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  1. Maria Branwell (15 April 1783 [1] – 15 September 1821) is best known as being the mother of British writers Emily Brontë, Anne Brontë, Charlotte Brontë and of their brother Branwell Brontë, who was a poet and painter. Maria married Patrick Brontë on 29 December 1812.

  2. Maria was the eighth of eleven children of Thomas Branwell and Anne Carne of Penzance, Cornwall, born April 15, 1783. Her father was a prosperous merchant with extensive property holdings in the town, and the family was involved in local politics as well as trade, Maria's brother Benjamin serving as the town's Mayor in 1809. The Branwells and ...

  3. In those first few years after the death of their mother, though, it was not to the adult Aunt Branwell that the younger children turned for a surrogate mother, but to their eldest sister Maria. 'Their games were founded upon what Maria read to them from the newspapers,' the family servant Sarah Garrs remembered, and, years after Maria's death, Branwell was still writing morbid poems about his ...

  4. 17 de abr. de 2017 · Maria Branwell was born in Penzance, Cornwall in 1783. Her father Thomas Branwell was a wealthy merchant and a leading figure in political and religious circles in the area. As so often in the Brontë story however, tragedy was to strike. Her mother and father died within four years of each other, along with two of her siblings.

  5. 18 de mar. de 2017 · Fue ordenado sacerdote anglicano en 1806 y se casó con Maria Branwell seis años más tarde. Una década después, ella murió, habiendo dado luz a seis hijos. Para entonces, ...

  6. Branwell Brontë fue el cuarto de seis hermanos y el único hijo varón de Patrick Brontë (1777–1861) y su esposa, Maria Branwell Brontë (1783–1821). [4] [5] Nació en Thornton, cerca de Bradford, y se mudó con su familia a Haworth cuando su padre fue nombrado pastor de la parroquia de por vida en 1820. [1]

  7. 30 de mar. de 2020 · Published by. Maria Branwell Brontë “The book that can never be written”. So Sharon Wright was told every time she proposed the idea of a biography of the Brontë sisters’ mother, Maria. The accepted view in Brontë scholarly circles has always been that Maria’s life was eclipsed by the genius of her children.