Hannah Burdon

Hannah Burdon
Born 1800
Morpeth, Northumberland
Died 1877
Rapperswil, Switzerland
Language English
Nationality British

Hannah Dorothy Burdon (1800–1877) was an English writer of novels. She initially wrote historical novels under the name "Miss Burdon" or, after her marriage in 1841, as "Madame Wolfensberger". After the death of her husband in 1850, she turned to writing social and political novels under the pseudonym "Lord B*******".

Life

Hannah Burdon was born in 1800.[1] She was a daughter of the mineowner and political writer William Burdon.[2][3] In 1836 she published her first historical novel Seymour of Sudley; or, the last of the Franciscans. In 1841 she married the Swiss landscape painter Johann Jakob Wolfensberger.[2] After his death in 1850 she began writing social-problem novels beginning with Masters and Workmen (1851).[2] Her novels from this time onwards were written anonymously under the pseudonym "Lord B*******".[2] Because of this pseudonym, her later works were erroneously attributed to Frederick Richard Chichester, the Earl of Belfast.[4] Later in life she married Daniel Jerome Schobinger in Switzerland.[2] She died in 1877 in Rapperswil, Switzerland.[1]

Works

References

  1. 1 2 "Wolfensberger-Burdon, Hanna Dorothea - SIKART Lexikon zur Kunst in der Schweiz". SIKART Lexikon zur Kunst in der Schweiz. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Author Information At the Circulating Library". Circulating Library: A Database of Victorian Fiction. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  3. "Burdon, William", Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 07
  4. "Chichester, Frederick Richard", Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 10

External links

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