Constance Lloyd (Spanish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Constance Lloyd" in Spanish language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Spanish rank
1st place
1st place
low place
low place
2,753rd place
low place
low place
low place
low place
low place
2,839th place
3,642nd place
low place
low place

actofunion.ac.uk

cmgww.com

  • Gately, Nicole (2005). «BIOGRAPHY» (en línea) (en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 17 de abril de 2011. Consultado el 28 de diciembre de 2013. «On May 29, 1884, Oscar married Constance Lloyd. Constance was four years younger than Oscar and the daughter of a prominent barrister who died when she was 16. She was well-read, spoke several European languages and had an outspoken, independent mind. Oscar and Constance had two sons in quick succession, Cyril in 1885 and Vyvyan in 1886.» 

irishstatutebook.ie

oscarwilde.com

  • «Family Values» (en inglés). Samuelson Entertainment. 1997. Consultado el 28 de diciembre de 2013. «I think that one forgets how much of a male society it was. The sexes were much more separate than today. Oscar used to tell Constance what she should wear. He sort of invented her -he got her involved in dress reform and in various women's organisations.» 

poemofquotes.com

  • «Biography of Oscar Wilde» (Poem of Quotes) (en inglés). 2004. Consultado el 28 de diciembre de 2013. «She died in 1898 following a spinal surgery and was buried in Staglieno Cemetary in Genoa, Italy.» 

umkc.edu

law2.umkc.edu

  • Douglas O., Linder. «The Trials of Oscar Wilde: An Account» (en línea) (en inglés). Consultado el 28 de diciembre de 2013. «The jury deliberated for over three hours before concluding that they could not reach a verdict on most of the charges (the jury acquitted Wilde on charges relating to Frederick Atkins, one of the young men with whom he was accused of having engaged in a gross indecency.) On May 7, Wilde was released on bail to enjoy three weeks of freedom until the start of his second criminal trial.
    The Liberal government determined to go all-out to secure a conviction in Wilde's second trial, even when people such as Queensberry's attorney Edward Carson were urging, "Can you not let up on this fellow now?" There is much speculation about the government's aggressive position on the Wilde case. Prime Minister Rosebery was suspected of having had a homosexual affair, when he was Foreign Minister, with Francis Douglas, another one of Queensberry's good-looking sons. It was shortly after Francis Douglas was "killed in a hunting accident" (probably a suicide), that Queensberry went on the rampage against Oscar Wilde. There is plausible evidence in the form of ambiguous letters to conclude that Rosebery was threatened with exposure by Queensberry or others if he failed to aggressively prosecute Wilde. It is interesting to note that during the two months leading up to Wilde's conviction, Rosebery suffered from serious depression and insomnia. After Wilde's conviction, his heath suddenly improved.
    Wilde's second prosecution was headed by England's top prosecutor, Solicitor-General Frank Lockwood. Although the trial resembled in many way the first, the prosecution dropped its weakest witnesses and focused more heavily on its strongest. Lockwood had the last word in the trial, and used it to offer what Wilde described as an "appalling denunciation [of me]--like something out of Tacitus, like a passage in Dante, like one of Savonarola's indictments of the Popes of Rome." After over three hours of deliberation, the jury returned its verdict: guilty on all counts except those relating to Edward Shelley. Wilde swayed slightly in the dock; his face turned gray. Some in the courtroom shouted "Shame!" while expressed their approval of the verdict.»
     

web.archive.org