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  1. Elisabeth Pepys (née de St Michel; 23 October 1640 – 10 November 1669) was the wife of Samuel Pepys, whom she married in 1655, shortly before her fifteenth birthday. Her father, Alexandre Marchant de St Michel, was born a French Roman Catholic but later converted to the Church of England.

  2. Biographies and Portraits. Elizabeth Pepys, as beautifully depicted by artist James Thomson, after John Hayls here, as “immortalized” at St. Olave’s here and eulogized here, was the wife of Samuel Pepys. She was the daughter of Alexandre and Dorothea St. Michel, and a sister to Balty. Elizabeth was born 23 October 1640 at or around Bideford.

  3. John Pepys Margaret Kite: Cónyuge: Elizabeth Pepys (desde 1655) Educación; Educado en: Magdalene College; St. Paul's School; Información profesional; Ocupación: Político, escritor, diarista, juez de paz y juez: Área: Navy Board, política, escritor, diario personal y administración de la justicia: Cargos ocupados: Member of the 1679 ...

  4. El carácter de Pepys resulta increíblemente moderno. Su tribulación moral y práctica cuando Elizabeth le descubre con la joven Deb es conmovedora: se debate entre la piedad hacia las dos mujeres y la piedad hacia su propia naturaleza de hombre sensual que precisa y exige la belleza, igual que un marido infiel de nuestros días.

    • José Luis de Juan
  5. Pepyss diary is an important source for our understanding of the development of the English language, and is cited over 1700 times in the Oxford English Dictionary. Intimate descriptions of Elizabeth Pepyss ‘terms’, or periods, are recorded several times in the diary.

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  6. 2 de dic. de 1996 · Elizabeth Pepys has remained a shadowy figure since the celebrated 17th- century diary of her husband Samuel was published. Now, 327 years after Mrs Pepys's death, the public will at last be...

  7. Elizabeth Pepys, wife of Samuel —Chronicle / Alamy Stock Photo In an incident that is difficult to interpret as anything but rape, Pepys recounts entering the home of a ship’s carpenter—a man very much under his control, since Pepys was a naval official—and noting that, after a struggle, “finally I had my will of her.”