Summary of John Guy s A Daughter s Love
45 pages
English

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45 pages
English

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Description

Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book.
Sample Book Insights:
#1 The author's eldest child, Margaret, would always remember her first home, the Barge at Bucklersbury. It was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. The parish church of St Stephen Walbrook was built in limestone with a fine timber roof covered in lead.
#2 The author's eldest child, Margaret, would always remember the Barge at Bucklersbury. It was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. The house was divided into tenements and converted for residential use.
#3 Thomas More's home was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. It was divided into tenements and converted for residential use. The family's main focal point was a private chapel.
#4 Thomas More's house was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. It was divided into tenements and converted for residential use. The family's main focal point was a private chapel.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 21 septembre 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9798350030648
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Insights on John Guy's A Daughters Love
Contents Insights from Chapter 1 Insights from Chapter 2 Insights from Chapter 3 Insights from Chapter 4 Insights from Chapter 5 Insights from Chapter 6 Insights from Chapter 7 Insights from Chapter 8 Insights from Chapter 9 Insights from Chapter 10 Insights from Chapter 11 Insights from Chapter 12 Insights from Chapter 13 Insights from Chapter 14 Insights from Chapter 15 Insights from Chapter 16 Insights from Chapter 17 Insights from Chapter 18 Insights from Chapter 19 Insights from Chapter 20 Insights from Chapter 21 Insights from Chapter 22 Insights from Chapter 23 Insights from Chapter 24 Insights from Chapter 25
Insights from Chapter 1



#1

The author's eldest child, Margaret, would always remember her first home, the Barge at Bucklersbury. It was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. The parish church of St Stephen Walbrook was built in limestone with a fine timber roof covered in lead.

#2

The author's eldest child, Margaret, would always remember the Barge at Bucklersbury. It was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. The house was divided into tenements and converted for residential use.

#3

Thomas More's home was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. It was divided into tenements and converted for residential use. The family's main focal point was a private chapel.

#4

Thomas More's house was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. It was divided into tenements and converted for residential use. The family's main focal point was a private chapel.

#5

Margaret was born at home, some time between late August and the beginning of October 1505. Her mother, Joanna, endured a painful and prolonged labour, and chose the baby's name, which was significant if it didn't already run in the family.

#6

Thomas More's house was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. It was divided into tenements and converted for residential use. The family's main focal point was a private chapel. Margaret was born there in 1505.

#7

Margaret's father, Thomas More, would have loved to entertain his children with stories from Aesop's Fables. He always remembered with love and affection his own nurse, Mother Maud, telling him animal stories from Aesop's Fables.

#8

The author's eldest child, Margaret, would always remember the Barge at Bucklersbury. It was a sought-after location because of its proximity to the Stocks Market, where meat, poultry, and fish were sold. The house was divided into tenements and converted for residential use.
Insights from Chapter 2



#1

John More, Margaret's grandfather, was a successful lawyer who married a wealthy widow named Joan Marshall six years before the death of his first wife. He had transformed his fortunes by marrying her.

#2

Thomas More's family was well-to-do, but not famous. They acquired good name and honest estimation, which was better than nothing.

#3

John More, Margaret's grandfather, was a successful lawyer who married a wealthy widow named Joan Marshall six years before the death of his first wife. He had transformed his fortunes by marrying her. He had acquired a small plot of land called Gobions near North Mimms in Hertfordshire, seventeen miles north of London.

#4

Margaret's grandfather, John More, was a successful lawyer who married a wealthy widow named Joan Marshall six years before the death of his first wife. He had transformed his fortunes by marrying her. He had acquired a small plot of land called Gobions near North Mimms in Hertfordshire, seventeen miles north of London.

#5

Thomas More had a daughter named Margaret. She was named after her grandmother, who had been named after her great-great grandmother. Margaret's father visited the universities of Paris and Louvain, near Brussels, in 1506. He was a successful lawyer who had married a wealthy widow named Joan Marshall six years before the death of his first wife. He had transformed his fortunes by marrying her.

#6

Thomas More's family was well-off, but not famous. They acquired good name and honest estimation, which was better than nothing. He had a daughter named Margaret. She was named after her grandmother, who had been named after her great-great grandmother. Margaret's father visited the universities of Paris and Louvain, near Brussels, in 1506. He was a successful lawyer who had married a wealthy widow named Joan Marshall six years before the death of his first wife.

#7

John More, Margaret's grandfather, was a successful lawyer who married a wealthy widow named Joan Marshall six years before the death of his first wife. He had transformed his fortunes by marrying her. He had acquired a small plot of land called Gobions near North Mimms in Hertfordshire, seventeen miles north of London.

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