Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hace 4 días · Caroline Lamb’s mother, Henrietta Ponsonby, Countess of Bessborough, also had numerous lovers including the playwright, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, and Lord Granville Leveson-Gower. Ponsonby had two children with Leveson-Gower and manged to conceal her pregnancies from her husband.

  2. 8 de may. de 2024 · In 1794 he met in Naples the unhappily married Henrietta Ponsonby, Countess of Bessborough, daughter of John, 1st Earl Spencer, and sister of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire. Lady Bessborough would later say that she “loved him to idolatry for seventeen years,” and she had four children by him.

  3. 22 de may. de 2024 · NEWTON-REGNY, or REGNEY, in Leath ward, lies three miles from Penrith. It is divided into the townships of Newton-Regny and Catterlen, containing together in 1811, 44 houses, and 219 inhabitants. The manor of Newton belonged in the reign of Henry II. to the family of de Regny, whose descendant in the reign of Edward I. left four daughters coheirs.

  4. 21 de may. de 2024 · 1789 PONSONBY, VERE BRABAZON, Earl of Bessborough (ed.). Lady Bessborough and her family circle. Murray, 1940. xx, 307pp. [Contains extracts from the social diary of HENRIETTA FRANCES, COUNTESS OF BESSBOROUGH, March–April 1789.] 89. 1790 MORRIS, GOUVERNEUR. A diary of the French Revolution, ed. B C Davenport.

  5. 23 de may. de 2024 · He had recorded affairs with Frances Crewe, Lady Crewe (he dedicated his 1777 play The School for Scandal to her), and a disastrous affair with Harriet Spencer, Henrietta Ponsonby, Countess of Bessborough, beginning in 1789.

  6. 21 de may. de 2024 · Part One: Jane Austen. 0:00—Free indirect discourse and character. 5:15—Implied author. 6:33—Publication and reception. 11:36Henrietta (“Harriet”) Ponsonby, Countess of Bessborough. 15:42: Reception continued. 22:00—The marriage plot. 26:55—Interlude.

  7. Hace 5 días · The bedchamber-woman poured the water out of the ewer upon the queen's hands. The bedchamber-woman pulled on the queen's gloves, when she could not do it herself. The page of the back-stairs was called in to put on the queen's shoes. When the queen dined in public, the page reached the glass to the bedchamber-woman, and she to the lady in waiting.