Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Henrietta Howard, Countess of Suffolk, c. 1724, by Charles Jervas. Henrietta Howard (born Henrietta Hobart; 1689 – 26 July 1767) was a British courtier. She is known as the mistress of King George II of Great Britain. She was the sister of John Hobart, 1st Earl of Buckinghamshire.

  2. Henrietta Howard, Countess of Suffolk (c.1669 – 10 August 1715), formerly Lady Henrietta Somerset, was the second wife of Henry Howard, 6th Earl of Suffolk. Lady Henrietta Somerset was the daughter of Henry Somerset, 1st Duke of Beaufort , and his wife, the former Mary Capell .

  3. In 1731, following her brother-in-law’s death, Henrietta became Countess of Suffolk, and to reflect her new rank she was elevated from the position of woman of the bedchamber to mistress of the robes to Queen Caroline.

  4. Henrietta Howard, Countess of Suffolk. Henrietta was the daughter of the irascible Sir Henry Hobart of Blickling Hall in Norfolk and Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Joseph Maynard, an eminent judge. Her father was killed in a duel in 1698 and her mother died in 1701 at Gunnersbury House in Middlesex.

  5. Henrietta Howard, condesa de Suffolk (c.1669 - 10 de agosto de 1715), anteriormente Lady Henrietta Somerset, fue la segunda esposa de Henry Howard, sexto conde de Suffolk. Lady Henrietta Somerset era hija de Henry Somerset, primer duque de Beaufort, y su esposa, la ex Mary Capell.

  6. Howard, Henrietta (1688–1767) English patron and mistress of King George II. Name variations: Countess of Suffolk; Lady Suffolk; Henrietta Hobart. Born Henrietta Hobart in Norfolk, England, in 1688 (some sources cite 1681); died on July 26, 1767, in Marble Hill, Twickenham, Middlesex; daughter of Sir John Hobart and Elizabeth Maynard (d. 1701);

  7. The Mistress of Marble Hill. Henrietta Howard, Countess of Suffolk. Born 11th May 1689, died 26th July 1767. ‘There is a greater court now at Marble Hill than at Kensington’, wrote Alexander Pope to a friend in August 1735, ‘and God knows when it will end.’. Pope was one of many celebrated poets and artists who flocked to the Thames ...