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Elizabeth Clinton, Countess of Lincoln ( née Knyvet; c. 1570–1638) was an English noblewoman and writer. She was Countess of Lincoln from 1616 until the death of her husband Thomas Clinton, 3rd Earl of Lincoln, in 1619, then Dowager Countess.
8 de mar. de 2022 · Elizabeth Clinton (née Knevitt, also Knyvett), Countess of Lincoln (c. 1574–c. 1630), was the first woman to publish a tract advocating maternal breastfeeding. The Countesse of Lincolnes Nurserie (1622) was dedicated to Clinton’s daughter-in-law,...
- m.bassnett@uwo.ca
28 de abr. de 2022 · Lady Elizabeth FitzGerald, Countess of Lincoln (1527 – March 1590), also known as The Fair Geraldine, was an Irish noblewoman and a member of the celebrated FitzGerald dynasty. She became the second wife of Sir Anthony Browne and later the third wife of English admiral Edward Clinton, 1st Earl of Lincoln.
Titled: Elizabeth Clinton, Countess of Lincoln Used Form: Elizabeth, Lady Lincoln ECCL published her sole text in the earlier seventeenth century: an unusual advice-manual which handles in very personal terms the topic of a woman's religious and maternal duty to breast-feed her own children, even if she is a member of the upper classes.
In 1622, when Elizabeth Clinton (c.1574–c.1630), Countess of Lincoln, published her short treatise, it was fashionable for aristocratic families to employ a wet-nurse, that is, another woman to breastfeed their children, rather than for mothers to do this themselves.
31 de ago. de 2014 · Abstract. This chapter comprises an introduction to Elizabeth Clinton, Countess of Lincoln (c.1574-c.1630) and seventeenth-century attitudes to breastfeeding, and the edited text...
The Countesse of Lincolnes Nurserie. Author: Lincoln, Elizabeth Clinton, Countess of. Note: Oxford: John Lichfield And James Short, 1622. Link: HTML at Celebration of Women Writers. Stable link here: