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Anne Isabella Noel Byron, 11th Baroness Wentworth and Baroness Byron (née Milbanke; 17 May 1792 – 16 May 1860), nicknamed Annabella and commonly known as Lady Byron, was an educational reformer and philanthropist who established the first industrial school in England, and was an active abolitionist.
On 21 April, Lord Byron signed the deed of separation, although very reluctantly, and left England for good a few days later. [15] Aside from an acrimonious separation, Lady Byron continued throughout her life to make allegations about her husband's immoral behaviour. [16] This set of events made Lovelace infamous in Victorian society.
Portrait of Ada Lovelace is an 1836 portrait painting by the British artist Margaret Sarah Carpenter depicting the mathematician Ada Lovelace.. Lovelace was the only daughter of the poet Lord Byron and his estranged wife Lady Byron and was raised by her mother.
Byron is the son of Lt. Col. Richard Geoffrey Gordon Byron, 12th Baron Byron, and Dorigen Margaret Esdaile. He was educated at Wellington College in Berkshire and studied law at Trinity College, Cambridge. He married Robyn Margaret McLean in 1979. She became Lady Byron when her husband inherited the barony on 15 June 1989. The couple have four ...
Reverend Richard Byron (1724–1811) Charles Byron (1726–1731) George Byron (1730–1789) Frances is identified in John Faber's engraving after a Hogarth portrait of 1736, [5] made before her husband Lord Byron died on 8 August 1736. It was "through her second son John [that Frances was] the great-grandmother of Lord Byron, the poet". [6]
George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron, FRS (22 January 1788 – 19 April 1824) was a British poet and peer. [1] [2] He is one of the major figures of the Romantic movement, [3] [4] [5] and is regarded as being among the greatest of British poets. [6]
She frequently took lovers from among the pro-Reform party during her marriage, firstly Francis Burdett and most notably Lord Byron (the affair lasting from 1812, in the aftermath of Byron's affair with Lady Caroline Lamb, when he was fourteen years her junior, until 1813, when she and her husband went abroad but Byron did not follow as she had ...
In 1816 rumours circulated that Lady Byron had discovered Mardyn at her dining table and had fled the marital home in a carriage, her belief being that Mrs. Mardyn was another of her husband's mistresses and that she had caught the couple in the act. As a result, Mardyn was described as "An actress at Drury-Lane of unsavoury reputation rumoured ...