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ELIZABETH (1635–1650)

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Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 286 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ELIZABETH (1635–1650)  ,
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English princess, second daughter of Charles I., was born on the 28th of December 1635 at St James's Palace . On the outbreak of the
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Civil War and the departure of the king from
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London, while the two elder princes accompanied their
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father, the princess and the infant duke of Gloucester were
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left under the care of the parliament . In
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October 1642 Elizabeth sent a letter to the House of Lords begging that her old attendants might not be removed . In
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July 1644 the royal children were sent to
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Sir John
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Danvers at
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Chelsea, and in 1645 to the
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earl and countess of Northumberland . After the final defeat of the king they were joined in 1646 by James, and during 1647 paid several visits to the king at Caversham, near
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Reading, and Hampton Court, but were again separated by Charles's imprisonment at
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Carisbrooke Castle . On the 21st of
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April 1648 James was persuaded to escape by Elizabeth, who declared that were she a boy she would not long remain in confinement . The last sad meeting between Charles and his two children, at which the princess was overcome with grief, and of which she wrote a short and touching account, took place on the 29th of
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January 1649, the day before his execution . In
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June she was entrusted to the care of the earl and countess of Leicester at
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Penshurst, but in 165o, upon the landing of Charles II. in Scotland, the parliament ordered the royal children to be taken for security to Carisbrooke Castle . The princess fell
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ill from a wetting almost immediately upon her arrival, and died of fever on the 8th of September . She was buried in St Thomas's church at
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Newport, Isle of Wight, where the initials " E.S." alone marked her
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grave till 1856, when a monument was erected to her memory by Queen Victoria . The princess's sorrowful career and early
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death have attracted general
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interest and sympathy . She was said to have acquired considerable proficiency in Greek,
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Hebrew and Latin, as well as in
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Italian and French, and several books were dedicated to her, including the
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translation of the Electra of Sophocles by Christopher Wase in 1649 .

Her mild nature and gentleness towards her father's enemies gained her the name of "

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Temperance." See Lives of the Princesses of England, by M . A . E . Green (1855), vol. vi.; Notes and Queries, 7th
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ser., ix . 444, X . 15 .

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