Person:Mary Harvey (74)

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Mary Harvey
chr.3 Sep 1629
d.7 Feb 1704
  1. Mary Harvey1629 - 1704
Facts and Events
Name Mary Harvey
Married Name Lady Mary Dering
Gender Female
Baptism[1] 3 Sep 1629
Marriage to Sir Edward Dering, 2nd Baronet
Death[1][2] 7 Feb 1704
Reference Number? Q6470421?


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Lady Mary Dering (née Mary Harvey) (bap. 3 September 1629 – 7 February 1704) was an English composer.

The daughter of Daniel Harvey and Elizabeth Kynnersley, Mary Harvey was baptised in Croydon on 3 September 1629, and therefore probably born within a day or two of that. Daniel Harvey was a wealthy London merchant and member of the Levant Company, his eldest brother being the anatomist William Harvey.

Mary Harvey was sent to Mrs Salmon's school in Hackney, where her friends included Mary Aubrey (later her sister-in-law, and niece of John Aubrey) and Katherine Philips (the Matchless Orinda). In 1645, she married her cousin and father's former apprentice, William Hauke; this was without her father's consent, and it was quickly annulled. The man her father arranged for her to marry, and whom she did on 5 April 1648, was Sir Edward Dering. The marriage turned out well; the couple produced seventeen children (seven of whom died young), as well as poems and music. Despite bearing so many children, Dering outlived her husband by twenty years, dying in February 1704 (1705 New Style); she also outlived her eldest son Sir Edward Dering, 3rd Baronet.

Dering studied music with Henry Lawes. Lawes dedicated his Second book of airs to her, declaring that

I have consider’d, but could not find it lay in my power to offer this Book to any but to your Ladiship. Not only in regard of that honour and esteem you have for Musick, but because those Songs which fill this Book have receiv’d much lustre by your excellent performance of them; and (which I confesse I rejoice to speak of) some which I esteem the best of these Ayres, were of your own Composition, after your Noble Husband was pleased to give the Words. For (although your Ladiship resolv’d to keep it private) I beg leave to declare, for my own honour, that you are not only excellent for the time you spent in the practise of what I set, but are your self so good a Composer, that few of any sex have arriv’d to such perfection.

The only works of hers which survive are the three songs that Lawes published in this volume - incidentally, the first published music by a female composer in England.

Dering was buried at Pluckley in Kent, and has a memorial inscription in the church there.

This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Lady Mary Dering. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Lady Mary Dering, in Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia.
  2. Mary Harvey, in Lundy, Darryl. The Peerage: A genealogical survey of the peerage of Britain as well as the royal families of Europe.