Mary S. Lovell - Bess of Hardwick, First Lady of Chatsworth
Mary S. Lovell - Bess of Hardwick, First Lady of Chatsworth
Mary S. Lovell - Bess of Hardwick, First Lady of Chatsworth
A Tudor portrait of Bess of Hardwick, wearing a black dress and four long lustrous strings of pearls. Currently on display in the Portland Collection Museum.
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  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Mary S. Lovell - Bess of Hardwick, First Lady of Chatsworth
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Mary S. Lovell - Bess of Hardwick, First Lady of Chatsworth
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, A Tudor portrait of Bess of Hardwick, wearing a black dress and four long lustrous strings of pearls. Currently on display in the Portland Collection Museum.

Mary S. Lovell - Bess of Hardwick, First Lady of Chatsworth

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Bess of Hardwick, First Lady of Chatsworth. 

Bess of Hardwick was one of the most remarkable women of the Tudor era. Gently-born in reduced circumstances, she was married at 15 and when she was widowed at 16, she was still a virgin. At 19 she married a man more than twice her age, Sir William Cavendish, a senior auditor in King Henry VIII's Court of Augmentations. Responsible for seizing church properties for the crown during the Dissolution, Cavendish enriched himself in the process. During the reign of King Edward VI, Cavendish was the Treasurer to the boy king and sisters, and he and Bess moved in the highest levels of society. They had a London home and built Chatsworth House in Derbyshire.

After Cavendish's death, her third husband was poisoned by his brother. Bess' fourth marriage to the patrician George, 6th Earl of Shrewsbury, Earl Marshall of England, made Bess one of the most important women at court. Her shrewd business acumen was a byword, and she was said to have 'a masculine understanding', in that age when women had little education and few legal rights. The Earl's death made her arguably the wealthiest, and therefore - next to the Queen - the most powerful woman in the country.

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A portrait of Bess of Harwick in the style of Rowland Lockey (around 1587), hangs in our current exhibition Unseen Treasures.  The 6th Duke of Portland showing it to an American guest, remarked, “She didn’t do so badly, four ropes of pearls – one from each husband, I suppose!”. Learn more about Bess of Hardwick in an article by Dr. Fiona Clapperton

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