Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 24 de may. de 2018 · Sotheby’s are delighted to be offering two works by Churchill which were gifted on his death to his granddaughter Arabella Churchill and until this sale have been on public view at Chartwell in Churchill’s old studio. SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL, AN OPEN STAIRCASE, LA CAPPONCINA, CAP D’AIL, CIRCA 1940S. ESTIMATE £80,000–120,000.

  2. 4 de may. de 2024 · Arabella Churchill. Admiral Churchill's sister Arabella was buried in the Abbey on 10th May 1730 but has no memorial or gravestone. She was a maid of honour to Anne Hyde, Duchess of York and became the mistress of James, Duke of York (who was later King James II). By him she had several children.

  3. When Arabella Churchill was born on 23 February 1648, in Musbury, Devon, England, United Kingdom, her father, Sir Winston Churchill 'Cavalier Colonel' Earl of Marlborough, was 27 and her mother, Elizabeth Drake of Brantfield, was 26. She married Charles Godfrey on 1 June 1680, in Minories, London, England, United Kingdom.

  4. 16 de ago. de 2021 · Born in Musbury, Devonshire, on 23 February 1648, Arabella was the eldest of Sir Winston Churchill and Elizabeth Drake’s children. (Yes, he is an ancestor of the larger-than-life twentieth ...

  5. Randolph Churchill mit seiner Tochter Arabella (rechts), Jacqueline Kennedy sowie deren Sohn John F. Kennedy Jr. in New York (1966) Arabella Spencer-Churchill (genannt Arabella Churchill oder Bella; * 30. Oktober 1949 in Westminster; † 20. Dezember 2007 in Glastonbury) war eine Mitbegründerin des Glastonbury Festivals .

  6. Arabella Churchill. Porträt von Arabella Churchill von Mary Beale. Arabella mit ihrem Bruder Winston, Porträt von Peter Lely. Arabella Churchill (* 23. Februar 1648; † 30. Mai 1730 in London) war eine Mätresse des englischen Königs Jakob II. und Mutter vierer seiner Kinder.

  7. 9 de jul. de 2008 · A profile of Arabella Churchill, the granddaughter of Sir Winston who at the age of 21, with Michael Eavis and Andrew Kerr, was the organiser of a radical music gathering in the English countryside.