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  1. Lutyens’s mother was Margaret Theresa Gallwey, called Mary all her life. She was born in Ballincollig, Cork, in 1833; her family came from Killarney. Her father Michael was an RIC officer....

  2. Edwin Lutyens was the tenth of thirteen children born to Captain Charles Henry Augustus Lutyens, a soldier and painter, and Mary Theresa Gallwey, hailing from Killarney, Ireland. He spent his early years in Thursley, Surrey, where he grew up with a passion for architecture.

  3. Mary Theresa Gallwey: Cónyuge: Emily Lytton Lutyens (desde 1897) Hijos: Elisabeth Lutyens: Educación; Educado en: Universidad Real de Arte (Arquitectura) Información profesional; Ocupación: Urbanista, arquitecto y artista visual: Área: Arquitectura: Años activo: 1884-1944: Cargos ocupados: President of the Royal Academy of Arts (1938-1944)

  4. Lutyens was born in Kensington, London, [10] the tenth of thirteen children of Mary Theresa Gallwey (1832/33–1906) from Killarney, Ireland, and Captain Charles Augustus Henry Lutyens (1829–1915), a soldier and painter. [11] [12] His sister, Mary Constance Elphinstone Lutyens (1868–1951), wrote novels under her married name of Mrs George Wemyss.

  5. Mary Teresa (Gallwey) Lutyens (abt.1833-1906) | WikiTree FREE Family Tree. Is this your ancestor? Explore genealogy for Mary (Gallwey) Lutyens born abt. 1833 Ballincollig, Co Cork, Ireland died 1906 Thursley, Surrey, England including ancestors + descendants + more in the free family tree community. login.

    • Female
    • March 1, 1833
    • Charles Henry Augustus Lutyens
    • September 17, 1906
  6. Born on March 29, 1869, into a Victorian family of London, Edwin Landseer Lutyens was the 10th of the 13 children (and the ninth son) of Mary Theresa Gallwey and Captain Charles Henry Augustus Lutyens. His father was a soldier and painter. Lutyens was also known by his nickname, “Ned.”.

  7. 21 de abr. de 2019 · Lutyens was born in 1869, the 10th of 13 surviving children of the soldier and painter Capt Charles Lutyens and his Irish wife, Mary Theresa née Gallwey. He was not a healthy child and it was this, he later maintained, ‘that afforded me time to think: and… to teach myself, for my enjoyment, to use my eyes instead of my feet’.