Charlotte Frances Frederica Spencer (née Seymour), Countess Spencer
5 of 11 portraits of Charlotte Frances Frederica Spencer (née Seymour), Countess Spencer
© National Portrait Gallery, London
Charlotte Frances Frederica Spencer (née Seymour), Countess Spencer
by Mason & Co (Robert Hindry Mason)
albumen cabinet card, early 1870s
5 3/8 in. x 4 in. (137 mm x 101 mm) image size
Given by Tim Cockerill, 2008
Photographs Collection
NPG x127217
Sitterback to top
- Charlotte Frances Frederica Spencer (née Seymour), Countess Spencer (1835-1903), Wife of 5th Earl Spencer; daughter of Frederick Charles William Seymour. Sitter in 11 portraits.
Artistback to top
- Mason & Co (Robert Hindry Mason) (active 1858-1872), Photographers. Artist or producer associated with 119 portraits.
Placesback to top
- Place made: United Kingdom: England, London (photographer's studio, 28 Old Bond Street, London)
Events of 1870back to top
Current affairs
William Edward Forster's Education Act is passed, making provisions for education for all under-13s. It demonstrated the balance in Gladstone's first ministry between progressive reform and conservativism by spreading literacy, whilst maintaining the status of Church schools.The Married Women's Property Act gives wives rights over their own earnings.
Art and science
The Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's fantasy-overture Romeo and Juliet, based on Shakespeare's play and written with the aid of composer Mily Balakirev, debuts in Moscow, conducted by Nikolai Rubenstein.W. G. Grace becomes cricket captain of Gloucestershire, marking the start of a successful decade for the club in which they won three 'Champion County' titles.
International
Isaac Butt, an Irish MP at Westminster, forms the Home Rule Association.The Franco-Prussian war breaks out between France and a coalition of German states led by Prussia. Provoked by the candidacy of German Prince Leopold Hohenzollen-Sigmaringen for the Spanish throne, France declared war in July after Bismark published the deliberately provocative Ems telegraph, in which the French were represented in an offensive light on the issue.
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