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  1. Mary Somerset, duquesa de Beaufort (bautizada el 16 de diciembre de 1630 - 7 de enero de 1715) conocida por su nombre de casada de Mary Seymour, Lady Beauchamp y su nombre de nacida Mary Capell, fue una noble, jardinera y botánica inglesa.

    • Británica
    • St Michael and All Angels Church, Badminton
  2. Mary Somerset, Duchess of Beaufort (baptised 16 December 1630 – 7 January 1715) also known by her other married name of Mary Seymour, Lady Beauchamp and her maiden name Mary Capell, was an English noblewoman, gardener and botanist. Among her introductions to British gardening are Pelargonium zonale, Ageratum species and Passiflora ...

  3. 12 de mar. de 2019 · Prominent botanist and cataloger of gardens, William Sherard (1659-1728), was hired by an aristocrat to tutor her grandson in botany for “hee loving my diversion so well.” This was Mary Somerset, the first Duchess of Beaufort (1630-1715), an accomplished gardener and botanist in her own right.

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    • Mary Somerset2
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    • Mary Somerset4
    • Mary Somerset5
  4. Mary Somerset, duquesa de Beaufort (bautizada el 16 de diciembre de 1630 - 7 de enero de 1715) conocida por su nombre de casada de Mary Seymour, Lady Beauchamp y su nombre de nacida Mary Capell, fue una noble, jardinera y botánica inglesa. Mary Somerset. Información personal.

  5. 5 de mar. de 2019 · During this Women’s History Month, JSTOR Daily features female scientists who transgressed boundaries to work in the natural sciences. In 1694, Lady Mary Somerset, first Duchess of Beaufort in England, corresponded with Sir Robert Southwell, President of the Royal Society, on botanical matters. The duchess was known for keeping ...

  6. The Duchess of Botany. Under the supervision of Professor Simon Hiscock and Dr Richard Coulton (QMUL), India Cole is undertaking an AHRC-funded Collaborative Doctoral Partnership (CDP) project examining Mary Somerset, the first Duchess of Beaufort (1630-1715). Somerset pursued botany at her gardens at Beaufort House in London, and at Badminton ...

  7. Mary Somerset was one of the few female “armchair botanists” Schiebinger cites, and this essay aims to reposition Somerset as an active agent of colonial botany, not just a bystander or less significant practitioner. Rather than the work of an isolated few, colonial botany was inherently the result of networks of knowledge and practice. [2] .