Provides a full, detailed picture of the life of an aristocratic
family in early modern England. The Temples of Stowe were a leading
Midland landed family, owning land in, and with strong connections
to, Buckinghamshire, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire
and Warwickshire. In the seventeenth century they were one of the
wealthiest and most prominent local families, building in the
eighteenth century a large and beautiful country house, now Stowe
School. The family also left voluminous records, housed mainly in
the Huntington and the Folger Shakespeare libraries. Based on very
extensive research in these records, this book provides a detailed
picture of the family life of the early Temples. It examines
household, financial and estate management, discusses social
networking and the promotion of family interests, and considers the
legal disputes the family were engaged in. It focuses in particular
on the happy and effective marriage of Sir Thomas and Lady Hester
Temple, exploring their relationship with each other, with their
children, and with their siblings. Lady Hester, who outlived her
husband by twenty years, is a good example of a formidable
matriarch, who took a strong lead in managing the family and its
resources. Overall, the book provides a full and detailed picture
of the family life of an aristocratic family in early modern
England. ROSEMARY O'DAY is Professor of History at the Open
University and author of, amongst numerous other works, Women's
Agency in Early Modern Britain and the American Colonies:
Patriarchy, Partnership and Patronage (Pearson. Longman 2007) and
Cassandra Brydges (1670-1735) First Duchess of Chandos: Life and
Letters (Boydell Press 2007).
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