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Lucy Cary

English Benedictine nun and biographer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Lucy Cary (c. 1619 – 1 November 1650) was an English Benedictine nun and biographer, under the religious name Lucy Magdalena.

Quick facts Born, Baptised ...
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Family and early life

Cary was born in about 1619 and was baptised on 23 December 1619 at St Bartholomew-the-Great in London.[1] As a child she frequented the courts of Kings James I and Charles I.[1]

Her parents were Henry Cary, 1st Viscount Falkland, and his wife Elizabeth Cary, Viscountess Falkland.[1] Elizabeth Cary was the only child of lawyer, politician and Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer, Sir Lawrence Tanfield,[2] and his wife Elizabeth Symondes of Norfolk.[1]

Cary was fourth of eleven children and one of her sisters was Anne Cary, the Benedictine nun and writer.[3] She was also a kinswoman of Penelope Longueville.[4]

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Catholicism

Elizabeth Cary converted to Catholicism in 1626, guided by Father John Fursdon, and was placed under house arrest.[4] Before her own conversion on Fridays Cary would wait until her mother was on the verge of eating meat and then would remind her that it was a fast day.[5]

Cary then herself converted in 1634,[1] the first of Elizabeth's children to do so. Cary travelled to Flanders, where she joined the Our Lady of Consolation convent at Cambrai on 31 August 1638,[6] alongside her sister Mary Cary, Barbara Constable, Catherine Gascoigne (Dame Justina), Mary Tempest and Francis Lucy.[1] Cary was professed in 1640.[4]

Cary later wrote a biography of her mother entitled The Lady Falkland: Her Life by One of Her Daughters.[7][8]

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Death

Cary died in Cambrai, Flanders on 1 November 1650.[1][4]

Sources

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