Lady Anne Clifford, Countess Dowager 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.
On the death of her father on 30 October 1605, she succeeded suo jure to the ancient title Baroness de Clifford, a barony created by writ in 1299, but her father's earldom passed (according to the patent of its creation) as was usual, to the heir male, namely his younger brother Francis Clifford, 4th Earl of Cumberland (1559-1641), to whom he had willed his estates. He had bequeathed to Anne the sum of £15,000. In her young adulthood she engaged in a long and complex legal battle to obtain the family estates, which had been granted by King Edward II (1307-1327) under absolute cognatic primogeniture, instead of the £15,000 willed to her. Her main argument was that she was just 15 years old at the time. It was not until the death in 1643 without male progeny of Henry Clifford, the 4th Earl's only son, that Anne managed to regain the family estates, although she did not obtain possession until 1649.
Jessica Malay, Lady Anne Clifford Books and Picture - University of Huddersfield
Dr Jessica Malay, a senior lecturer at the University of Huddersfield, talks about her research on Lady Anne Clifford's Great Books of Record and her involvement in the Lady Anne Books and Picture exhibition at the Kendal's Abbot Hall Art Gallery. Full story at http://www.hud.ac.uk/staff/greatladyofthenorth.php
published: 21 May 2012
Professor Patricia Phillippy, ‘Memory and Matter: Lady Anne Clifford’s “Life of Mee”
At her Inaugural Lecture Patricia discusses how Lady Anne Clifford (1590-1676) stands at the centre of an expansive network of textual and material creations, from her Great Books of Record and autobiographical writings to her restorations of the castles and public buildings of her inheritance, to monuments commemorating family members and others.
Professor Patricia Phillippy received her PhD from Yale University in Renaissance Studies, and taught at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas for several years before moving to the United Kingdom. She joined Coventry in 2020 as a Professor of Material and Cultural Memories and Executive Director of the Centre for Arts, Memory and Communities.
published: 18 Jan 2021
LADY ANNE.... clifford
he was down bad 😔
published: 14 May 2021
Lost Library Of Anne Clifford. September 2020
Lost Library Of Anne Clifford at Skipton Castle. Explained by Professor Jessica Malay
published: 02 Oct 2020
Lady Anne Clifford's memorial St. Lawrence church in Appleby Cumbria
This video is about 'Lady Anne Clifford-a woman cast out'. A play written by Caroline Moir, directed by Chris Taylor and performed by Kendal Community Theatre. All seats were sold at the Town Hall in Kendal, Abbot Hall, Appleby and Kirkby Stephen. This film shows the cast in rehearsal and performing on Tour.
published: 09 Sep 2013
Lady Anne Clifford
Making the mould for casting of a bronze statue of Lady Anne Clifford.
published: 26 Apr 2019
Lady Anne's Way
Lady Anne's Way is a long distance trail of 100 miles from Skipton to Penrith, following in the footsteps of the remarkable Lady Anne Clifford.
In 1643 , the age of 60, Lady Anne set about the task of the restoration of her newly inherited estate and castles. Sheila Gordon’s guide (http://www.skyware.co.uk/ladyannesway.htm) retraces the journeys Lady Anne made visiting all her important castles from Skipton in Craven to Brougham in Westmorland.
The film shows the walk done over six days; at it passes through the wonders of the Yorkshire Dales with its unspoilt villages and its limestone pavements and progresses through the remote and rugged fellside of Mallerstang, to enter Cumbria and the romantic delights and hidden haunts of the Eden Valley
Dr Jessica Malay, a senior lecturer at the University of Huddersfield, talks about her research on Lady Anne Clifford's Great Books of Record and her involvemen...
Dr Jessica Malay, a senior lecturer at the University of Huddersfield, talks about her research on Lady Anne Clifford's Great Books of Record and her involvement in the Lady Anne Books and Picture exhibition at the Kendal's Abbot Hall Art Gallery. Full story at http://www.hud.ac.uk/staff/greatladyofthenorth.php
Dr Jessica Malay, a senior lecturer at the University of Huddersfield, talks about her research on Lady Anne Clifford's Great Books of Record and her involvement in the Lady Anne Books and Picture exhibition at the Kendal's Abbot Hall Art Gallery. Full story at http://www.hud.ac.uk/staff/greatladyofthenorth.php
At her Inaugural Lecture Patricia discusses how Lady Anne Clifford (1590-1676) stands at the centre of an expansive network of textual and material creations, f...
At her Inaugural Lecture Patricia discusses how Lady Anne Clifford (1590-1676) stands at the centre of an expansive network of textual and material creations, from her Great Books of Record and autobiographical writings to her restorations of the castles and public buildings of her inheritance, to monuments commemorating family members and others.
Professor Patricia Phillippy received her PhD from Yale University in Renaissance Studies, and taught at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas for several years before moving to the United Kingdom. She joined Coventry in 2020 as a Professor of Material and Cultural Memories and Executive Director of the Centre for Arts, Memory and Communities.
At her Inaugural Lecture Patricia discusses how Lady Anne Clifford (1590-1676) stands at the centre of an expansive network of textual and material creations, from her Great Books of Record and autobiographical writings to her restorations of the castles and public buildings of her inheritance, to monuments commemorating family members and others.
Professor Patricia Phillippy received her PhD from Yale University in Renaissance Studies, and taught at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas for several years before moving to the United Kingdom. She joined Coventry in 2020 as a Professor of Material and Cultural Memories and Executive Director of the Centre for Arts, Memory and Communities.
Lady Anne Clifford's memorial above her tomb in the church of St. Lawrence in Appleby. This is one of the many churches which she helped restore in the mid-17th...
This video is about 'Lady Anne Clifford-a woman cast out'. A play written by Caroline Moir, directed by Chris Taylor and performed by Kendal Community Theatre....
This video is about 'Lady Anne Clifford-a woman cast out'. A play written by Caroline Moir, directed by Chris Taylor and performed by Kendal Community Theatre. All seats were sold at the Town Hall in Kendal, Abbot Hall, Appleby and Kirkby Stephen. This film shows the cast in rehearsal and performing on Tour.
This video is about 'Lady Anne Clifford-a woman cast out'. A play written by Caroline Moir, directed by Chris Taylor and performed by Kendal Community Theatre. All seats were sold at the Town Hall in Kendal, Abbot Hall, Appleby and Kirkby Stephen. This film shows the cast in rehearsal and performing on Tour.
Lady Anne's Way is a long distance trail of 100 miles from Skipton to Penrith, following in the footsteps of the remarkable Lady Anne Clifford.
In 1643 , the ...
Lady Anne's Way is a long distance trail of 100 miles from Skipton to Penrith, following in the footsteps of the remarkable Lady Anne Clifford.
In 1643 , the age of 60, Lady Anne set about the task of the restoration of her newly inherited estate and castles. Sheila Gordon’s guide (http://www.skyware.co.uk/ladyannesway.htm) retraces the journeys Lady Anne made visiting all her important castles from Skipton in Craven to Brougham in Westmorland.
The film shows the walk done over six days; at it passes through the wonders of the Yorkshire Dales with its unspoilt villages and its limestone pavements and progresses through the remote and rugged fellside of Mallerstang, to enter Cumbria and the romantic delights and hidden haunts of the Eden Valley
Lady Anne's Way is a long distance trail of 100 miles from Skipton to Penrith, following in the footsteps of the remarkable Lady Anne Clifford.
In 1643 , the age of 60, Lady Anne set about the task of the restoration of her newly inherited estate and castles. Sheila Gordon’s guide (http://www.skyware.co.uk/ladyannesway.htm) retraces the journeys Lady Anne made visiting all her important castles from Skipton in Craven to Brougham in Westmorland.
The film shows the walk done over six days; at it passes through the wonders of the Yorkshire Dales with its unspoilt villages and its limestone pavements and progresses through the remote and rugged fellside of Mallerstang, to enter Cumbria and the romantic delights and hidden haunts of the Eden Valley
Dr Jessica Malay, a senior lecturer at the University of Huddersfield, talks about her research on Lady Anne Clifford's Great Books of Record and her involvement in the Lady Anne Books and Picture exhibition at the Kendal's Abbot Hall Art Gallery. Full story at http://www.hud.ac.uk/staff/greatladyofthenorth.php
At her Inaugural Lecture Patricia discusses how Lady Anne Clifford (1590-1676) stands at the centre of an expansive network of textual and material creations, from her Great Books of Record and autobiographical writings to her restorations of the castles and public buildings of her inheritance, to monuments commemorating family members and others.
Professor Patricia Phillippy received her PhD from Yale University in Renaissance Studies, and taught at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas for several years before moving to the United Kingdom. She joined Coventry in 2020 as a Professor of Material and Cultural Memories and Executive Director of the Centre for Arts, Memory and Communities.
This video is about 'Lady Anne Clifford-a woman cast out'. A play written by Caroline Moir, directed by Chris Taylor and performed by Kendal Community Theatre. All seats were sold at the Town Hall in Kendal, Abbot Hall, Appleby and Kirkby Stephen. This film shows the cast in rehearsal and performing on Tour.
Lady Anne's Way is a long distance trail of 100 miles from Skipton to Penrith, following in the footsteps of the remarkable Lady Anne Clifford.
In 1643 , the age of 60, Lady Anne set about the task of the restoration of her newly inherited estate and castles. Sheila Gordon’s guide (http://www.skyware.co.uk/ladyannesway.htm) retraces the journeys Lady Anne made visiting all her important castles from Skipton in Craven to Brougham in Westmorland.
The film shows the walk done over six days; at it passes through the wonders of the Yorkshire Dales with its unspoilt villages and its limestone pavements and progresses through the remote and rugged fellside of Mallerstang, to enter Cumbria and the romantic delights and hidden haunts of the Eden Valley
Lady Anne Clifford, Countess Dowager 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.
On the death of her father on 30 October 1605, she succeeded suo jure to the ancient title Baroness de Clifford, a barony created by writ in 1299, but her father's earldom passed (according to the patent of its creation) as was usual, to the heir male, namely his younger brother Francis Clifford, 4th Earl of Cumberland (1559-1641), to whom he had willed his estates. He had bequeathed to Anne the sum of £15,000. In her young adulthood she engaged in a long and complex legal battle to obtain the family estates, which had been granted by King Edward II (1307-1327) under absolute cognatic primogeniture, instead of the £15,000 willed to her. Her main argument was that she was just 15 years old at the time. It was not until the death in 1643 without male progeny of Henry Clifford, the 4th Earl's only son, that Anne managed to regain the family estates, although she did not obtain possession until 1649.
The resident that it is perhaps most associated with is LadyAnneClifford, who did a lot of restoration work on the castle - including inserting a cross-wall in the ...
Back in 1605 LadyAnneClifford was due to inherit the medieval fortress from her father, George Clifford, Queen Elizabeth I’s champion jouster ... Only 15 at the time, Lady Anne then fought a ...
It went on sale earlier this month ...More ... But the most celebrated owner of Appleby Castle was LadyAnneClifford who lived there from 1649 to 1676 ... But the most celebrated owner of Appleby Castle was Lady Anne Clifford who lived there from 1649 to 1676.
The State Bedroom, pictured, features a headboard dated to 1590 that was believed to have belonged to LadyAnneClifford, a wealthy dowager responsible for restoring the castle in the 1600s ... Clifford ...