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  1. Earl of Southampton was a title that was created three times in the Peerage of England . Its first creation came in 1537 in favour of the courtier William FitzWilliam. He was childless and the title became extinct on his death in 1542. Its second creation came in 1547 in favour of the politician Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Baron Wriothesley, Lord ...

  2. Viele der Elegien von Southampton und die Memoirs of Henry Wriothesley, the third Earl of Southampton sind in James Boswells Shakespeare abgedruckt. Peter Alvor vertrat 1906 in Das neue Shakespeare Evangelium [5] die Theorie, dass die Werke von Shakespeare eigentlich von Wriothesley und Roger Manners, Earl of Rutland stammen und sie den Namen Shakespeare benutzten, um nicht bei der Königin ...

  3. Henry Wriothesley, born 24 April 1545, was the only surviving son of Thomas Wriothesley, 1st Earl of Southampton, and Jane Cheney (d. 15 September 1574), the daughter and heiress of William Cheney of Chesham Bois, Buckinghamshire, by Emma Walwyn, daughter of Thomas Walwyn. [3] At his christening on 24 April 1545 at St Andrew's, Holborn, he was ...

  4. 18 de may. de 2018 · Southampton, Henry Wriothesley, 3rd earl of (1573–1624). Wriothesley's father, a catholic, was imprisoned in the Tower 1571–3 under suspicion of encouraging Norfolk's proposed marriage to Mary, queen of Scots. Wriothesley succeeded to the earldom at the age of 7 and grew up as a follower and companion of Essex, whose cousin he married.

  5. Collection. Highlights. Detail. Henry Wriothesley, third earl of Southampton, 1594. A hand or an eye By Hilliard drawn is worth an history. By a worse painter made... John Donne, The Storm, 1597. As John Donne's admiring lines imply, Nicholas Hilliard was the dominant figure in British painting during the latter part of the sixteenth century.

  6. Earl of Southampton, Shakespeare’s patron. In 1593, when he was 20, he received a copy of a book from the famous actor and popular playwright, William Shakespeare. It was a poem, Venus and Adonis. The poet had written the dedication in his own hand: Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, and Baron of Titchfield. Right Honorable,

  7. Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton. (1573-1624), Patron of Shakespeare. Sitter associated with 10 portraits. A favourite of Elizabeth I, Southampton had become earl two days before his eighth birthday. A lover of literature, he is the only known patron of Shakespeare, and in 1593 Shakespeare dedicated the witty and erotic poem Venus and ...