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  1. Charlotte Canning, Countess Canning (née Stuart; 31 March 1817 – 18 November 1861) was a British aristocrat, artist and the first Vicereine of India. She was one of India's most prolific women artists – two portfolios in the Victoria and Albert Museum contain some 350 watercolours by her, the result of four major tours in the ...

    • 31 March 1817, Paris, France
  2. Charlotte Canning, Countess Canning was a British aristocrat, artist and the first Vicereine of India. She was one of India's most prolific women artists – two portfolios in the Victoria and Albert Museum contain some 350 watercolours by her, the result of four major tours in the country.

  3. by Scott Mehl © Unofficial Royalty 2018. Charlotte Canning, Countess Canning; Credit – Wikipedia. Charlotte Canning, Countess Canning was a Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Victoria from 1842 until 1855. Ladies of the Bedchamber were always wives of peers.

  4. Charlotte Canning (née Stuart), Countess Canning. (1817-1861), Wife of 1st Earl Canning. Sitter in 3 portraits. Born in Paris, the daughter of the British ambassador and was Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Victoria for thirteen years. When her husband Lord Canning was appointed Governor-General of India she went with him to Calcutta where she ...

  5. In 1859 Charles Canning was raised in the peerage as Earl Canning and Charlotte became Countess Canning. Charlotte painted continually throughout her extensive travels across India. She embarked upon many personal treks into the Himalayas where she recorded flora and fauna, spectacular mountain scenery and jungle views.

  6. 23 de abr. de 2013 · Read this article. This essay explores the themes of memory and memorial by scrutinizing the afterlives of two objects made in memory of Charlotte, Lady Canning (1817–61). The first is an inlaid marble tomb monument by George Gilbert Scott and John Birnie Philip, which today stands outside St John's Church, Kolkata.

  7. 17 de dic. de 2019 · Back in 2018, I wrote a blog about the Indian diaries of Charlotte, Lady Canning, and how they and other of her papers had been damaged by a tent fire in December 1859. Lady Canning, her husband the Governor General Charles Canning, and their entourage, were travelling through Oudh (Awadh) and the Punjab in a grand progress.