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E-book
Author Peck, Linda Levy, author.

Title Women of fortune : money, marriage and murder in early modern England / Linda Levy Peck
Published Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2018

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Description 1 online resource : illustrations
Contents 'The great man of Buckinghamshire' the Lord Mayor, the benefactor, and the moneylender : the Bennets -- 'My personal estate which God of his infinite goodness hath lent me' the grocer's apprentice : the Morewoods -- 'The £30,000 widow' and Kensington house : the Finches, the Cliftons, and the Conways -- 'I was never one of fortune's darlings' city and country : the Gresleys -- 'One of the greatest fortunes in England' : money, marriage and mobility : the Bennet heiresses -- 'The most sordid person that ever lived' : the murder of Grace Bennet -- 'The Countess of Salisbury who loved travelling' from Hatfield House to the grand tour : the Earl and Countess of Salisbury -- 'A seventh son and beau major shall gain my Lady Salisbury' courting the countess : George Jocelyn -- 'Diverse great troubles and misfortunes' losing a fortune : John and Grace Bennet -- 'Fortune's darlings' single women in Hanoverian London : the Dowager Countess of Salisbury and Grace Bennet
Summary Women of Fortune tells the compelling story of mercantile wealth, arranged marriages, and merchant heiresses who asserted their rights despite loss, imprisonment, and murder. Following three generations of the Bennet and Morewood families, who made their fortune in Crown finance, the East Indies, the Americas, and moneylending, Linda Levy Peck explores the changing society, economy, and culture of early modern England. The heiresses - curious, intrepid, entrepreneurial, scholarly - married into the aristocracy, fought for their property, and wrote philosophy. One spent years on the Grand Tour. Her life in Europe, despite the outbreak of war, is vividly documented. Another's husband went to debtors' prison. She recovered the fortune and bought shares. Husbands, sons, and contemporaries challenged their independence legally, financially, even violently, but new forms of wealth, education, and the law enabled these heiresses to insist on their own agency, create their own identities, and provide examples for later generations
Subject Bennet, Thomas, approximately 1550-1627 -- Family
Morewood, Gilbert, 1586-1650 -- Family
Upper class women -- England -- History -- 17th century
Heiresses -- England -- History -- 17th century
Wealth -- England -- History -- 17th century
Murder -- England -- History -- 17th century
Families
Heiresses
Murder
Upper class women
Wealth
England
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781139524094
1139524097