Frances Byron, Baroness Byron

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Frances_Byron,_Baroness_Byron an entity of type: Thing

Frances, Baroness Byron (later Hay; née Berkeley; 1703 – 13 September 1757), was the second daughter of William Berkeley, 4th Baron Berkeley of Stratton (died 1740/1), and his wife Frances Temple (died 1707). She was the third wife of William Byron, 4th Baron Byron and a great-grandmother of the poet Lord Byron. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Frances Byron, Baroness Byron
rdf:langString Frances Byron
rdf:langString Frances Byron
rdf:langString East Lothian
xsd:date 1757-09-13
xsd:integer 59085018
xsd:integer 1114977911
xsd:integer 1703
rdf:langString Frances Berkeley
rdf:langString Frances, painted by Michael Dahl in 1720
xsd:date 1757-09-13
rdf:langString Charles Byron
rdf:langString George Byron
rdf:langString Reverend Richard Byron
rdf:langString Frances Temple
rdf:langString Sir Thomas Hay, 2nd Baronet of Alderston
rdf:langString Baroness Byron
rdf:langString Baronetess of Alderston
rdf:langString Frances, Baroness Byron (later Hay; née Berkeley; 1703 – 13 September 1757), was the second daughter of William Berkeley, 4th Baron Berkeley of Stratton (died 1740/1), and his wife Frances Temple (died 1707). She was the third wife of William Byron, 4th Baron Byron and a great-grandmother of the poet Lord Byron. Lady Byron was one of 21 women of influence who signed Thomas Coram's petition of 1729, which led to the foundation of the Foundling Hospital. She is also known for sitting for the eighteenth-century artist William Hogarth (1697–1764), whose painting has been exhibited at the Foundling Museum, near Brunswick Square in London, as part of their "Ladies of Quality" exhibition.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8116
rdf:langString Baroness Byron
rdf:langString Baronetess of Alderston

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