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  1. Frances Fanny Imlay (Legalmente Fanny Wollstonecraft; también conocida como Fanny Godwin) (14 de mayo de 1794 – 9 de octubre de 1816) fue la hija ilegítima de la feminista británica Mary Wollstonecraft y de Gilbert Imlay, aventurero, especulador y comerciante estadounidense.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Fanny_ImlayFanny Imlay - Wikipedia

    Frances Imlay (14 May 1794 – 9 October 1816), also known as Fanny Godwin and Frances Wollstonecraft, was the illegitimate daughter of the British feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and the American commercial speculator and diplomat Gilbert Imlay. Wollstonecraft wrote about her frequently in her later works.

  3. 28 de oct. de 2016 · These were the only entries in Mary’s daily diary of the news of the suicide of her twenty-two year old elder half-sister, Fanny Imlay Godwin. The entries are characteristic of Mary’s decidedly terse and brief references to the most wrenching of events in her life recorded in her daily accounts.

  4. 9 de oct. de 2016 · Why did Fanny Imlay kill herself? The documentary evidence offers no one simple cause. Part of the answer may have been physiological: she seems to have suffered from the same periods of depression that afflicted her mother, and which Mary also endured.

  5. Fanny Imlay. Frances Imlay, later Godwin, 1794 - 1817, was the daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft and Gilbert Imlay and half-sister to Mary Shelley. After Mary Wollstonecraft's death William Godwin adopted the three-year old whom he raised as if his own child until she was eleven. Always a troubled girl, Fanny had neither financial independence ...

  6. Frances Imlay (14 de mayo de 1794 - 9 de octubre de 1816), también conocida como Fanny Godwin y Frances Wollstonecraft, fue la hija ilegítima de la feminista británica Mary Wollstonecraft y el especulador comercial y diplomático estadounidense Gilbert Imlay.

  7. 5 de abr. de 2022 · This is Fanny Imlay, illegitimate daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft, half-sister to Mary Shelley. She lives among them all, but seems to make little impression, until suddenly, shockingly, at the age of nineteen, we read of her suicide. Mary Wollstonecraft by John Opie, circa 1797, NPG London.