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  1. Duchess of Guelders (lived 1417 to 1479) Katharina Catherine van Gelre (Kleve) aka von Kleve, Of Cleves (25 May 1417 - 10 Feb 1479)

  2. Master of Catherine of Cleves ( 1435– 1460) in The Oxford Companion to Western Art Length: 164 words. (active c. 1435–c. 1460).Northern Netherlandish manuscript illuminator named after an extensively illuminated book of hours which includes the portrait and coat-of-arms of Catherine of Cleves, Duchess of Gelders (New ...

  3. When Katharina von Kleve was born on 25 May 1417, in Cleve, Cleves, her father, Adolf I. Herzog von Kleve, was 43 and her mother, Marie de Bourgogne, was 24. She married Arnold van Egmont on 26 January 1430, in Kleve, Rhineland, Prussia, Germany. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 3 daughters. She died on 10 February 1479, in Lobith ...

  4. The reason we can consider Anne of Cleeves more of a survivor than Catherine Parr, is down to what happened after the death of Henry VIII. When Henry died in 1547, his widow Catherine Parr was free to remarry. Six months after the death of Henry, Catherine married Sir Thomas Seymour, brother of the deceased queen, Jane Seymour.

  5. 19 de mar. de 2024 · For the first time in nearly 400 years, the public can see Anne of Cleves as Henry VIII first saw her: resplendent in red velvet against a brilliant blue backdrop, her hazel eyes framed by a sheer ...

  6. 10 de ene. de 2024 · Amid this debate, Catherine of Cleves clearly loved her art. Her book of hours is profusely and beautifully illuminated – with 157 illuminations. The illustrations are attributed to the Master of Catherine of Cleves. We don’t have a name but the work was probably carried out by a workshop.

  7. Catherine of Cleves (1417–1476) is renowned for two significant aspects of her life: her Book of Hours and her prolonged legal dispute with her husband. In 1430, she entered into marriage with Arnold of Egmond (1410–1473), thus assuming the title of duchess of Guelders.