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・ Jane Gail
・ Jane Gallop
・ Jane Gardam
・ Jane Gardiner
・ Jane Garrett
・ Jane Garvey
・ Jane Garvey (aviation administrator)
・ Jane Garvey (broadcaster)
・ Jane Gaskell
・ Jane Gaugain
・ Jane Gavalovski
・ Jane Doe No. 14 v. Internet Brands, Inc.
・ Jane Dolan
・ Jane Donnelly
・ Jane Doolittle
Jane Dormer
・ Jane Dornacker
・ Jane Douglas
・ Jane Douglas (disambiguation)
・ Jane Douglas (Lady)
・ Jane Dowdall
・ Jane Downs
・ Jane Doyle
・ Jane Draycott
・ Jane Drew
・ Jane Drew Prize
・ Jane du Pont Lunger
・ Jane Dudley
・ Jane Dudley, Duchess of Northumberland
・ Jane Duncan


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Jane Dormer : ウィキペディア英語版
Jane Dormer

Jane Dormer, Duchess of Feria (6 January 1538 – 13 January 1612) was an English lady-in-waiting to Mary I who, after the Queen's death, married Gómez Suárez de Figueroa y Córdoba, 1st Duke of Feria and went to live in Spain.
==Early life==
Jane Dormer, born at Eythrope near Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire. on 6 January 1538, was the daughter of Sir William Dormer (d. 17 May 1575) of Wing, Buckinghamshire, by his first wife, Mary Sidney (died 10 February 1542), the daughter of Sir William Sidney of Penshurst, Kent, and Anne Pakenham. She had two brothers, Thomas Dormer and Robert Dormer, and a sister, Anne Dormer, who married Sir Walter Hungerford. She was the granddaughter of Sir Robert Dormer (died 2 or 8 July 1552) and Jane Newdigate, the daughter of John Newdigate (d. 15 August 1528), esquire, of Harefield, Middlesex, by Amphyllis Neville (d. 15 July 1544). Jane Newdigate's brother was the martyr, Sebastian Newdigate.
Jane Dormer was born during the reign of Henry VIII, when her family was split by the religious controversy caused by the ongoing Reformation. On the one side, her father Sir William Dormer's family (moderately prosperous Buckinghamshire landowners and wool merchants) remained staunchly Roman Catholic. However, her mother Mary Sidney's family embraced the new religion of Protestantism. Jane was raised broadly outside this latter influence from the death of her mother in 1542, but she spent her youth not only in the household of her paternal grandmother but also as a playmate of the young Edward VI, who, she wrote in her memoirs, was very fond of her and reportedly said after having beaten her at cards, "Now your king is gone Jane, I shall be good enough for you".

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