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  1. Lady Elizabeth Berkeley ( née Carey; later Chamberlain; 24 May 1576 – 23 April 1635), was an English courtier and patron of the arts. Life. Elizabeth Carey was the only child of George Carey, 2nd Baron Hunsdon, and Elizabeth Spencer. Queen Elizabeth I was one of her godmothers. [1] .

  2. Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland ( née Tanfield; 1585–1639) was an English poet, dramatist, translator, and historian. She is the first woman known to have written and published an original play in English: The Tragedy of Mariam. From an early age, she was recognized by her contemporaries as an accomplished scholar. Biography. Early life.

  3. Elizabeth, Viscountess Mordaunt ( née Carey, 1632/3 – 1679) was an English royalist conspirator and diarist. She is credited with contriving the acquittal of her husband, the zealous but unsuccessful conspirator John Mordaunt, for treason in 1658, and she acted as an intelligencer for the royalist network in 1659.

  4. 2021年3月18日 · Elizabeth Cary, also known as Viscountess Falkland (1585–1639), was an English poet, dramatist, and scholar. Thought to be the first woman to have written and published a play in English ( The Tragedy of Mariam , detailed below), she was acknowledged as an accomplished scholar in her lifetime.

  5. 2015年6月29日 · Introduction. Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland, was born in 1585 or 1586 to Elizabeth (née Symondes) and Lawrence Tanfield in Burford close to Woodstock, where the Lady Tanfield’s relations were prominent, notably Queen Elizabeth’s Champion, Sir Henry Lee.

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  7. Anne Brontë (1820-1849) By Kerin G. Rose. Born in 1584 or 1585, Elizabeth Cary became the first woman dramatist to be published in England, when her play The Tragedy of Mariam appeared in 1613. During the years of her childhood, she read voraciously, bribing servants to supply her with candles for night-time study.

  8. 2023年1月14日 · Introduction. Elizabeth Cary, Lady Falkland (1585/1586–1639), is the closest thing we have to a female Shakespeare. Acknowledged in her own time as a dramatist, historian, translator, and patroness, she is recognized today as the first Renaissance Englishwoman to author an original drama.