84:'s house at Chelsea, which after his execution had been granted to William Paulet, marquis of Winchester. Here she and her husband made their home, her brother, Lord Buckhurst, often residing with them. Lord Dacre died at Chelsea on 25 September 1594. She survived him by only a few months, dying in the same house on 14 May 1595. Only a few weeks before her death she defended herself from the charge of wishing to appropriate her husband's estate to herself. She and her husband were buried in the
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State Papers indicate that she was a woman of strong mind and somewhat imperious and exacting disposition. She was at one time at variance with her brother, Lord
Buckhurst. At another she addressed a long complaint to Elizabeth against her husband's sister, Margaret Lennard, for raising false reports
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concerning her, and endeavouring to prejudice her majesty against her. Her husband incurred debts, for the discharge of which he desired to sell some portions of his estates, which Mrs. Lennard as his next heir sought to prevent, and at the same time desired to have the lands settled in her name.
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for twenty poor persons, ten of each sex, and a school for twenty poor children. This bequest was in pursuance of a plan she and her husband hoped to complete in their lifetime, the funds for its support being charged on the manor of
92:, where, by her desire, a magnificent marble monument was erected, exhibiting their effigies of full size under a Corinthian canopy, richly adorned with festoons of flowers. Her epitaph describes her in laudatory terms as:
158:. She begged the queen's acceptance of a jewel worth £300. To her brother, Lord Buckhurst, she left, with other jewels, her majesty's picture, set round with twenty-six rubies, with a pendent pearl.
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73:(executed in 1541). With his sister Margaret, Gregory was restored in blood and honours in 1558. She and her husband had one daughter, Elizabeth, who died at a young age.
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By her will, dated 20 December 1594, three months after her husband's death, Lady Dacre made provision for the erection of
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On the death of her mother, the
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When the church was rebuilt in 1667 this monument was removed to the south aisle.
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38:, and steward of the royal manors in Kent and Sussex. Richard was the son of
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54:, who after Sir Richard Sackville's death became the third wife of
50:. Her mother was Winifred (d.1586), daughter of Sir John Bridges,
22:(died 10 May 1595) was an English gentlewoman and benefactress.
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142:She bequeathed her manors, lands and houses at
105:Fida Deo, perchara tuis, constansque, diserta;
30:She was born Anne Sackville, the daughter of
97:Fœminei lux clara chori, pia, casta, pudica;
217:. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
174:State Papers, Dom. vol. xxvi. Nos. 37–39
56:John Paulet, 2nd Marquess of Winchester
42:, and Margaret Boleyn, daughter of Sir
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109:Sic patiens morbi, sic pietatis amans.
101:Ægris subsidium, pauperibusque decus;
60:Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset
16:English gentlewoman and benefactress
58:. Anne Sackville was the sister of
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46:, and thus aunt of queen consort
214:Dictionary of National Biography
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34:, treasurer of the exchequer to
71:Thomas Fiennes, 9th Baron Dacre
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252:Burials at Chelsea Old Church
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20:Anne Fiennes, Baroness Dacre
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232:16th-century English women
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65:Anne Sackville married
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128:almshouse
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118:Legacy
162:Notes
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