Miss Maria Ward had the good fortune to attract the attentions of a baronet, Sir Thomas. Once they were married, she was elevated in rank as a baronet's lady, with a lovely house and a large income. She married extremely well, better than either of her two sisters. She brought a dowry of only £7,000 to the marriage.
| Attributes | Values |
|---|
| rdfs:label
| |
| rdfs:comment
| - Miss Maria Ward had the good fortune to attract the attentions of a baronet, Sir Thomas. Once they were married, she was elevated in rank as a baronet's lady, with a lovely house and a large income. She married extremely well, better than either of her two sisters. She brought a dowry of only £7,000 to the marriage.
|
| dcterms:subject
| |
| Marital
| |
| dbkwik:jane-austen...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
| dbkwik:janeausten/...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
| Portrayer
| |
| Residence
| |
| Name
| |
| Romance
| |
| Rank
| |
| Family
| - Mrs. Norris
- Mrs. Price
- Thomas, Edmund, Maria, and Julia Bertram
- William, Fanny, Susan, and seven other Price children
|
| Gender
| |
| abstract
| - Miss Maria Ward had the good fortune to attract the attentions of a baronet, Sir Thomas. Once they were married, she was elevated in rank as a baronet's lady, with a lovely house and a large income. She married extremely well, better than either of her two sisters. She brought a dowry of only £7,000 to the marriage. Her elder sister Mrs. Norris, married a respectable clergyman: Rev. Mr. Norris. Lady Bertram's husband gave them the parish at Mansfield. Their other sister, Fanny, married a man without consequence. She did not let them know of her marriage until after the fact, angering Mrs. Norris.
|
| is Family
of | |