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  1. Judith Blunt-Lytton, 16th Baroness Wentworth. Judith Anne Dorothea Blunt-Lytton, 16th Baroness Wentworth, (6 February 1873 – 8 August 1957) also known as Lady Wentworth, was a British peer, Arabian horse breeder and real tennis player.

  2. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Judith Anne Dorothea Blunt-Lytton, 16th Baroness Wentworth also known as Lady Wentworth (6 February 1873 – 8 August 1957) was a British peer, Arabian horse breeder and real tennis player.

  3. Judith Anne Dorothea Blunt-Lytton, 16th Baroness Wentworth, also known as Lady Wentworth (6 February 1873 – 8 August 1957) was the great-granddaughter of the poet Lord Byron and the granddaughter of mathematician Ada Lovelace. She (Lady Wentworth) inherited the baronetcy from her estranged mother in 1917 and is perhaps best known as a breeder ...

  4. Her many pregnancies produced a single surviving child, Judith Blunt-Lytton, 16th Baroness Wentworth. Anne never ceased to grieve over her miscarriages and the babies who died soon after birth. Although a fond father to Judith when she was a child, Blunt made no secret that he would have preferred a son. [citation needed]

  5. Judith Anne Dorothea Blunt-Lytton, 16th Baroness Wentworth, also known as Lady Wentworth, was a British peer, Arabian horse breeder and real tennis player. As the owner of the Crabbet Arabian Stud from 1917 to 1957, her influence on Arabian horse breeding was profound, with over 90 per cent of all Arabian horses in the world today carrying ...

  6. Upon the death of her mother in 1917 she became Baroness Wentworth. An Arabian horse breeder, she was the owner of Crabbet Arabian Stud from 1917 to 1957. Over 90 percent of arabian horses today carry Crabbet bloodstock in their pedigrees. Judith married Neville Lytton in Cairo on February 2nd, 1899. They had three children, Nowel, Anne and ...

  7. 15 de oct. de 2016 · Photograph of Judith Blunt-Lytton, 16th Baroness Wentworth, Lady Anne’s daughter. The couple traveled across Europe and the Middle East. They bought Arabian horses from Bedouin tribes and the Egyptian Ali Pasha Sherif, who was also a renowned horse breeder himself.