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  1. Annabelle Apsion. Jane Cavendish is a character appearing in the episode Dead Man's Eleven of the ITV crime drama Midsomer Murders . Categories. Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted.

  2. Women's Household Drama: “Loves Victorie,” “A Pastorall,” and “The concealed Fansyes.” Mary Wroth, Jane Cavendish, and Elizabeth Brackley. Ed. Marta Straznicky and Sara Mueller. The Other Voice in Early Modern Europe: The Toronto Series 66; Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies 544. Toronto: Iter Press; Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2018. xvi ...

  3. "This is an excellent volume, providing a scholarly, thoroughly annotated edition of three fascinating manuscript plays by early modern women writers: Mary Wroth’s Loves Victorie (based on the Huntington manuscript), edited by Marta Straznicky, and Jane Cavendish and Elizabeth Brackley’s A Pastorall and The concealed Fansyes, edited by Sara Mueller.

  4. In her book Cavalier – The Story of a 17th century Playboy – Dr Lucy Worsley describes the three Cavendish sisters as ‘truly extraordinary seventeenth century women.’ Jane, Elizabeth and Frances Cavendish were the daughters of William Cavendish 1st Duke of Newcastle and Elizabeth Bassett. The sisters grew up at Welbeck Abbey, a former monastery in Nottinghamshire; a home […]

  5. Jane Cavendish. Huntington Library, San Marino, CA. MS EL 8048. Letter from Elizabeth Cavendish Egerton to Jane Cheyne. MS EL 8353. Poem, "On the death of my Dear Sister,” by Jane Cavendish Cheyne, 1663. MS EL 11143. Account book of Lady Jane Cheyne. University of Nottingham, Nottingham. MS Portland PwV 19. Thomas Lawrence's elegy for Jane ...

  6. ABSTRACT. Cavendish certainly played a powerful role in the women's lives, and The Concealed Fancies is both dedicated to him and ends with a speech which calls for his approval of their play: No records exist of an actual performance of the play, and, although it was so clearly written with William Cavendish in mind, a staging before his new ...

  7. Jane CavendIsh and elIzabeth braCkley 201 PB loss at Marston Moor in 1644. We also know that Cavendish and Brackley lived together at their family estates, Welbeck Abbey and Bolsolver Castle, until the mid-1640s, when Brackley went to live with her husband. 6 All of these factors suggest, but do not prove,