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・ Elizabeth G. Ferris
・ Elizabeth G. Robinson
・ Elizabeth Gaffney
・ Elizabeth Gage
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・ Elizabeth Gallagher
・ Elizabeth Gardiner
・ Elizabeth Gardner
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・ Elizabeth Garrett Anderson
・ Elizabeth Garrett Anderson and Obstetric Hospital
・ Elizabeth Garrett Anderson School
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Elizabeth Gaunt
・ Elizabeth Geertruida Agatha Dyson
・ Elizabeth George
・ Elizabeth George (author)
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・ Elizabeth George (disambiguation)
・ Elizabeth George Speare
・ Elizabeth Germain
・ Elizabeth Gertrude Britton
・ Elizabeth Gertrude Stern
・ Elizabeth Gilbert
・ Elizabeth Gilels
・ Elizabeth Gill Lui
・ Elizabeth Gillies
・ ElizaBeth Gilligan


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Elizabeth Gaunt : ウィキペディア英語版
Elizabeth Gaunt

Elizabeth Gaunt (died 23 October 1685), was an English woman sentenced to death for treason after having been convicted for involvement in the Rye House Plot. She was the last woman to have been executed for a political crime in England.
Gaunt was an Anabaptist shop-keeper in London. She was the daughter of Anthony Fothergill of Brownber, Ravenstonedale, and was well known to give shelter to persecuted people, such as victims of religious and political oppression. According to Bishop Burnet, she spent "her life in acts of charity, visiting the gaols and looking after the poor of what persuasion soever they were". She helped one of the participants of the failed Rye House Plot of 1683, James Burton, to escape to Amsterdam. After his arrest in 1685, Burton implicated her as an accomplice in the hope of saving his life. She was in fact not involved in the conspiracy and the trial against her was seen as a show trial. David Hume wrote: "He received a pardon as a recompense for his treachery and she was burnt alive for her charity."〔(The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.I., Part F., by David Hume )〕 She was sentenced to death for treason in the Old Bailey 19 October 1685.
Gaunt considered the trial to be a martyrdom and reportedly behaved with such good humour that the audience was moved to tears. She was executed by burning, and, as she was denied strangulation, she was literally burned alive. William Penn witnessed the execution and reported that she "died with a constancy, even to a cheerfulness, that struck all that saw it."〔Protestantism, Politics, and Women in Britain, 1660-1714 by Melinda Zook〕
== References ==

* (A historical dictionary of British women Av Cathy Hartley )
* http://www.capitalpunishmentuk.org/burning.html
* http://www.thegloriousrevolution.org/docs/elizabethgaunt.htm


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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