Elizabeth Hamilton (1641-1708) (French Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Elizabeth Hamilton (1641-1708)" in French language version.

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archive.org

  • Rigg 1890, p. 146, left column
  • Corp 2004b, p. 786, left column
  • Merriam-Webster 1997, p. 799, right column
  • Debrett 1828, p. 63, line 20. . "He [George Hamilton] m. [married] Mary, 3d daughter of Thomas, Viscount Thurles, son of Walter, 11th earl of Ormond and sister of James, duke of Ormond, and had issue 6 sons and 3 daughters ..."
  • Burke et Burke 1915, p. 54, right column, line 33. . "4. George (Sir) Bart. of Donalong, co. Tyrone, and Nenagh, co. Tipperary, created a baronet of Scotland, about 1660;"
  • Airy 1886, p. 54, right column. . "... and the cessation was signed on the 15 Sept. [1643]."
  • Cokayne 1903, p. 305. . "... he was Col. of Foot and Gov. of Nenagh castle"
  • Warner 1768, p. 228. . "... taking Nenagh and two other castles, on the tenth of November, he came to his winter quarters at Kilkenny."
  • Clark 1921, p. 5. . "In the spring of 1651 took place, at last, the event which had such a determining influence on the fate of the young Hamiltons. Sir George Hamilton left his country for France with his family ..."
  • Millar 1890, p. 177, left column. . "Marquis of Ormonde, whom he followed to Caen in the spring of 1651 with his wife and family."
  • Carte 1851, p. 384. . "The marchioness of Ormond had landed in that country on June 23d [1648], with her three sons and two daughters, and had taken up her residence at Caen"
  • Clark 1921, p. 8, line 14. . "... James the eldest also joined the wandering court, though the precise nature of his connexion is not known."
  • Clark 1921, p. 8, line 13. . "... George, the second son, was made a page to Charles II ..."
  • Clark 1921, p. 8, line 27. . "... his [Anthony Hamilton's] mother and his aunt, Lady Muskerry, had apartments at the couvent des Feuillantines in Paris ..."
  • Clark 1921, p. 8, line 16. . "Elizabeth was sent with her cousin Helen, Lady Muskerry's daughter, to Port-Royal, where, as she herself was not ashamed to relate many years afterwards, the daughter of a penniless refugee, was charitably received and sheltered during seven or eight years."
  • Corp 2004a, p. 786, line 1 of the entry. . "called "La Belle Hamilton""
  • Adams 1865, p. 68. . "Her mind was a proper companion for such a form; she did not endeavour to shine in conversation by those sprightly sallies which only puzzle ..."
  • Hamilton 1930, p. 120–132.
  • Melville 1928, p. 111. . "the duke of Richmond was one of the first to come forward. He was a gambler and a sot; but he was well and truly enamoured."
  • Melville 1928, p. 112, line 1. . "Miss Hamilton could and did resist the advances of the almost irresistible Henry Jermyn, famous for his conquests."
  • Melville 1928, p. 112, line 5. . "Not himself, nor the prospective dukedom, nor his thirty thousand a year, tempted her."
  • Melville 1928, p. 112, line 8. . "Berkeley, afterwards Earl of Falmouth, wealthy and attractive in person, though dissipated, a boon companion of the King and of the Duke of York ..."
  • Adams 1865, p. 70. . "The highest in rank and the most important of her lovers was the Duke Of York, who had been captivated by a glance at her portrait in Lely's studio."
  • Ward 1892, p. 183. . "... soon after the acknowledgement of his marriage to Anne Hyde (concluded 3 Sep. 1660) he engaged in new inconstancies ..."
  • Saint-Simon 1899, p. 560. . "Il arriva à Londres le 15 janvier 1663, et retrouva entre autres camarades, les Hamilton, de grande maison écossaise et catholique, dont il avait fréquenté plusieurs jeunes gens au Louvre dans l'entourage de la veuve et du fils de Charles 1er."
  • Auger 1805, p. 2. . "Près de deux ans après le rétablissement de Charles II, arriva à Londres le fameux chevalier de Grammont, exilé de France ..."
  • Hamilton 1713, p. 104. . "La Motte Houdancourt étoit une des filles de la Reine-Mère."
  • Hartmann 1924, p. 58
  • Hartmann 1930, p. 378. . "The chevalier de Gramont's rare constancy had met with its reward long before, towards the end of December 1663."
  • Paul 1904, p. 55. . "she [Elizabeth] married in 1664 the dissipated Philibert, Count de Gramont ..."
  • Saint-Simon 1899, p. 563, line 8. . "Le contrat de mariage fut passé sans autre retard, le 9 décembre 1663 (style anglais) ..."
  • Louis XIV 1806, p. 170. . "Au comte de Grammont. Paris le 6 mars 1664. Monsieur le Comte de Grammont. Il ne faut point que l'impatience de vous rendre auprès de moi, trouble vos nouvelles douceurs. Vous serez toujours le bien-venu ..."
  • Saint-Simon 1899, p. 563, line 11. . "... ayant déjà un fils né le 7 septembre, mais qui ne vécut point."
  • Brunet 1883, p. xii. . "Comminges à Lionne, Londres, 29 août — 8 septembre 1664. Madame la comtesse de Grammont accoucha hier au soir d'un fils beau comme la mère ..."
  • Jusserand 1892, p. 229. . "Comminges to Lionne Sept. 8, 1664 [NS]. Madame la comtesse de Grammont accoucha hier au soir d'un fils beau comme la mère ..."
  • Saint-Simon 1902, p. 502, line 1. . "Les deux filles de la comtesse de Gramont n'ont pas prospéré, avec l'esprit de deux demons, méchantes et galantes à l'avenant, quoique fort laides ..."
  • Rigg 1890, p. 147, left column
  • Corp 2004a, p. 787. . "The Count and Countess de Gramont had two daughters: Claude-Charlotte (b. c. 1665) and ..."
  • Paul 1904, p. 56. . "Marie Elizabeth de Gramont, born 27 December 1667, abbesse de St Marine of Poussay in Lorraine."
  • Saint-Simon 1902, p. 502, line 4. . "L’aînée, pour faire une fin, se fit abbesse de Poussay, qui est un chapitre en Lorraine ..."
  • Michel 1862, p. 407. . "qui avaient été filles d'honneur de la Dauphine de Bavière ..."
  • Adams 1865, p. 82, line 1. . "After the birth of their first child, in 1669, they repaired to France."
  • Saint-Simon 1899, p. 563, line 12. . "... qui, en fevrier 1667, donna à Mme de Gramont une septième place de dame du palais ..."
  • Saint-Simon 1902, p. 501. . "La comtesse de Gramont avait l'air d'une reine ..."
  • La Chesnaye des Bois 1866, p. 642, line 5. . "Le comte de Toulongeon, son frère, l'institua pour héritier par son testament ..."
  • Corp 2004a, p. 786, right column. . "The following year Fénelon became her spiritual director ..."
  • Dangeau 1854b, p. 129. . "Nous apprenons à Versailles que le roi a donné l'appartement qu'avoit M. de Montausier à madame la comtesse de Gramont."
  • Adams 1865, p. 83. . "... following the example of his wife devoted him to religious duties."
  • Saint-Simon 1895, p. 112, line 4. . "... elle osa s'enfermer à Port-Royal toute une octave de la Fête-Dieu. Son absence fit un vuide qui importuna le Roi ..."
  • Saint-Simon 1895, p. 112, line 8. . "... il en fallut venir aux excuses et aux pardons ..."
  • Clark 1921, p. 122. . "When Félix, the chief-surgeon, died in 1703, a small property of his, les Moulineaux, which lay within the grounds of Versailles, fell vacant and the king at once gave it to Madame de Gramont, a present which caused no little talk ..."
  • Saint-Simon 1895, p. 112, line 23. . "Le présent des Moulineaux, cette petite maison revenu à la disposition du Roi par la mort de Félix, qu'elle appela Pontalie, fit du bruit ..."
  • Dangeau 1857a, p. 293. . "Le comte de Gramont mourut à Paris la nuit passée."
  • Dangeau 1857b, p. 150. . "June 1708. Dimanche 3 ... La comtesse de Gramont mourut à Paris."
  • Paul 1904, p. 56, line 7. . "... she [Elizabeth Hamilton] died, 3 June 1708, aged sixty-seven."

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gallica.bnf.fr

  • Gaspard 1871, p. 42. . "Marie-Elisabeth de Grammont fut élue le 6 janvier 1695, les bulles sont du 9 de novembre de la même année. Elle est fille de Philibert, comte de Grammont, vicomte d'Aster, commandeur des ordres du roi, et d'Elisabeth d'Hamilton d'Albercorne."

books.google.com

  • Britland 2011, p. 138. . "In 1657, with money that had been made available to her by the French queen regent, she purchased a country house in the village of Colombes, north of Paris ... The house had belonged to Basile Fouquet, the brother of the notorious Nicolas Fouquet, surintendant of Louis XIV's finances ..."
  • Corp 2004c, p. 217. . "In May 1703 Louis XIV gave Hamilton's sister the use during her lifetime of a house near Meudon called 'Les Moulineaux'. In the five years until her death in June 1708 it was much frequented and became the centre of [Anthony] Hamilton's social world."