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  1. 19 de may. de 2022 · Portrait of Moll Davis (1640–1708), by Peter Lely. Summary [ edit ] Peter Lely : Mrs Moll Davis (1640–c.1721), Actress and Mistress of Charles II ( )

  2. Mrs Moll Davis (1640–c.1721), Actress and Mistress of Charles II Lely, Peter, 1618–1680 Weston Park Photo credit: Trustees of ...

  3. 17 de jun. de 2016 · This week we’re learning about Moll Davis. Moll Davis. Mary “Moll” Davis: 1648 (England) – 1708 (England) Famous diarist, Samuel Pepys said of Moll that she was “a bastard of Collonell Howard, my Lord Barkeshire.”. In the 1660’s Moll was an actress in the Duke’s Theatre Company as was called “the most impertinent slut in the ...

  4. Charles was already enamoured with Moll Davis, a fellow actress but, on Nell’s return to London at the end of 1667, Buckingham saw an opportunity to dangle another mistress under the king’s nose. Negotiations began: Nell suggested that she would need £500 per year to be kept as the king’s mistress, but this was rejected as too expensive - and so, as quickly as they began, the ...

  5. czwiki.cz › Lexikon › Moll_DavisCzWiki > Moll Davis

    Mary 'Moll' Davis byla populární tanečnice, zpěvačka a herečka. Roku 1667, po divadelním představení, se seznámila s Karlem II. Z jejich vztahu se narodila dcera, Lady Mary Tudor (1673–1726). Její rivalkou v králově přízni byla Nell Gwyn (1650–1687), která nakonec docílila toho, že Karel vztah s Moll ukončil. [zdroj?

  6. 1 de abr. de 2017 · Iron, vitamin B 12 and folate are required for essential metabolic functions. Deficiency states of these nutrients, either singly or in combination, are common clinical conditions. Clinically, they present with not only disordered haematopoiesis, but also widespread effects in other organs that can precede the appearance of haematological ...

  7. Mary "Moll" Davis (ca. 1648 - 1708) was a seventeenth-century entertainer and courtesan, singer and actress who became one of the many mistresses of King Charles II of England. Davis was born around 1648 in Westminster and was said by Samuel Pepys, the famous diarist, to be "a bastard of Collonell Howard, my Lord Barkeshire" - probably meaning Thomas Howard, third Earl of Berkshire.[1] During ...

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