Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 20 de may. de 2024 · Twelve years earlier in this same church, Samuel Pepys looked upon one particular maiden - an attractive “portionless” girl named Elizabeth - as they were married in 1655. Only 15 at the time, Elizabeth emerges from Pepys’ diary over the following years as a lively, spirited wife who often gave as good as she got.

  2. Hace 5 días · He secured a place at Cambridge University through a scholarship and later gained employment as a teller in the Exchequer. In 1655, Pepys married 14-year-old Elisabeth de St Michel, the daughter of French Huguenot exiles. Pepys began his diary on January 1, 1660, during a period of great political turmoil.

  3. 22 de may. de 2024 · Samuel Pepys (born February 23, 1633, London, England—died May 26, 1703, London) was an English diarist and naval administrator, celebrated for his Diary (first published in 1825), which gives a fascinating picture of the official and upper-class life of Restoration London from Jan. 1, 1660, to May 31, 1669.

  4. Hace 3 días · Masques at a Chelsea school in 1656 or 1657 were recalled in 1663 by Elizabeth Pepys's paid companion Mary Ashwell, who still assisted with small children there. (fn. 3) Possibly it was the good school which had been within convenient distance of a house leased to William Lawrence in 1652 and 1662.

  5. Hace 4 días · May 1661 begins with Pepys again on the road, now at Portsmouth, “a very pleasant and strong place.” It’s a work trip, attending to navy business, but Sam has brought his wife Elizabeth with him and they get to see a neat ship named for Pepys’ patron, and when they take lodgings Pepys notes whenever they’re in a room that the king or the queen mother has recently slept in.

  6. Hace 3 días · Pepys no menciona muy a menudo las verduras, pero sí hace referencias pasajeras a la col, los guisantes, los espárragos, la cebolla y el pepino, y a las ensaladas en las que, aunque no lo dice, se mezclaban flores y hierbas con lechuga, rábano y pepino, aunque no tomates, que Pepys nunca menciona: eran originarios de México, pero, como se consideraban fríos para el estómago y posible ...

  7. Hace 4 días · Answer: Elizabeth Pepys (his wife) Elizabeth Pepys was only twenty-nine when she died. In the late summer of 1669, the Pepys made a trip to France, and Elizabeth caught a fever on the voyage home. She was seriously ill by the time she reached their home in Seething Lane on Oct. 20, 1669.