Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 21 de jul. de 2022 · Abstract. Elizabeth and Dorothy Cromwell occupied unprecedented—and unpreceded—positions in the Anglo-Scottish hierarchy: they were leading women in a state that had temporarily thrown off its monarchy. Married to the heads of the experimental protectorate that presided over Britain for a decade, their roles were neither governmental nor ...

  2. Elizabeth Cromwell (née Steward) (died 1654), Mother of Oliver Cromwell. Sitter associated with 6 portraits Elizabeth Cromwell was born Elizabeth Steward. She was the daughter of William Stewart, who had inherited from his uncle, the Prior of Ely, leases of abbey lands in the early days of the Reformation.

  3. This is the home page's excerpt. Jane Austen's World. This Jane Austen blog brings Jane Austen, her novels, and the Regency Period alive through food, dress, social customs, and other 19th C. historical details related to this topic.

  4. 20 de nov. de 2018 · The essay shows how two royalist recipe books — The Queens Closet Opened (1655) and The Court & Kitchin of Elizabeth (1664) — fashioned Henrietta Maria (1609–69) and Elizabeth Cromwell (1598–1665) as very different housewives to the English nation.

  5. 10 de ene. de 2001 · Staged as a dialogue “between the ghost of this grand traytor and tyrant Oliver Cromwell, and sir reverence my Lady Joan his wife” (1), Andrews situates Elizabeth as a prophetic intermediary between Cromwell’s ghost — who, Samson-like, has now “become house-keeper in Hell” (16) — and Richard and Henry, Elizabeth’s sons. Cromwell ...

  6. Cromwell Mi-ing “Nalagsalagsak ak ken nakasa-kasat ak ty in mali siya ka fiyag ko ay si pupuso ay manglayad kn mang-asawa ken saken ya siya angkay akes nan fafai sina lufong ay lychek makadwa ken ma-asawa ay entak annachan, isalakan, respituwen, ya laylaychen is engengkana.”