Makin, Bathsua et al. Educating English Daughters. Editors Teague, Frances et al., Iter Academic Press; Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2016.
105-6
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Education | Margaret Haig Viscountess Rhondda | St Leonard's emphasized intellectual, physical, and domestic development; girls were allowed the freedom of unsupervised daily walks. At this school Margaret learned to debate the merits of Erasmus
, Martin Luther
, and Sir Thomas More |
Family and Intimate relationships | Margaret Roper | The family of Thomas More
were merchants and lawyers of London's bourgeois ruling class: Thomas duly became a lawyer and out of personal passion became a scholar of the new humanist learning. He married again... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary More | His may have had some historical link with that of the humanist Sir Thomas More
, with whose descendants he did business. He died in 1698. Makin, Bathsua et al. Educating English Daughters. Editors Teague, Frances et al., Iter Academic Press; Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2016. 105-6 |
Family and Intimate relationships | Jane Austen | JA
was descended on her mother's side from Margaret Roper
, daughter of Sir Thomas More
, a translator and letter-writer whose reputation for learning as well as for heroic virtue was still alive. Dunning, Ronald. “Family connections were always worth preserving”. JASNA News, Vol. 34 , No. 2, 1 June 2018– 2024, p. 9. Dunning, Ronald. “Family connections were always worth preserving”. JASNA News, Vol. 34 , No. 2, 1 June 2018– 2024, p. 9. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary Basset | Despite her personal achievements, Margaret Roper's fame has and to some extent still does rest primarily on her status as the eldest and favourite daughter of Thomas More
, Lord Chancellor of England under Henry VIII |
Family and Intimate relationships | John Donne | His father died when he was four, and his mother married again. He was connected by marriage with the family of Sir Thomas More
and Margaret Roper
. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Margaret Roper | MR
and her father
together watched from the Tower of London, where More was imprisoned, as five priests (one a personal friend) were tied to hurdles on which they would be dragged to the... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Margaret Roper | Sir Thomas More
, MR
's father, was beheaded (the sentence commuted from hanging because of the high office he had held), and his severed head displayed on a spike on Tower Bridge as that... |
Friends, Associates | Emilie Barrington | EB
's friendship with Frederic Leighton
was in its early stages connected with her friendship with his sister Alexandra Orr
(author of A Handbook to the Works of Robert Browning). When she ceased to... |
Instructor | Margaret Roper | Margaret More, together with her siblings and Margaret Giggs
, made up a whole School qtd. in Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford, 1990. |
Intertextuality and Influence | Josephine Tey | Although Shakespeare
's Richard III clearly plays a major role in shaping the myth of Richard's villainy against which Tey writes, she alludes to this play only in passing, when a character comments on Laurence Olivier |
Intertextuality and Influence | Anna Swanwick | The title-page explained that AS
's dream was that of the Improvement of the Condition of the Lower Classes in London. qtd. in British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo. |
Leisure and Society | Margaret Roper | In 1527 or early 1528 MR
was painted by Hans Holbein the Younger
, in a group portrait of all of Thomas More's household. From the painting Holbein made a drawing (not now extant) and... |
Literary responses | Margaret Roper | Her father
was so pleased with her epistolary skills that he showed her letters to such luminaries as Reginald Pole
(who at first would not believe that this was really her work) and John Veysey |
Literary responses | Mary Basset | The editorial paragraph in the original publication said that MB
wrote so much like her grandfather that their styles could hardly be told apart (a great compliment), and expressed the hope of having her work... |