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  1. Anna Bacon (nacida Cooke; 1527 o 1528-27 de agosto de 1610) era una dama inglesa y erudita. Tuvo una notoria contribución en la literatura religiosa inglesa con su traducción del latín de Apologie of the Anglican Church (1564) de John Jewel.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Anne_BaconAnne Bacon - Wikipedia

    Anne, Lady Bacon (née Cooke; 1527 or 1528 – 27 August 1610) was an English lady and scholar. She made a lasting contribution to English religious literature with her translation from Latin of John Jewel 's Apologie of the Anglican Church (1564).

  3. www.wikiwand.com › es › Anne_BaconAnne Bacon - Wikiwand

    Anna Bacon ( nacida Cooke; 1527 o 1528-27 de agosto de 1610) era una dama inglesa y erudita. Tuvo una notoria contribución en la literatura religiosa inglesa con su traducción del latín de Apologie of the Anglican Church (1564) de John Jewel. Fue la madre de Francis Bacon.

  4. www.brooklynmuseum.org › heritage_floor › anne_baconBrooklyn Museum: Anne Bacon

    Hace 3 días · Anne herself was a formidable proponent of radical puritanism and exhorted leading ecclesiastical figures to remove all traces of “popery” from the Church of England. She married Sir Nicholas Bacon in 1553; their son, Francis Bacon, launched a scientific revolution with his method of inductive reasoning.

  5. The letters of the learned and indomitable Lady Anne Bacon, mother of the philosopher, Francis Bacon, number nearly two hundred items of correspondence, which are scattered in repositories throughout the world.

  6. Lady Anne Bacon was mistress of Gorhambury, St Albans, from 1561 until her death in 1610. Educated, connected and astute, she lived through the upheavals and reverses of four Tudor reigns. Anne was committed to religious reform, and a published translator of key works of the English Reformation. Anne served both Mary I and Elizabeth I at court.

  7. 28 de dic. de 2022 · Anne Bacon’s biography, humanist endeavors, Protestantism, and revealing correspondence illustrate a high-ranking noblewoman’s long life near the center of power in early modern England.