Hvem daterte Isabella Ingram-Seymour-Conway, Marchioness of Hertford?
George IV of the United Kingdom datert Isabella Ingram-Seymour-Conway, Marchioness of Hertford fra ? til ?. Aldersforskjellen var 3 år, 1 måneder og 5 dager.
Isabella Ingram-Seymour-Conway, Marchioness of Hertford
Isabella Anne Seymour-Conway, Marchioness of Hertford (7 July 1759 – 12 April 1834) was an English landowner and courtier and a mistress of King George IV when he was Prince of Wales. She was born at Temple Newsam in Leeds, and was the eldest daughter of Charles Ingram, 9th Viscount of Irvine, and his wife Frances Gibson Shepheard Ingram. She married Francis Ingram-Seymour-Conway, 2nd Marquess of Hertford, in 1776, at age sixteen, being his second wife. She was known as Lady Beauchamp until 1794 when her husband succeeded his father.
Isabella was co-heiress to Temple Newsam along with her four sisters, and owned properties in Worcestershire, Norfolk, Ireland and London.
Tall, handsome, and elegant, she caught the attention of the Prince of Wales most likely at a ball or concert at Manchester House, the London home of the Hertfords. George was also friends with Isabella's son, Lord Yarmouth, born in 1777. In 1806, the Hertfords became guardians to Mary 'Minney' Seymour, a favourite of the Prince. Charles was made Master of the Horse in 1804 and a Knight of the Garter in 1807.
At first, Isabella rejected George's advances, causing him to become depressed. He made a visit to Isabella's mother at Temple Newsam in 1806 whilst attending Doncaster races as an excuse to see Isabella. George became obsessed with Isabella and became ill when parted from her so that the Hertfords travelled to London to see him and George was miraculously cured. In 1807, Isabella, now almost fifty, began a relationship with George who was then in his mid-forties. As a result, the Prince was a regular guest at Hertford House, Hertford's London residence, and Ragley Hall in Warwickshire. A Tory herself, she was influential in turning the Prince toward the Tories and away from the Whigs, and used her London residence as the headquarters for Tory sympathisers. Isabella was criticised by the House of Lords and in the press for her influence on George; satirical prints by George Cruikshank and others were produced.
The Marchioness's predecessor as the Prince Regent's mistress had been Maria Fitzherbert, a Roman Catholic. Other Catholics disapproved of the Marchioness's influence over the prince, referring to "the fatal witchery of an unworthy secret influence" that they felt had turned him against the idea of Catholic emancipation. George Canning, speaking for the party in power, made use of these comments to say that, if Lady Hertford was really responsible for the prince's political decisions, she was "Britain's guardian angel". Isabella made a point of humiliating Mrs Fitzherbert and by 1811 the Prince had formally separated from her.
On the death of her mother in 1807, she inherited Temple Newsam in West Yorkshire, where the Prince of Wales had paid her a visit. She and her husband added the name of Ingram to their surname due to the fortune they inherited from her family. Lavish entertainments were held at Hertford House attended by the Prince, members of the royal family and visiting nobles, including for victory celebrations in 1814. Isabella's dresses were reported in the press including a Greek-style ostrich feather head-dress worn in 1813 styled on the Prince's crest.
Lady Hertford's relationship with the Prince, now prince regent, ended in 1819, when he turned his attentions to Elizabeth Conyngham, Marchioness Conyngham. According to Greville’s diary for 9 June 1820:
Somebody asked Lady Hertford if she had been aware of the King's admiration for Lady Conyngham, and whether he had ever talked to her about Lady C. She replied that 'intimately as she had known the King, and openly as he had always talked to her upon every subject, he had never ventured to speak to her upon that of his mistresses'.
Isabella continued to spend the season in London, but otherwise lived at Temple Newsam. Here she busied herself with charitable works, being the patron or member of many events and societies, and was noted for her benevolence to the poor as well as her generosity to the servants at Temple Newsam who held an annual ball and supper in the house. Lady Hertford died in 1834 after catching a cold on her way from Temple Newsam to London by carriage. Her obituary in The Leeds Intelligencer described her as 'Her intellectual character, and high attainments, formed the least part of her excellencies; however enlightened her mind, her heart was warmer still. To the poor and the distressed her munificence was all but unbounded'.
Les mer...George IV of the United Kingdom
Georg IV August Fredrik (engelsk George Augustus Frederick, tysk Georg IV August Friedrich (født 12. august 1762 i St. James's Palace, død 26. juni 1830 i Windsor Castle) var prinsregent i 1811–1820 og konge av Storbritannia og Irland og Hannover fra 1820 til 1830. Han var medlem av det tyske fyrstehuset Hannover.
Han var eldste sønn av Georg III av Storbritannia, Irland og Hannover og Sophie Charlotte av Mecklenburg-Strelitz og styrte fra 1811 som prinsregent på bakgrunn av sin fars sinnssykdom. Hans regentskap (engelsk: regency) ga navn til perioden, dens arkitektur og dens moter. Georg IV fikk arkitekten John Nash til å bygge Royal Pavilion i Brighton og ombygge Buckingham Palace, samt Jeffry Wyattville til å gjenreise Windsor-slottet.
I hemmelighet hadde han giftet seg med en katolikk, Maria Fitzherbert, i 1785. I 1795 giftet han seg offisielt med Caroline av Braunschweig, som han forgjeves prøvde å skille seg fra etter å ha blitt konge i 1820. (Caroline døde i 1821.) Deres eneste barn, den 21-årige prinsesse Charlotte, døde etter selv å ha satt et dødfødt barn til verden i 1817.
Georg IV ble den mest forhatte av Hannover-kongene. Befolkningen hatet ham for å leve i luksus og overflod på en tid da jevne folk sultet på grunn av krigen med Frankrike, og det var oppløp i gatene etter brød. Georg selv var smellfet, men fikk likevel dikteren Leigh Hunt idømt en bot på 500 pund og fengslet i to år for å ha kalt kongen «en feit adonis på 50».
Da Georg IV døde i 1830, ble han etterfulgt på tronen av sin yngre bror Vilhelm.
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