Frances Manners, Baroness Bergavenny
Frances Neville, Baroness Bergavenny (also Nevill (née Manners; c. 1530—c. September 1576) was an English noblewoman and author. Little is known of either Lady or Lord Bergavenny, except that the latter was accused of behaving in a riotous and unclean manner by some Puritan commentators. Lady Bergavenny's work appeared in The Monument of Matrones in 1582 and was a series of "Praiers". Her devotions were sixty-seven prose prayers, one metrical prayer against vice, a long acrostic prayer on her daughter's name, and an acrostic prayer containing her own name.
Wikipage disambiguates
Wikipage redirect
primaryTopic
Frances Manners, Baroness Bergavenny
Frances Neville, Baroness Bergavenny (also Nevill (née Manners; c. 1530—c. September 1576) was an English noblewoman and author. Little is known of either Lady or Lord Bergavenny, except that the latter was accused of behaving in a riotous and unclean manner by some Puritan commentators. Lady Bergavenny's work appeared in The Monument of Matrones in 1582 and was a series of "Praiers". Her devotions were sixty-seven prose prayers, one metrical prayer against vice, a long acrostic prayer on her daughter's name, and an acrostic prayer containing her own name.
has abstract
Frances Neville, Baroness Berg ...... rayer containing her own name.
@en
birth name
Frances Manners
@en
citizenship
nationality
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
11,343,743
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,025,973,560
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
birth date
before 1540
@en
birth name
Frances Manners
@en
citizenship
name
Frances Neville
@en
nationality
relatives
Eleanor Paston, Countess of Rutland
@en
Thomas Manners, 1st Earl of Rutland
@en
spouse
Henry Nevill, 6th Baron Bergavenny
@en
wikiPageUsesTemplate
subject
hypernym
comment
Frances Neville, Baroness Berg ...... rayer containing her own name.
@en
label
Frances Manners, Baroness Bergavenny
@en
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
Frances Neville
@en