Anne Clifford
From Freepedia
Lady Anne Clifford (1590-1676) was the only surviving child of George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland (1558-1605) by his wife Margaret Russell, daughter of the Earl of Bedford. The marriage was soured by the deaths of Anne's two elder brothers: her parents lived apart for most of her childhood. She was brought up in an almost entirely female household -- evoked in Emilia Lanier's Description of Cookeham -- and given an excellent education by her tutor, the poet Samuel Daniel. As a child she was a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I of England; she also danced in masques with Anne of Denmark, queen of King James I of England. In 1656, she erected the Countess Pillar in memory of her late mother.
She was also responsible for the improvement and expansion of many of the Clifford family's castles across Northern England, including those at Brough and Skipton.



