Kdo si vzal Lady Anne Clifford, 14th Baroness de Clifford?
Richard Sackville, 3rd Earl of Dorset ženatý Lady Anne Clifford, 14th Baroness de Clifford dne . Anne Clifford bylo v den svatby 19 let (19 roky, 0 měsíců a 28 dny). Richard Sackville, 3rd Earl of Dorset bylo v den svatby 19 let (19 roky, 10 měsíců a 30 dny). Věkový rozdíl byl 0 roky, 10 měsíců a 2 dny.
Manželství skončilo v roce .
Philip Herbert, 4. hrabě z Pembroke ženatý Lady Anne Clifford, 14th Baroness de Clifford dne . Anne Clifford Herbert Pembroke bylo v den svatby 40 let (40 roky, 4 měsíců a 4 dny). Philip Herbert, 4. hrabě z Pembroke bylo v den svatby 45 let (45 roky, 7 měsíců a 24 dny). Věkový rozdíl byl 5 roky, 3 měsíců a 20 dny.
Lady Anne Clifford, 14th Baroness de Clifford
Lady Anne Clifford, Countess of Dorset, Pembroke and Montgomery, suo jure 14th Baroness de Clifford (30 January 1590 – 22 March 1676) was an English peeress. In 1605 she inherited her father's ancient barony by writ and became suo jure 14th Baroness de Clifford. She was a patron of literature and as evidenced by her diary and many letters was a literary personage in her own right. She held the hereditary office of High Sheriff of Westmorland which role she exercised from 1653 to 1676.
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Richard Sackville, 3rd Earl of Dorset
Richard Sackville, 3rd Earl of Dorset (18 March 1589 – 28 March 1624) was the eldest surviving son of Robert Sackville, 2nd Earl of Dorset, by his first wife, Lady Margaret Howard, daughter of Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk and Margaret Audley.
Born at Charterhouse, London, Sackville was styled Lord Buckhurst from 1608 until 1609, when he succeeded his father as Earl of Dorset and inherited the family home of Knole House.
During the years 1612–24 Sackville served as a Lord Lieutenant of Sussex.
He married Lady Anne Clifford, daughter of George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland and Margaret, daughter of Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford on 27 February 1609, but their marriage was not a success; partisans of the Earl blame Lady Anne's headstrong personality, while partisans of the Countess blame the Earl's repeated infidelities, his extravagance and indebtedness – "one of the seventeenth century’s most accomplished gamblers and wastrels".
A rumour noted later by the antiquary John Aubrey had it that one of Richard Sackville's "concubines" was Venetia Stanley. She was said to have had children by him and he settled upon her an annuity of £500 per annum. Among the Earl's other mistresses was Martha Penistone, the wife of Sir Thomas Penistone, one of the Earl's retinue.
At the time of their marriage, Lady Anne had been in a long-running legal contest over her inheritance rights; in 1617, the 3rd Earl signed away her claim on contested ancestral lands to James I, in return for a cash payment which the Earl used to pay off his gambling debts. A catalogue of their household at Knole between 1613 and 1624 survives. It records the names and roles of servants, and indicates where they sat for their meals. The list includes two African servants, Grace Robinson, a maid in the laundry, and John Morockoe, who worked in the kitchen. Both were described as "Blackamoors".
The 3rd Earl and Lady Anne had five children between 1612 and 1621; however, none of their three sons, born in 1616, 1618, and 1621, survived their father. Their two daughters, Isabella (born 6 October 1622, died 22 August 1661) and Margaret (born 2 July 1614, died May 1676) were longer lived. Margaret became the wife of John Tufton, 2nd Earl of Thanet.
The 3rd Earl died at Dorset House, London without a male heir on Easter Sunday of 1624 at Dorset House, London, and was succeeded by his younger brother Edward Sackville. He was buried on 7 April 1624 at St. Michael's Parish Church in Withyham, Sussex.
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Philip Herbert, 4. hrabě z Pembroke
Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke and 1st Earl of Montgomery, (10 October 1584 – 23 January 1650) was an English courtier, nobleman, and politician active during the reigns of James I and Charles I. He married Susan de Vere, the youngest daughter of Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, the Oxfordians' William Shakespeare. Philip and his older brother William were the 'incomparable pair of brethren' to whom the First Folio of Shakespeare's collected works was dedicated in 1623.
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