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  1. 15 de sept. de 2017 · Mary Sidney died in 1621, and after a sumptuous funeral at St Paul’s Cathedral, was taken by torchlit procession to be interred at Salisbury Cathedral. Her descendants are still earls of Pembroke and Montgomery. Mary Sidney was one of the most significant female figures of the Tudor world, not least because of her tireless patronage to poets ...

  2. Mary Sidney thereby became, at age 15, Countess of Pembroke and mistress of Wilton, the primary Pembroke estate, as well as Baynards Castle in London and many smaller properties. They had four children in rapid succession: William (1580), later third Earl of Pembroke; Katherine (1581); Anne (1583); and Philip (1584), later Earl of Montgomery ...

  3. Mary Sidney (October 27, 1561–September 25, 1621) was born at Ticknall Place, Bewdley, Worcestershire in England, daughter of Sir Henry Sidney, thrice Lord Deputy of Ireland and sister of the poets Sir Philip Sidney and Sir Robert Sidney. She was educated at home in French, Italian, Latin and Greek, and music.

  4. Below is a list of Mary’s Sidney’s known work. A Discourse of Life and Death, translated from the French original of Philippe de Mornay. Published as A Discourse of Life and Death, Written in French by Philip Mornay; Antonius: A Tragedie Written Also in French by Robert Garnier. Both done in English by the Countesse of Pembroke.

  5. 26 de abr. de 2021 · The extraordinary Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke (1561 – 1621), was an almost exact contemporary of Shakespeare and has been one of the candidates in various conspiracy theories for the actual author of Shakespeare’s works, in particular his sonnets. Even though this is nonsense, Mary Sidney, sister of the more famous Philip, was ...

  6. 24 de ago. de 2022 · At the time of his death, Sidney was in the midst of his most ambitious project—a complete translation of the Psalms across a multitude of poetic style, an attempt to lyrically and fully fuse the Reformation with the Renaissance. After his death, the completion of this task depended on his sister Mary Sidney—the greater of the two poets.

  7. 22 de feb. de 2018 · Poet, patron, Protestant polemicist, translator, and executor of her brother Sir Philip Sidney’s literary estate, Herbert was the fourth child of Henry Sidney and Mary Dudley. Her 1577 marriage to Henry Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, vastly improved her family’s fortunes and endowed Herbert with an influence second only to that of Queen Elizabeth.