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According to
Roman tradition,
Lucretia (/luːˈkriːʃə/ loo-KREE-shə,
classical Latin: [ɫʊˈkreːtia]; died c. 510 BC),
anglicized as Lucrece, was a noblewoman...
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Lucretia Mott (née Coffin;
January 3, 1793 –
November 11, 1880) was an
American Quaker, abolitionist, women's
rights activist, and
social reformer. She...
- Potsdam),
Neues Palais Lucretia (Casali), c. 1750
Lucretia (Parmigianino), 1540
Lucretia (Raphael), 1500s
Lucretia (Rembrandt, 1666)
Lucretia (Veronese), c. 1585...
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Lucretia the Tumbler, also
known as
Lucrece the
Tumbler and
Lucrecia the
Tumbler (fl. 1542 - fl. 1543), was a
court jester in the
court of Mary I of England...
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Lucretia Garfield (née Rudolph;
April 19, 1832 –
March 14, 1918) was the
first lady of the
United States from
March to
September 1881, as the wife of James...
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Mecistogaster lucretia:
Mecistogaster lucretia hauxwelli Selys, 1886
Mecistogaster lucretia lucretia (Drury, 1773) "Mecistogaster
lucretia Report". Integrated...
- 1571
Lucretia -
Rembrandt (1664)
Tarquin and
Lucretia -
Tintoretto (c.1578)
Suicide of
Lucretia - Joos Van
Cleve (c. 1520–1525) The
story of
Lucretia's rape...
- Myra
Lucretia Taylor (born July 9, 1960) is an
American actress and singer. She
received Tony
Awards nomination for Best
Featured Actress in a Musical...
- to be whipped, at the
behest of Clay's wife,
Lucretia. Dupuy's
infraction was a late
return as
Lucretia's carriage driver. The
overseer attempted the whipping...
- 1470. The
novel is set in Siena, Italy, and
centres on the love
story of
Lucretia, a
married woman, and Euryalus, one of the men
waiting on the Duke of Austria...