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  1. www.wikiwand.com › en › Lady_ByronLady Byron - Wikiwand

    Anne Isabella Noel Byron, 11th Baroness Wentworth and Baroness Byron, nicknamed Annabella and commonly known as Lady Byron, was an educational reformer and philanthropist who established the first industrial school in England, and was an active abolitionist. She married the poet George Gordon Byron, more commonly known as Lord Byron, and separated from him after less than a year, keeping their ...

  2. Lady Byron and Her Daughters places Annabella at the center of a group of women whose lives were shaped in profound ways by Byron, a group that encompasses his half sister and mistress, Augusta; his illegitimate daughter Medora; and Annabella’s own daughter, Ada Lovelace, an extraordinary pioneer of computer programming.

  3. George Hayter: Annabella, Lady Byron, Öl auf Leinwand, um 1812 Anne Isabella Noel Byron, 11. Baroness Wentworth, besser bekannt als Lady Byron (* 17. Mai 1792 in Seaham in der Grafschaft Durham; † 16.

  4. La très honorable. à partir du 2 janvier 1815. Blason. Anne Isabella Milbanke Noel Byron, 11e baronne Wentworth et baronne Byron, née à Londres le 17 mai 1792 et morte le 16 mai 1860 est l'épouse du poète Byron sous le nom d'« Annabella » et la mère de la scientifique Ada Lovelace qui collabora avec le mathématicien Charles Babbage .

  5. Anne Isabella Milbanke Noel Byron, 11 e baronne Wentworth et baronne Byron, née à Londres le 17 mai 1792 et morte le 16 mai 1860 est l'épouse du poète Byron sous le nom d'« Annabella » et la mère de la scientifique Ada Lovelace qui rédigea la première boucle de code jamais écrite lorsqu'elle travailla sur les machines du mathématicien Charles Babbage.

  6. Anne Isabella Noel Byron, 11th Baroness Wentworth and Baroness Byron (née Milbanke; 17 May 1792 – 16 May 1860), nicknamed Annabella and commonly known as Lady Byron, was wife of poet George Gordon Byron, more commonly known as Lord Byron. Their daughter Ada worked as a mathematician with Charles Babbage, the pioneer of computer science. Lady Byron had felt that an education in mathematics ...

  7. It has been written of Anne Isabella, Lady Noel-Byron (1792–1860) that she “managed to quarrel with practically everyone for whom she undertook any philanthropy and certainly does not emerge from any examination of her good works without the conclusion being drawn that her unrecognized motive was to dominate.”1 That may be so.