Margery (disambiguation)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Margery is a female given name derived from Margaret, which can also be spelled as Marjorie or Marjory. From the Old French, the Middle English forms of Margaret equally derive from the Greek for pearl. Margery, Marjorie and Marjory in the 14th century became a medieval softened translation of French and Church Latin versions of Margaret. After the Middle Ages this name was rare, but it was revived at the end of the 19th century. The name later became that of a small rural settlement and a hill in England.
Given name
Middle Ages and Renaissance (Tudor) period
- Margery Baxter, early English church disempowerment activist (lollard), sentenced to Sunday floggings in 1429
- Margery Brews (d.1495), romance (Valentine's Day) love letter writer
- Margery Brunham, see Margery Kempe
- Margery de Burgh, 13th century Norman-Irish noblewoman
- Margery Golding, or Margaret, Countess of Oxford, verbally Lady de Vere, wife of John de Vere, 16th Earl of Oxford
- Margery of Hedsor, early 14th century redeemed wayward nun of Burnham Abbey
- Margery Kempe, pilgrim in the early 1400s dictated the first quasi-autobiography in the English language, outlining parts of her extensive pilgrimages to various holy sites in Europe and Asia, as well as her mystical conversations with God
- Margery Jourdemayne, "the Witch of Eye", executed in 1441 in England
- Margery Wentworth, later Lady Margaret Seymour, courtier, grandmother to Edward VI of England
- Margery Byset or Margaret/Margery Bissett and variations, turn of 15th century protagonist of the noble Bissett family (Ireland)
Post-tudor era
- Margery Allingham, murder mystery and crime fiction novelist
- Margery Beddow, American actress, dancer, director and choreographer
- Margery Bianco, see Margery Williams Bianco
- Margery Booth, Opera singer and British spy against Naziism
- Margery Bronster, Attorney General of Hawaii
- Margery Corbett Ashby, British Liberal politician, feminist and internationalist
- Margery Clinton, Scottish ceramics artist of reduction lustre glazes
- Mina Crandon, prominent American 20th century physical medium and illusionist, also known as: Margery Crandon or locally Margery
- Margery Cuyler, American children’s book author
- Margery Deane, American author
- Margery Eagan, American columnist with the Boston Herald, talk radio host
- Margery Edwards, Australian artist: spiritual Abstract Expressionist who worked with mixed media
- Margery Fish, English gardener and gardening writer, specialising in informal cottage gardens
- Margery Fisher, British literary critic and academic
- Margery Fry, British prison reformer
- Margery Gardner, actress, 1946 victim of executed double-murderer Neville Heath
- Dame Margery Greenwood, née Spencer, diplomatic wife of the Viscount, influential in agreeing the terms of the Anglo-Irish Treaty
- Margery Hinton, British Olympic swimming medalist
- Margery Mason, English actress and director
- Margery Maude, English actress
- Margery McKay, singer who dubbed a character in The Sound of Music (film)
- Margery Palmer McCulloch, Scottish literary scholar, author and critic
- Dame Margery Perham, British historian of, and writer on, African affairs
- Margery Ruth Morgenstern Krueger, real name of Jayge Carr, American science fiction and fantasy author
- Margery Sharp, English writer of 42 novels, 4 plays and of short stories, including The Rescuers and sequel adapted by Disney into Animated feature films
- Margery Saunders, British film editor
- Margery Ward, NDP politician in Ontario, Canada
- Margery Williams Bianco, children's author
- Margery Wilson, American actress and silent movie director
Places
- England
- Margery, a hamlet in Banstead Downs, Surrey
- Margery Hill, a high hill towards the northern boundary of the Peak District National Park, South Yorkshire
Other uses
- Margery and Gladys, drama
- Margery Austin, boat, schooner (1918-1919)
- Margery Daw (disambiguation), character, nursery rhyme, books
See also
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. |
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.