Jane Jones (onye na-ebi akwụkwọ)
Jane Jones (nwụrụ 1739) bụ onye na-ebi akwụkwọ Irish, onye na-ere akwụkwọ na onye nwe akwụkwọ akụkọ. [1]
Ndụ
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]Jane Jones bụ nwunye Theophilus Jones, onye na-ere akwụkwọ, onye na-ebi akwụkwọ, onye nwe akwụkwọ akụkọ na onye nwere ike ịbụ nwa Sir Theophilus Jones . A kọwara ya dị ka "nwanyị a mụrụ." Mgbe Jones nwụsịrị n'April 1736, ọ mara ọkwa na ya ga-aga n'ihu n'ahịa di ya iji kwado ezinụlọ ya buru ibu. Ọ gara n'ihu na-ebipụta Post Evening Post site na Clarendon Street ruo 31 Maachị 1739. O bipụtakwara Life of Prince Eugene of Saxony (1737), Amusements de Spa nke Karl Ludwig von Pöllnitz (1737), ndị ahịa Bekee zuru ezu nke Daniel Defoe (1738), na akwụkwọ ozi e degaara nwanyị, iji too mmụta ụmụ nwanyị nke Wetenhall Wilkes dere. (1739). Jones malitere ọrụ na History of the bishọp nke Ireland site n'aka Sir James Ware na 1739, ma ọ nwụrụ na May nke afọ ahụ tupu ọ gụchaa ya. Nwa ya nwanyị, Elizabeth, weghaara azụmahịa ahụ, ikekwe site n'enyemaka nke ụmụnne ya nwanyị abụọ. Ha gara n'ihu na-arụ ọrụ site na Clarendon Street ruo afọ abụọ ọzọ, na-ebipụta ọrụ Ware zuru ezu yana History of the Civil Wars nke France site n'aka Enrico Caterino Davila (1740). Elizabeth Jones lụrụ onye na-ese ihe, Thomas Dixon, na 1756, n'oge ahụ ọ kwụsịrị ịrụ ọrụ dị ka onye na-ebi akwụkwọ ma ọ bụ onye na-ere akwụkwọ. [1] [2] [3]
Hụkwa
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]- Ndepụta ụmụ nwanyị ndị na-ebi akwụkwọ na ndị mbipụta tupu 1800
Ntụaka
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]ga-aga n'ihu n'ahịa di ya iji kwado ezinụlọ ya buru ibu. Ọ gara n'ihu na-ebipụta Post Evening
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Hourican (2009). "Jane Jones In Jones, Theophilus", in McGuire: Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Hourican, Bridget (2009). "Jane Jones In Jones, Theophilus". In McGuire, James; Quinn, James (eds.). Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Kpọpụta njehie: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "Hourican" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ Kinane (1991). "Irish Booklore: A Galley of Pie: Women in the Irish Book Trades". The Linen Hall Review 8 (4): 10–13. ISSN 0266-1500.
- ↑ Masthead from The Dublin Evening Post, July 1734. Dublin City Council. Archived from the original on 8 June 2020. Retrieved on 30 May 2020.