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  1. Elizabeth Clinton, Countess of Lincoln ( née Knyvet; c. 1570–1638) was an English noblewoman and writer. She was Countess of Lincoln from 1616 until the death of her husband Thomas Clinton, 3rd Earl of Lincoln, in 1619, then Dowager Countess.

  2. 8 de mar. de 2022 · Elizabeth Clinton (née Knevitt, also Knyvett), Countess of Lincoln (c. 1574–c. 1630), was the first woman to publish a tract advocating maternal breastfeeding. The Countesse of Lincolnes Nurserie (1622) was dedicated to Clinton’s daughter-in-law,...

    • m.bassnett@uwo.ca
  3. Elizabeth FitzGerald, Countess of Lincoln (1527 – March 1590), also known as "The Fair Geraldine", was an Irish noblewoman and a member of the celebrated FitzGerald dynasty. She became the second wife of Sir Anthony Browne and later the third wife of English admiral Edward Clinton, 1st Earl of Lincoln .

  4. late example . . . her self: Clinton refers here to Lady Bridget, Countess of Lincoln, to whom she dedicated her treatise. In a dedicatory epistle, Clinton praises the Countess for breastfeeding her own children despite the many excuses that were available to her.

  5. Titled: Elizabeth Clinton, Countess of Lincoln Used Form: Elizabeth, Lady Lincoln ECCL published her sole text in the earlier seventeenth century: an unusual advice-manual which handles in very personal terms the topic of a woman's religious and maternal duty to breast-feed her own children, even if she is a member of the upper classes.

  6. Elizabeth Clinton (née Knevitt, also Knyvett), CountessofLincoln(c.1574–c.1630),wasthe first woman to publish a tract advocating maternal breastfeeding. The Countesse of Lincolnes Nurserie (1622) was dedicated to Clinton’s daughter-in-law, Bridget Fiennes Clinton, who had chosen to nurse her own children rather than employing a wet nurse, as

  7. The Countess of Lincoln's Nurserie. By Elizabeth Clinton, Countess of Lincoln, 1574?-1630?. Oxford: John Lichfield And James Short, 1622.