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Anne's and father
Anne's father was appointed to the perpetual curacy in Haworth, a small town seven miles ( 11 km ) away.
In Elizabeth Gaskell's biography, Anne's father remembered her as precocious, reporting that once, when she was four years old, in reply to his question about what a child most wanted, she answered: " age and experience ".
Anne's reply, and continued gossip, seemed to confirm Mary's suspicions that the child was not her natural brother, and that her father was conspiring to secure a Catholic succession.
Anne's father continued his diplomatic career under Henry VIII.
Anne's European education ended in 1521, when her father summoned her back to England.
Anne's Catholic father, James II and VII, was deposed during the " Glorious Revolution " of 1688.
Anne's father and stepmother retired to Brussels in March 1679 in the wake of anti-Catholic hysteria fed by the Popish Plot, and Anne visited them from the end of August.
When Charles II died in 1685, Anne's father became king as James II in England and Ireland and James VII in Scotland.
Anne's father died in September 1701.
His widow, Anne's stepmother, the former Queen, wrote to Anne to inform her that her father forgave her and to remind her of her promise to seek the restoration of his line.
Anne's father was influenced by Erasmus and followed a moderate path within the Reformation.
Anne's father, dissatisfied with the rewards he had received for helping Edward gain the throne, compared with the favours lavished on the Woodville family, changed sides and allied himself with Margaret of Anjou, Queen consort of the ousted Lancastrian king Henry VI.
By her father, the Duchess of York was Anne's great-aunt.
The letter, congratulating him on his orbit around the Earth, enclosed a family tree showing that Anne's father, George Arthur Thomas Glenn, and John Glenn were cousins.
Anne's father was the most powerful monarch in Europe at the time ruling over about half of Europe's population and territory.
The property came into the possession of Henry VIII after the death of Anne's father, Thomas Boleyn, in 1539.
Sarah acted as Anne's agent after the latter's father, James II, was deposed during the Glorious Revolution ; and she promoted her interests during the rule of James's successors, William III and Mary II.
In the first book of the series, it is established that he is the brother of Julian, Dick and Anne's father.
Clarence then imagines dying and being tormented by the ghosts of his father-in-law ( Warwick, Anne's father ) and brother-in-law ( Edward, Anne's former husband ).
Furthermore, James began to favor Anne's father: Edward Hyde received knighthood in 1660 and again in 1661.
After her father had gone bankrupt in an attempt to invest in Halifax, Canada, she married the rich brewer Henry Thrale on 11 October 1763, at St. Anne's Chapel, Soho, London.
Anne's father was soon appointed curate ( deputy vicar ) of Saint Wilfrid's, the local church in Alford, and in 1585 he also became the schoolmaster at the Alford Free Grammar School, one of many such public schools, free to the poor, begun by Queen Elizabeth.
Anne's father, James, Duke of York, consented to the marriage.

Anne's and Brontë
Mainly because the re-publication of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall was prevented by Charlotte Brontë after Anne's death, she is less known than her sisters Charlotte, author of four novels including Jane Eyre, and Emily, author of Wuthering Heights.
Shirley is what Brontë believed her sister, Emily Brontë, would have been if she had been born into a wealthy family. The maiden name of Mrs. Pryor is Agnes Grey, the name of the main character in Anne's first novel.

Anne's and
Anne's mother, Maria Branwell ( 1783 1821 ), was the daughter of Thomas Branwell, a successful, property-owning grocer and tea merchant in Penzance and Anne Carne, the daughter of a silversmith.
* 1713 War of the Spanish Succession ( Queen Anne's War ): Treaty of Utrecht.
* 1702 Queen Anne's War: James Moore, Governor of the Province of Carolina, abandons the Siege of St. Augustine.
* 1704 Queen Anne's War: French forces and Native Americans stage a raid on Deerfield, Massachusetts, killing 56 villagers and taking more than 100 captive.
* 1988 Auntie Anne's was founded by Anne F. Beiler in Lancaster, Pennsylvania
* 1949 Anne F. Beiler, American businesswoman, founded Auntie Anne's
* 1702 English colonists under the command of James Moore besiege Spanish St. Augustine in Queen Anne's War.
* June 24 Kathleen Young and Irene Templeton are ordained as priests in St Anne's Cathedral, Belfast, becoming the first female Anglican priests in the United Kingdom.
* July 13 The Treaty of Portsmouth brings an end to Queen Anne's War.
* June Queen Anne's Captain-General John Churchill forces the surrender of Kaiserswerth on the Rhine.
* Prince Stanisław Albrecht Radziwiłł ( 1917 1976 ) is buried at St Anne's church, Fawley Court just outside Henley, where he founded the Divine Mercy College.
There are numerous parallels between the two stories including the fact that one of Henry's closest friends, Sir Henry Norreys, was beheaded as one of Anne's supposed lovers and he refused to confess in order to save his life claiming that everyone knew the Queen was innocent.
The largest and most central house of this settlement, it served as the local garrison house for protection from Indian raids made along the Massachusetts frontier during Queen Anne's War of 1702 1713.
His marriage to the hot-tempered Sarah Jennings Anne's intimate friend ensured Marlborough's rise, first to the Captain-Generalcy of British forces, then to a dukedom.
* Anne of Great Britain, ( 1702 1714 ) Following the Act of Union with Scotland, Anne's personal union of the Scottish and English crowns was replaced by a political union.
Beginning in 1689, the colonies became involved in a series of wars between Great Britain and France for control of North America, the most important of which were Queen Anne's War, in which the British conquered French colony Acadia, and the final French and Indian War ( 1754 1763 ) when Britain was victorious over all the French colonies in North America.
* Tressel and Berkeley Lady Anne's attendants ( non-speaking roles )
The town has seven primary schools Highfields Community, Millfields, Pear Tree, St Anne's ( Catholic ), Stapeley Broad Lane ( Church of England ), The Weaver and The Wyche, two secondary schools Brine Leas School and Malbank School and Sixth Form College, as well as Reaseheath College which runs both Further Education and Higher Education courses ( in conjunction with Harper Adams University College and the University of Chester ).
Following Anne's death, in about 1414, the Earl of Cambridge married the widowed Maud Neville ( Clifford ), former wife of John de Neville, 6th Lord Latimer ( 1382 1430 ). They had one daughter Alice, who may have been born postumusly to both Richard and Maud.
Following Anne's death, Cambridge married Matilda Clifford, daughter of Thomas de Clifford, 6th Baron de Clifford ( 1363 1391 ), but they were probably married a very short time before he was discovered to be one of the fomenters of the Southampton Plot against King Henry V of England immediately prior to departure on the French campaign.
St Bede's Catholic High School ( ages 11 16 ) is on St Anne's Road next to the A59 and Prescot Road, and opposite St Anne's church.
* Restoration of St Anne's Limehouse, 1851 54

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