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Une petite liste de « blogs » de passionnés qui rédige en anglais ou en français que ce soit des blogs historiques (sur des chateaux) ou des blogs historiques (biographies de personnages connues et inconnues).
1 – BLOG DU CHEVALIER DAUPHINOIS :
Un blog rédigé par un passionné (le chevalier Dauphinois) qui visite chateaux et églises en France :
Le lien ===> http://chateau.over-blog.net/article-liste-des-chateaux-forts-en-france-c-58707704-comments.html#anchorComment
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2 – BLOG sur les GOOD GENTLEWOMAN :
Un autre blog rédigé en anglais :
Le lien ==> https://goodgentlewoman.wordpress.com/author/goodgentlewoman/page/6/
Good Gentlewoman : Read about the St John ladies and the people whose lives they touched.
==> sur les femmes de la famille St John….. un pur délice…..
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3 – BLOG sur les personnalités de la Régence (Angleterre règne de George IV) :
en anglais :
le lien ==> https://thethingsthatcatchmyeye.wordpress.com/
David William Wilkin’s Weblog
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3 – BLOG sur les femmes de l’époque d’Elizabeth 1ère :
A Who’s Who of Tudor Women
en anglais :
le lien ==> http://www.kateemersonhistoricals.com/TudorWomenIndex.htm
Une foule de biographies sur des femmes de l’époque d’Elizabeth 1ère avec quelques fois des portraits intégrés. Classé de A à Z.
Exemple :
MARGARET À BARROW (1500-1560)
Margaret à Barrow was the daughter of Sir Maurice of North Barrow, Somerset. The surname is variously spelled as à Barrow, Barrow, Arbarrow, Aborough, Abarowe, d’Abarow, and Barough. Margaret may have been part of Sir Thomas More’s household in 1510/11 and have studied with his daughters. She was renowned for her learning. At about that same time, although it may have been as late as 1522, she married Sir Thomas Elyot (c.1490-March 26, 1546). They lived at Long Combe, Oxfordshire from 1522-30 and then at Carlton cum Willingham, Cambridgeshire. In his will, he left his property to Margaret for her lifetime but instructed that his library be sold and the proceeds go to poor scholars. She married her second husband, James Dyer of Wincanton, Somerset (1510-March 24, 1582) by special license dated February 9, 1546/7. He was knighted in 1553. Their London house was in Cow Lane, near Smithfield. She had no children by either husband. The Oxford DNB entry for Sir James Dyer gives her date of death as 1569. The entry for Sir Thomas Elyot says 1560. Another record says she was buried August 26, 1560 at Great Staughton, Huntingdonshire, where her husband was later buried beside her. Their effigies were not added until early in the next century. The History of Parliament entries for Dyer and Elyot both say her father was John Abarough of Downton, Wiltshire and the one for Dyer gives her date of death as 1569. Portraits: drawing by Hans Holbein the Younger labeled « The Lady Eliot. »