the aftermath of the 1641 rebellion; her royalist exile in Caen; her successful claim to a portion of the confiscated Ormonde estate; and her subsequent retirement to Dun...