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  1. 21 de may. de 2024 · Anne Stanhope, Duchess of Somerset is buried in St Nicholas' chapel in Westminster Abbey and has a large monument there. This is mainly of alabaster with an effigy of the Duchess in a red ermine-lined robe wearing a coronet. At her feet is the crest of a blue triple-towered castle, from the Stanhope coat of arms.

  2. Anne Seymour, Duchess of Somerset (née Stanhope; before 1512 – 16 April 1587) was the second wife of Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset (c. 1500–1552), who held the office of Lord Protector during the first part of the reign of their nephew King Edward VI. The Duchess was briefly the most powerful woman in England.

  3. Anne Stanhope, por matrimonio Seymour (c.1497 – 16 de abril de 1587), fue la segunda esposa de Edward Seymour, quien ocupó el puesto de Lord Protector durante la primera parte del reinado de su sobrino, el rey Eduardo VI. Durante esa época, Anne fue la mujer más poderosa de Inglaterra, exigiendo incluso prioridad de paso sobre la reina ...

  4. 30 de may. de 2019 · Anne Stanhope was forty years old when she had their last child, Elizabeth. Sometime in 1538, most likely on Anne’s insistence, his boys by Katherine Fillol were excluded from Edward Seymour’s property and titles by Act of Parliament – she meant business, wanting her children to benefit from their father’s standing, not his supposed children from his first marriage.

  5. 21 de jul. de 2014 · The alabaster monuments in the parish church of St.Peter & St.Paul, Shelford, are as follows:- Tomb of Lady Anne Stanhope. died 1587, with her eight children kneeling alongside on the north side of the tomb.

  6. Anne Stanhopes suspect reputation lived on after her, opaque, reviled and tarred with accusations as a wicked woman, her central place in Tudor history erased by disputes over character flaws and expectations of gender.

  7. Anne Stanhope, por matrimonio Seymour , fue la segunda esposa de Edward Seymour, quien ocupó el puesto de Lord Protector durante la primera parte del reinado de su sobrino, el rey Eduardo VI. Durante esa época, Anne fue la mujer más poderosa de Inglaterra, exigiendo incluso prioridad de paso sobre la reina viuda Catalina Parr.