Difference between revisions of "Elizabeth Brooke 1602?-1683"
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====Biographical Note==== | ====Biographical Note==== | ||
− | + | Of [[Location::Cockfield Hall, Suffolk]], daughter of [[Family::Thomas Colpeper]] (d.[[Date of Death::1613]]) and wife of [[Family::Sir Robert Brooke]] (d.[[Date of Death::1646]]). She taught herself theology and philosophy and acquired a large number of religious writings. | |
====Books==== | ====Books==== | ||
− | Although we have no direct documentation of her library, the biography in her funeral sermon refers not only to the depth and breadth of her reading, but also to | + | Although we have no direct documentation of her library, the biography in her funeral sermon refers not only to the depth and breadth of her reading, but also to the body of [[subject::theology|devotional]] [[author::writings]] she left behind. She evidently had a closet well-stocked with books. |
====Sources==== | ====Sources==== | ||
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Brooke, Elizabeth}} | {{DEFAULTSORT:Brooke, Elizabeth}} | ||
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Revision as of 06:39, 7 April 2020
Elizabeth BROOKE, Lady Brooke ca.1602-83
Biographical Note
Of Cockfield Hall, Suffolk, daughter of Thomas Colpeper (d.1613) and wife of Sir Robert Brooke (d.1646). She taught herself theology and philosophy and acquired a large number of religious writings.
Books
Although we have no direct documentation of her library, the biography in her funeral sermon refers not only to the depth and breadth of her reading, but also to the body of devotional writings she left behind. She evidently had a closet well-stocked with books.
Sources
- Mendelson, Sara H. "Brooke [née Colepeper], Elizabeth, Lady Brooke (1602?–1683), exemplar of godly life." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- Parkhurst, N. The faithful and diligent Christian described, 1684.